Arthur is a carpenter in the damp, rolling hills of Shropshire who speaks mostly in grunts and measurements. If you ask him if a timber frame will last, he will never give you a simple “yes.” He will walk the length of the oak, squinting at the grain, feeling the moisture content with a handheld meter that looks like it belongs in a mid-century laboratory.
He knows that “sturdy” is a temporary state, a truce between the wood and the weather. , while I was watching him evaluate a beam for a client’s porch, he told the owner it was a “noble piece of wood,” which the owner took as a green light. But Arthur followed it with a twenty-minute dissertation on sapwood ratios and the inevitable expansion of the mortise joints during a wet July.
The owner wanted a verdict; Arthur gave him a weather report. The owner heard a guarantee; Arthur was actually describing a controlled risk.
The Biological Hunger for Certainty
We are biologically wired to crave the verdict. We want the binary. We want to be told we are “cleared for takeoff,” “fit for surgery,” or, most dangerously, that we are an “excellent candidate.”
When a man sits in a consultation chair,