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Started by tyrannosaurus vex, June 14, 2020, 10:52:12 PM

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altered

So, I've been thinking about this and specifically Cram's assertion that we (and probably me in particular) are being too hard on Vex here. Too aggressive and vicious. And I have a response.

When what Vex is saying isn't a potential rationalization for the real harm of real people, he will be worth responding to kindly. So long as his ideas are actively dangerous to real people, he deserves to be jumped on with the big boots.

He's not a Nazi, but he's laying some of the rhetorical groundwork for fascists, authoritarians, and shitty neoliberals.

Sound far fetched?

I don't know about you, but it's easy for me to imagine either Joe Biden or DJT saying "we aren't going to gentrify Native lands, we will preserve their traditional hunter-gatherer way of life," the implication being that they won't work to help eliminate the poverty and food deserts that Indigenous people live in.

It doesn't matter that the chances of a powerful figure seeing Vex's forum posts are basically nil. It doesn't matter that Vex may not think these things through that far. They're legitimately dangerous and deserve to be stepped on as much as AND in the same manner and degree as if someone had independently reinvented Fascism and wanted to talk to us about their cool new idea.
"I am that worst of all type of criminal...I cannot bring myself to do what you tell me, because you told me."

There's over 100 of us in this meat-suit. You'd think it runs like a ship, but it's more like a hundred and ten angry ghosts having an old-school QuakeWorld tournament, three people desperately trying to make sure the gamers don't go hungry or soil themselves, and the Facilities manager weeping in the corner as the garbage piles high.

LMNO

Ok, I'm gonna weigh in here, as inadvisable as it may be.  I've redacted some of the rhetoric in the OP and highlighted other bits, to look at what I thought his main point was.

Quote from: tyrannosaurus vex on June 14, 2020, 10:52:12 PM
One of the most insidious and dangerous assumptions we have is the silly idea that... human events follow a more or less predictable... trajectory from "primitive" to "advanced", and that it does this because of some sort of natural law that governs all kinds of progress.
So, that does speak to a fallacy, or a flaw, in a lot of people's thinking.  There isn't an "inevitable" push towards any kind of future.  There is no guiding hand pushing us towards the best possible world.  In the end, it is the work of the people to move a society forward, they can't just wait around for it to happen, because...
QuoteIt is the reason we are taught that the evils of slavery and genocide are "in the past" while the forces that drive them simmer in communities around the world.

History has no arc. It is not a story about a protagonist species who learn and grow. It has never been guaranteed that tomorrow will be more just for you than today, or that the next century will bring more opportunity for your descendants than the last one had for your ancestors.
In a way, this is an Absurdist view of history.  The world is random and chaotic and doesn't have a consciousness or a moral vision -- it's the people who have to have the consciousness and moral vision, and then act on it.
Quote...This should be plain to see as we watch the entire allegedly "free" world slip farther every day into the same patterns of mistakes and collapse that have recurred time and again since anyone bothered to remember anything.




The last bit I think got off point a little, and seems to be going in another direction.  It appears to try and parse the meaning of "progress" or "better", and then compare technological advances with human social experiences.  I don't think this part works terribly well, and kind of derails the first part of the post. So I'm just going to ignore it.

QuoteEven when disaster is averted, for all our apparent progress we have never actually made a difference in what it means to be human. Sure, we have the power to blow up the planet, the power to fling ourselves uselessly into orbit, the power to talk to each other across insurmountable distances. But so what if we can do all this, but give up the ability to feed our children, or the time to appreciate a sunset once in a while, or the courage to speak to our own neighbors? What have we gained, exactly, and why do we imagine that to be "progress"?

altered

As I said multiple times, I do not disagree and I think Howl is the only one who does with the concept of there not being a historical narrative arc. There's no far flung utopia on the far side of the path of progress. If there is a path of progress at all, it's a multi lane highway more twisty than Boston and handbrake U-turns are totally legal.

My issue was with something specific that aims a dagger at something important (that there is any fundamental change at all), and all the increasingly alarming rationalization he applied to it.
"I am that worst of all type of criminal...I cannot bring myself to do what you tell me, because you told me."

There's over 100 of us in this meat-suit. You'd think it runs like a ship, but it's more like a hundred and ten angry ghosts having an old-school QuakeWorld tournament, three people desperately trying to make sure the gamers don't go hungry or soil themselves, and the Facilities manager weeping in the corner as the garbage piles high.

