Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 2, Summer 2014 | Page 76

72 nomads and it is difficult to get a hold of them), he neglects the information and fails (4, 83). Also Darius does not gather information about his enemy before he carries out the war. But as Herodotus delivers the information (4,2-82), the reader understands why Darius must fail. Woodward conveys a similar idea. He writes: Most tragic, Scowcroft (a friend of Bush senior) felt that the administration had believed Saddam was running a modem, efficient state, and thought that when he was toppled there would be an operating society left behind . . . But the administration wouldn’t re-examine or re evaluate its policy. As he (Scowcroft) often said, ‘I just don’t know how you operate unless you continually challenge your own assumptions.’ (420) That a decision maker sticks to his chosen option although information is available which suggests to abandon the option is according to Woodward the major problem in Bush’s decision-making: “Alternative courses of action were rarely considered’’ (455). This is the same problem which Herodotus described as being responsible for unsuccessful decision making roughly 2500 years ago. After thousands of years certain motives, patterns and methods are still valid. Evidently the mental infrastmcture in the 5^^ century BCE in parts of the Greek world was similar to ours in the 2T‘ century. Inquiries^^ are essentially still carried out along the same principles. This makes Herodotus more the father of journalism and reporting, than of history. City University of New York Helmut G Loeffier Notes 1 Cicero de legibus 1.5. 2 See for example West, pp. 80-81. “An assurance and a confident use of detail suggesting an eye-witness are part of his stock-in-trade, his approach to his subject matter being generally nearer to a modem journalist’s than we judge appropriate to a serious historian.” 3 See Herodotus 1.27. Bias manipulates information to make Croisus decide in a certain way. 4 See Pohlenz 1937 (^1973).