One of the topics of behavioral economics is how the human brain instinctively sets "baselines" that are used for decision-making.
quick example, there are better ones but they'd be very wordy:
-you come across a deli that is selling a certain type of food you've never seen before. let's call it "monkeyfish". this place is selling monkeyfish hoagies ("subs" or "grinders" for those unfamiliar with the lingo) that go for about $7 for a footlong.
two days later, you eat out at a nice diner and you see a dish on the menu; "monkeyfish stew", going for $18. you think to yourself, "holy crap that's expensive for monkeyfish, i could probably make my own for much cheaper getting monkeyfish at that deli".
-meanwhile, your brother Johnny is at a Hibachi place and notices a type of food that HE's never seen before (lets call it, for now, "donkeyloins"). they come as the main dish in a $28 meal, slightly more than the sirloin and chicken meals, a little less than the filet mignon. the people next to him appear to be very well off and one of them has ordered this exact meal.
the next day, said Johnny notices a street vendor selling these donkeyloins (the street vendor is also selling hot dogs and knishes) for $8; obviously more than the other food, but compared to the Hibachi place he thinks this is a steal and he actually tries donkeyloins for the first time.
-here's the twist (i'm sure many of you know where i'm going with this in terms of HD but i digress)...monkeyfish and donkeyloins are the same food. is it unreasonable that any of the situations i've described above can be accurate for, say, a very high-quality sausage? expensive at hibachi, $7 footlong at a deli, etc.
the point is, everyone sets "baselines" the first time they come across something. what has happened with the new recruits is everyone things they SUCK because their baseline is the old recruits.
if everyone takes a step back and tries to look at the new recruits while ignoring the old ones, there is likely NO PROBLEM with them. when people come to a conclusion such as "perhaps players with weaknesses are good for real life but not HD" they are purely going on the gut feeling that these recruits are too bad to use...and that gut feeling comes from the old recruits being a baseline.
the upshot of all this i think can be summarized one or two ways:
1.perhaps whatif and seble did not realize how difficult adjusting to new recruits would be, so they just threw us into the fire
2.perhaps whatif and seble DID realize how difficult adjusting would be for us and as a result are ignoring all the complaints because they know they're largely baseline-driven and misguided.
thoughts?
7/29/2010 2:14 PM (edited)