Hanlon's Razor - Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by stupidity
When interpreting others' negative actions
Understanding the Rule
Most harm results from incompetence, not malicious intent. Before assuming bad intentions, consider whether ignorance, error, or incompetence explain behavior better.
What Happens When You Break It
Assuming malice creates enemies from accidental offenders, escalates conflicts, generates paranoia, prevents constructive solutions, and wastes energy fighting imagined ill will.
Benefits of Following This Rule
Assuming incompetence before malice reduces conflict, enables constructive solutions, prevents unnecessary enemies, maintains perspective, and proves correct most often.