Sunday, July 12, 2009

AGI and other Islands

Thinking about AGI and other companies as “islands" reminded me of the story about an island where half the people tell the truth all the time and half lie all the time. The problem is figuring out which half are the truth tellers and which half are the liars. I had a hard time finding the actual story or who to credit. Here is a link (includes reading comprehension questions after the story) to an expanded island with four kinds of people. http://wps.ablongman.com/long_henry_er_1/0,7989,1832838-,00.html
The addition of The Eccentrics and the Wimps make the analogy to recent corporate shenanigans even better. Draw your own conclusions.

And here is the story without the questions:
Stranger than Truth
You have undoubtedly heard of those mysterious islands where half the inhabitants always tell the truth and the other half always lie. Nobody seems to have actually visited one of those islands, but everyone knows of someone who has, someone who found himself at the fork in a road with a strange islander (who could be either a truth teller or a liar) and who was able to ask only one question to find the right path.

That's simple. So is the case where the islanders don't speak English and you have to interpret their response. It's even possible to find the right road if half of them are zombies or psycho killers and you are armed with one silly question.


I once found myself on an island that made those places look like Romper Room. Picture, if you will, the Isle of Row, a one-acre forsaken swatch of desert in the middle of the Sea of Troubles. Despite its diminutive size, Row has no less than four kinds of people, all outwardly indistinguishable from one another. There are the members of the First Family, who always tell the truth, and the Pretenders, who never do. There are the Eccentrics, who may or may not tell the truth, depending on whim. Finally there are the Wimps, who are incapable of speaking unless they have heard one of the other kinds of people speak, and then they obsequiously chime in.

One day, as luck would have it, I found myself at the only crossroads on the island, facing four possible routes. Three Rowans stood by, milling about, and I had only two questions to ask in order to reach, as directly as possible, the fabled 100-foot Tower of Schmooze, the island's premier, albeit only, tourist attraction. What did I do?

Yours in pursuit of truth,
Dr. Crypton
—Discover, January 1991, p. 98