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Home » FULL TRANSCRIPT: Charlie Munger’s Speech at USC Commencement 2007

FULL TRANSCRIPT: Charlie Munger’s Speech at USC Commencement 2007

Read here the full transcript of Charlie Munger’s speech at USC Law Commencement 2007.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Well, no doubt many of you are wondering why the speaker is so old. Well, the answer is obvious: he hasn’t died yet. And why was the speaker chosen? Well, I don’t know that either.

I like to think that the development department had nothing to do with it. Whatever the reason, I think it’s very fitting that I’m sitting here because I see one crowd of faces in the rear not wearing robes. And I know, from having educated an army of descendants, who really deserves a lot of the honors that are being given to the people up here in front. The sacrifice and the wisdom and the value transfer that come from one generation to the next can never be underrated.

And that gave me enormous pleasure as I looked at this sea of Asian faces to my left. All my life I’ve admired Confucius. I like the idea of filial piety, the idea that there are values that are taught and duties that come naturally, and that all that should be passed on to the next generation. And you people who don’t think there’s anything in this idea, please note how fast these Asian faces are rising in American life.

I think they have something. All right, I scratched out a few notes. And I’m going to try and just give an account of some ideas and attitudes that have worked well for me. I don’t claim that they’re perfect for everybody, although I think many of them are pretty close to universal values, and many of them are can’t-fail ideas.

Core Ideas for Success

What are the core ideas that have helped me? Well, luckily I got at a very early age the idea that the safest way to try and get what you want is to try and deserve what you want. It’s such a simple idea. That’s the golden rule, so to speak.

You want to deliver to the world what you would buy if you were on the other end. There is no ethos, in my opinion, that is better for any lawyer or any other person to have. By and large, the people who have had this ethos win in life, and they don’t win just money, just honors and emoluments. They win the respect, the deserved trust of the people they deal with.

There is huge pleasure in life to be obtained from getting deserved trust, and the way to get it is to deliver what you’d want to buy if the circumstances were reversed. Occasionally you find a perfect rogue of a person who dies rich and widely known, but mostly these people are fully understood by the surrounding civilization, and when the cathedral is full of people at the funeral ceremony, most of them are there to celebrate the fact that the person is dead. And that reminds me of the story of the time when one of these people died and the minister said, “It’s now time for someone to say something nice about the deceased.” And nobody came forward.

And nobody came forward. And nobody came forward. And finally, one man came up and he said, “Well, his brother was worse.” That is not where you want to go.

That’s not the kind of funeral you want to have. You’ll leave entirely the wrong example. A second idea that I got very early was this: There’s no love that’s so right as admiration-based love, and that love should include the instructive death.

Somehow I got that idea, and I’ve lived with it all my life, and it’s been very, very useful to me. A love like that celebrated by Somerset Maugham in his book “Of Human Bondage,” that’s a sick kind of love. It’s a disease. And if you find yourself in a disease like that, my advice to you is turn around and fix it.

Eliminate it. Another idea that I got, and this may remind you of Confucius too, is that wisdom acquisition was a moral duty. It’s not something you do just to advance in life. Wisdom acquisition is a moral duty, and there’s a corollary to that proposition, which is very important.

The Importance of Lifetime Learning

It means that you’re hooked for lifetime learning, and without lifetime learning, you people are not going to do very well. You are not going to get very far in life based on what you already know. You’re going to advance in life by what you’re going to learn after you leave here. If you take Berkshire Hathaway, which is certainly one of the best-regarded corporations in the world, and it may have the best long-term investment record in the entire history of civilization, the skill that got Berkshire through one decade would not have sufficed to get it through the next decade with the achievements made.

Without Warren Buffett being a learning machine, a continuous learning machine, the record would have been absolutely impossible. The same is true at lower walks of life. I constantly see people rise in life who were not the smartest, sometimes not even the most diligent, but they are learning machines. They go to bed every night a little wiser than they were when they got up, and boy does that habit help particularly when you have a long run ahead of you.

Alfred North Whitehead said at one time that the rapid advance of civilization came only when man invented the method of invention. Of course, he was referring to the huge growth of GDP per capita and all the other good things that we now take for granted, which happened just started a few hundred years ago, and before that all was stasis. So if civilization can progress only when it invents the method of invention, you can progress only when you learn the method of learning.