Shining through all Moses' statements was confidence, a faith that his system would work, a belief that personalities of tens of thousands of human beings could be reduced to mathematical grades, that promotions and raises could be determined by a science precise enough to give every one of those human beings the exact rewards he deserved. Asked once if it might not prove difficult to divide a job like that of janitor into different levels based on different functions and responsibilities, Moses replied flatly that it would not be difficult at all. To the expert, he said, such differences are "clearly discernible." When someone ventured to argue that it might be hard to bring under his system appointees in policy-making posts because policy-making was too subtle to measure, Moses could barely restrain his impatience. "There is no reason why it cannot be worked out in that way," he said.
Caro, Robert A. The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York. Vintage Books, 1975.
I'm often amused, bemused really, at the capacity of the overeducated, like our friend Bobby Mo here, to believe that human activity can be so simply regulated or reduced to mere mathematical formulae as if the improvement of social and economic intercourse were merely a matter of fiddling with the levers of society in order to find the proper balance. The social and economic world is not a toaster. It is not a scientific system operating with the precision and predictability of electric current charging through nichrome wires. It's a chessboard with infinite squares, a multiplicity of pieces, and an inscrutable set of rules.
So whenever I read of great men and their ideas of improvement I'm reminded of Una and her Dwarfe's warning to the Redcrosse Knight as he prepared to set things right in the Cave of Errour:
"Be well aware," quoth then that Ladie milde./
"Least suddaine mischiefe yet too rash provoke:/
The danger hid, the place unknowne and wilde,/
Breedes dreadfull doubts: Oft fire is without smoke./
And perill without show: therefore your stroke/
Sir knight with-hold, till further triall made."/
"Ah Ladie," said he, "shame were to revoke/
The forward footing for an hidden shade:/
Vertue gives her selfe light, through darkenesse for the wade."/
"Yea but," quoth she, "the perill of this place/
I better wot then you, though now too late/
To wish you backe returne with foule disgrace,/
Yet wisedome warnes, whilest foot is in the gate,/
To stay the steppe, ere forcéd to retrate./
This is the wandring wood, this Errours den,/
A monster vile, whom God and man does hate:/
Therefore I read beware." "Fly, fly," quoth then/
The fearefull Dwarfe: "this is no place for living men."
"The Faerie Queene." Edmund Spenser's Poetry: Norton Critical Edition. eds Anne Lake Prescott and Andrew D. Hadfield. W.W. Norton & Company, 2014.