Doktor Howl

Quote from: altered on July 08, 2020, 05:31:10 PM
As I said multiple times, I do not disagree and I think Howl is the only one who does with the concept of there not being a historical narrative arc. There's no far flung utopia on the far side of the path of progress. If there is a path of progress at all, it's a multi lane highway more twisty than Boston and handbrake U-turns are totally legal.

My issue was with something specific that aims a dagger at something important (that there is any fundamental change at all), and all the increasingly alarming rationalization he applied to it.

I just feel that progress is measured by killer robots.
Molon Lube

altered

Unfortunately, you weren't there for the Egyptian 3F8A-TEP dynasty, when androids running on papyrus and the necromantic energies of tomb-robbed pharaohs briefly took control of Upper Egypt and sealed a bunch of thieves in the very tombs they once robbed, the better to use their spirits to power more robots.

We still haven't reached again those lofty heights, when self-propelled murderbots ran the streets.
"I am that worst of all type of criminal...I cannot bring myself to do what you tell me, because you told me."

There's over 100 of us in this meat-suit. You'd think it runs like a ship, but it's more like a hundred and ten angry ghosts having an old-school QuakeWorld tournament, three people desperately trying to make sure the gamers don't go hungry or soil themselves, and the Facilities manager weeping in the corner as the garbage piles high.

minuspace

Quote
"One of the most insidious and dangerous assumptions we have is the silly idea that human history has a direction"

I get what you are saying here, particularly when viewed from a large scale, it seems naive to say there there is any "god given" telos, direction or evolution. Except for the adaptations necessary to keep-up with other chance "advancements" in the environment, it mostly looks like the direction is, if anything, centripetal.

Quote"History has no arc."§
See above

*dons dunce cap*

Except for the fact that history, that utterly temporal gesture, can be articulated in three separate "parts." Like the spiral path of interpretation, it has a beginning, middle and end. Those three centers of narrative gravity DO NOT hold absolute positions (ask Einstein); they are not privileged like the access we believe ourselves to have w.r.t. them. However, to say that because of that humans cannot improve themselves and accrue value over time, well, that's just silly

§ also nope, just ask Noah.

picoli

I don't get what this is about?

Doktor Howl

Quote from: picoli on August 01, 2020, 09:52:47 PM
I don't get what this is about?

You just sit there and thank whatever gods you have that you don't know what this is all about.

You aren't being black-bagged.
You aren't being shelled alongside your family in Yemen.
You aren't the guy who has to hose the spray tan crusties out of the folds in Donald Trump's flabby person.

It can always get worse, and looking won't help at all so, why traumatize yourself?
Molon Lube

discordia22

I understand both views...
I personally think, that you should live life to your fullest. I'm not sure if the people back then did, because nowadays also many people don't.
Everbody be living inside their own bubble and thinkung life is about them. On the one hand that's right, on the other hand, it's more that that. There's life out there, you have no clue about.
We'Re just tiny little beings in this enormous universe. Sometimes you feel like crap because you think, I'm not worthy...
Truth is, you should stop giving a f..k about what others think, because you do only live once, and nobody will remmeber you... at least not in the way you think they would. So do that crazy thing, call your crush, go to that party, kiss that person, just do it!
Live your life, before it's too late.
You only regret the things you haven't done...
stay close to people who feel like sunshine

Doktor Howl

Quote from: LMNO on July 08, 2020, 04:18:09 PM

So, that does speak to a fallacy, or a flaw, in a lot of people's thinking.  There isn't an "inevitable" push towards any kind of future.  There is no guiding hand pushing us towards the best possible world.  In the end, it is the work of the people to move a society forward, they can't just wait around for it to happen, because...
QuoteIt is the reason we are taught that the evils of slavery and genocide are "in the past" while the forces that drive them simmer in communities around the world.


But that's not true.

The initial push upward for humans was the horse collar.  We just had to decide to accept that push, which took about 800 years.  Loads of pushes every ten seconds now, and you have three possible responses:

1.  YAY!
2.  THE OLD WAYS ARE THE BEST!  DAMN KIDS!
and
3.  THE WORLD IS FUCKED AND IF YOU TRY TO FIX IT OR EVEN SLOW THE DAMAGE DOWN, YOU'RE PART OF THE PROBLEM.
Molon Lube