Paradox #444 • From Homer's Odyssey, ~800 BCE
In Homer's Odyssey, Ulysses (Odysseus) faced the Sirens—creatures whose song was so beautiful that sailors would leap to their deaths trying to reach them.
Ulysses wanted to hear the song but knew his future self would be unable to resist. So he ordered his crew to tie him to the mast and ignore any commands he gave while under the Sirens' spell.
Here's the paradox: By giving up his freedom, Ulysses gained control. He could experience the song AND survive—something impossible without the binding.
Let's test your own ability to resist temptation—with and without a Ulysses Pact.
You're on a treasure hunt. You've found two chests:
Waiting gives you 2.5× the reward. Which do you choose?
The small chest is RIGHT THERE. You could just take it...
You resisted temptation!
Another treasure hunt. Same choice—but now you can sign a contract that prevents you from changing your mind.
In Homer's Odyssey (circa 800 BCE), Odysseus ordered his crew to tie him to the mast as they sailed past the Sirens. He put wax in his men's ears so they couldn't hear his commands. He knew his future self would beg to be released—and that his men must refuse.
This wasn't weakness. It was wisdom. By binding himself in a "cold" rational state, he protected against decisions made in a "hot" emotional state.
We use Ulysses Pacts constantly:
Here's what's counterintuitive: reducing options can increase real freedom. Without the contract, you're a slave to your impulses. With it, you're free to achieve your actual goals.
Behavioral economist Daniel Goldstein notes the challenge: "You're Odysseus and the first mate in one person. You bind yourself, then weasel your way out, then beat yourself up afterwards."
The limitation? You can often unbind yourself. Delete the website blocker. Cancel the gym membership. The key is making the unbinding costly enough that your hot self won't bother—but not so costly that your cold self won't commit in the first place.
The Greeks called it "akrasia"—acting against your better judgment. Modern research confirms: we systematically overestimate our future willpower. The Ulysses Pact isn't about willpower at all—it's about designing around its absence.