Until Drucker became my professor, I always felt pretty good when an opinion I held seemed to agree with others’ opinions on the same subject. This majority agreement seemed to confirm that I was right and confirmed my knowledge about the subject. Yet what Drucker emphasized to his students was: “What everyone knows is usually wrong.” Moreover, he seemed to enjoy showing us when a majority belief was proven wrong, which was unexpectedly frequent.
I was surprised not to find this in his published material. Then, when I quoted Drucker in a manuscript for a book about my experiences with him, the publisher changed it to: “What everyone knows is frequently wrong.” My editor said that he had made the change for believability, that this was more logical for him to have said. But that is not what Drucker said, he said usually wrong. Thereafter I paid closer attention and insisted that Drucker be quoted exactly the way he had expressed it in the classroom.
I also paid closer attention and discovered that his statement was surprisingly accurate. I looked at many majority opinions once held in the past and they were usually wrong, with many examples throughout history.
Can what everyone knows really be in error?
We laugh at some facts that were once thought true. We do not even stop to consider that once not only were they considered facts by some, but everyone seemed to accept them as factual as well.
Beliefs such as that the world is flat, the earth is the center of the universe or that, until Englishman Roger Bannister ran it for the first time in 1954, it is impossible for the human body to run a mile in four minutes. These are typical. If you were verbal about your doubt that some of these facts might be wrong, in some centuries, you could be sent to prison or even executed for being a witch.
The latter is what happened to Joan of Arc, the 15th century female warrior-prodigy who appeared during the Hundred Years War between England and France. The French city of Orleans had been cut off for eight months and the English had beaten back every French attempt to break the siege.
Then, along came this young girl who claimed that God had told her to take command. Charles VII of France might have ignored her, however, his advisors were so frustrated that they told him that he might as well give her command since they had tried everything else. Desperate, he gave Joan an unusual assignment, sending her to Orléans commanding the relief army. She broke the siege of Orleans not in months but in eight days, which many considered bizarre.
Thereafter, the teenage Joan led French armies to one victory after another. They designed a large banner which clearly identified her, and everyone knew her position on the battlefield. Almost a year later she was captured and her captors spread rumors that her victories had been won through witchcraft and demanded that she be tried in a religious court.
The court found her guilty by unanimous decision and sentenced her to being burned alive at the stake. Everyone knew she was a witch as she had proven it herself through her victories and her enemies were happy to spread the lie. She was killed as required by religious law without a drop of her blood being spilled.
Other group beliefs were also wrong
The Ancient Greeks believed that all matter was made up of only four elements: earth, air, fire and water. I do not think that you got imprisoned or burned at the stake for believing otherwise, but you were at the very least thought to be an ignorant person.
In modern times we have learned that much of what ancients civilizations believed was wrong. When I took chemistry in high school, I learned that Mendeleev, a Russian chemist and inventor, had formulated a Periodic Table of Elements and that it had been established that there were exactly 93 elements which were arranged by atomic mass.
Following science meant knowing these elements and you got a passing grade if you could name a few. Had a student proposed that there were more than 93, I am certain that he or she would have been instantly corrected.
It was eventually revealed that science, along with our teachers, were wrong. When I checked this in 2008, there were 102 elements. Also our teachers usually failed to tell us that Mendeleev had documented only 63 elements when he did his research and the other 30 had not been discovered until later.
When I checked in February of 2021, there were 118 or so “everyone knows”. I am uncertain as the numbers can still increase, since scientists are now creating new elements rather than just discovering elements already in existence.
The scientific theory of creation that was wrong
It was once believed that living organisms were created from nonliving matter through a process called spontaneous generation. For example, frogs were thought to be born from swamp water and maggots from rotting meat.
Although the belief about spontaneous generation went back more than a thousand years, no one could provide satisfactory proof. Researchers designed experiments which tended to confirm that spontaneous generation was true, but the experiments were poorly designed. Finally, Louis Pasteur used the microscope in 1859 and the spontaneous generation theory disappeared.
The Jewish Sanhedrin solves a problem using Drucker’s theory
The Sanhedrin was the highest court of justice in ancient Israel. There was one Great Sanhedrin of 71 judges sitting in Jerusalem, which acted as the Supreme Court, taking appeals from cases which were decided by lesser courts.
The Sanhedrin too decided that “what everyone knew was usually wrong”. In the case of capital offenses which called for the death penalty, unless at least one judge thought the defendant innocent, the defendant was set free despite the complete agreement of guilt by all 71 judges. The Sanhedrin thought if all the judges termed the defendant guilty with not a single exception, something was wrong with the court and taking human life in a prejudiced situation was against Jewish religious law.
With many additional opportunities to distribute erroneous information as factual, this can be a complicated problem. Incorrect information gets repeated, and the impression is given that multiple sources have confirmed the original source even though it may have been in error.
Why could women not vote in the US until the 1920s?
In many countries, including the US, women were not permitted to vote until the early 20th century. This was based on the belief that women were less mentally stable due to a hormonal imbalance. As late as the 1960s, some still believed that women were controlled by their hormones and pregnant women were viewed as emotionally charged, hormonal powder kegs.
Hormonal surges supposedly caused female instability and led them to make irrational decisions. Even bad hairdos were deemed possible stimuli. Consequently, pregnant women were advised not to cut their hair radically for a different hairdo because of an unusually strong regret that was likely to result when a woman who was already in a poor emotional state reflected on her changed appearance.
As far as I know, no one advises women not to cut their hair anymore during pregnancy and it is established that both men and women are subject to hormonal issues. Also, we do not burn those we disagree with at the stake anymore.
During the pandemic, however, we have taken to describing unpopular political leaders and even medical doctors as incompetent, liars, dishonest, unpatriotic, racist or claiming they do not have the courage to stand against whichever political party or politics we disagree with.
I wondered what I should believe or doubt with all that I see and hear, on TV and the internet nowadays. I recall the advice to new detectives: “Believe nothing you hear and only one half that you see.” This seems to support Drucker’s warning to his students.
This advice has also been given to budding attorneys, though it did not originate with any judge. Instead, it came from a work of fiction by Edgar Allen Poe and appeared in “The System of Dr. Tarr and Prof. Fether” in the November 1845 issue of Graham’s Magazine. I consider this my first line of defense. What about you? Do you believe whatever the majority believes? Remember Drucker’s warning: “Whatever everyone knows is usually wrong.”
Be safe and healthy, and live long and prosper, but investigate any claim on your own. Respect others who see or hear and may believe different things or have different opinions than you. Until the present becomes history, many facts that we know, or think we know, may be wrong or somewhat in error, especially if they are what “everyone knows”.