Sunday, April 05, 2009

Hobson's choice

Hobson's choice

Meaning

No real choice at all - the only options being to either accept or
refuse the offer that is given to you.

Origin

There is a story that 'Hobson's choice' comes from a Mr. Hobson who
hired out horses and gave his customers no choice as to which horse
they could take. This has all the credentials of a 'folk etymology'
myth but, in this case, the derivation is correct.

A search of Google will return several thousand hits for 'Hobbesian
choice'. The mistaken uses of that phrase, in place of the correct
'Hobson's choice', originate from a confusion between the celebrated
philosopher Thomas Hobbes and the obscure Thomas Hobson, to whom the
phrase refers.

Thomas Hobson (1545–1631) ran a thriving carrier and horse rental
business in Cambridge, England, around the turn of the 17th century.
Hobson rented out horses, mainly to Cambridge University students, but
refused to hire them out other than in the order he chose. The choice
his customers were given was 'this or none'; quite literally, Hobson's
choice.

The phrase was already being described as proverbial less than thirty
years after Hobson's death. The Quaker scholar Samuel Fisher referred
to the phrase in his religious text, The Rustick's Alarm to the
Rabbies, 1660:

"If in this Case there be no other (as the Proverb is) then Hobson's
choice ... which is, chuse whether you will have this or none."

The Spectator, No. 509, 1712, explains how Hobson did business, which
shows clearly how the phrase came into being:

"He lived in Cambridge, and observing that the Scholars rid hard, his
manner was to keep a large Stable of Horses, ... when a Man came for a
Horse, he was led into the Stable, where there was great Choice, but
he obliged him to take the Horse which stood next to the Stable-Door;
so that every Customer was alike well served according."

After his death in 1631, Hobson was remembered in verse by no less a
figure than John Milton, saying "He had bin an immortall Carrier".
That seems rather a strange thing to say just after he had died.
Eighty-six was a very good innings in the 17th century, but hardly
immortality.

The phrase was still well enough known in the 20th century for
'hobsons' to be adopted then as Cockney rhyming slang for 'voice'.

The most celebrated application of Hobson's choice in the 20th century
was Henry Ford's offer of the Model-T Ford in 'any colour you like, so
long as it's black'.

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