Pontification of Deadlines and Urgency
Manage episode 504447119 series 3571879
Word of the Episode: Pontificate
- Hosts’ Initial Guess:
- They believed it meant to think deeply to arrive at a decision.
- They even associated it with careful contemplation and resolution.
- Actual Definition (Oxford Languages):
- To express one’s opinions in an annoyingly pompous or dogmatic way.
- Far from quiet reflection—it's about pompous expression.
- Negative connotation, closer to “know‑it‑all” behavior.
- Additional Meaning: In Roman Catholic Church context, pontificate = officiate as a bishop at mass; also used as a noun for tenure (e.g., “the Pope’s pontificate”).
- Etymology: From Latin pontifex → Old French pontificat → late Middle English pontificate.
👉 Discovery: Many who jokingly say “let me pontificate” are actually self‑insulting.
Main Discussion: Planning, Urgency & Arbitrary Deadlines
- Topic: The tension between:
- Big‑picture do‑it‑now mentality (one host = act immediately, finish early, no burden later).
- Wait‑until‑necessary mentality (other host = if the deadline is months away, wait; urgency is lower).
- Personal Contrast:
- One host: finishes things quickly, even taking on extra work (did 3 college senior projectsjust to stay productive).
- Other host: efficient under pressure but prefers pacing, resting first, “working the system” by doing only what’s required to meet the goal.
- Conflict:
- Upcoming deadlines set 4 months away — one frustrated at others’ lack of urgency, the other argues most people only act when urgency arrives.
- Suggested solution: “arbitrary deadlines” to create urgency. But one host feels this is deceptive and prefers transparency.
- Possible compromise: present early dates as “goals” instead of hard deadlines.
- Reflection on Society:
- Many people only act under true deadlines or emergencies (“Your lack of planning is not my emergency”).
- Debate over whether arbitrary goals motivate or manipulate.
- Hypothesis: People fall into thirds—early planners, motivatable by goals, and last‑minute doers.
- Closing Pontification: maybe it’s less “thirds” and more Pareto principle (tease for Episode 75).
Tone & Takeaways
- Language Lesson: Pontificate ≠ “think deeply”—it’s “speak pompously.”
- Life Lesson: People manage tasks and deadlines differently; tension arises over efficiency vs. pacing, transparency vs. manipulation, but balance can come with clear goals.
- Humor: Self‑aware jokes about whether they were “pontificating” the whole episode in the negative sense.
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Any views expressed on this podcast are those solely of the hosts and is for entertainment purposes only. None of the content is medical advice or financial advice.
Special thanks to Tim Wright aka CoLD SToRAGE for his permission to use the song Operatique.
97 episodes