Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 17,033
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
How in the hell is this still going on? I need to check ignored threads more often...
@southernhybrid, I imagine threads like these happen because people want to argue, somehow, over whether people have an obligation to "reprogram themselves".
I might imagine it survives as a worldview because as perverse as the view that we cannot reprogram ourselves may be, it benefits those who sell the viewpoint. For those who some person who convinces of such a thing, gratitude of them taking on the weight of living and "driving" becomes a thing, attachment and even leadership status granted from those who they convince to believe that they lack freedom of will.
I think The Never Ending Story had it right: those who have no dreams of their own are easy to control.
People sell the abdication of this grand weight of living as a great service and joyful thing, forgetting the reason they ever carried the weight.
Big dreams are surprisingly heavy, and carrying these despite the costs is done because to see a dream birthed into reality is a wondrous thing, often the product of much work and sacrifice... And it is harder to accomplish a dream when others do not work together with you to make it all happen.
We fight for the power to accomplish our dreams, and to do that effectively, we have to plan our actions ahead of time, or at least know how to combine present moments in ways that take us towards what we want. To form immediate pathfinding tasks, we have to at least have an idea of where we want to be or go, even if that is just "not here", but it's certainly something quite attainable that we can expect humans to learn how to do, and when they do not, I think we are well within our rights to keep such chaotic and thoughtless people away from anything important that they could spasm their way into fucking up.
Hard determinism to me has the appearance of an argument that people cannot somehow come to program themselves. So does Libertarianism, or some other such idea that people are not mechanical and thus are not reprogrammable and thus only for for punishment and scaring with threats.
Both of those camps seem to have an issue with the idea that humans' responsibility to police ourselves, and that those who do not have failed in their responsibility to each other, but that they can still change.
Like, hard determinists seem to think that people can't change themselves when they can, and libertarians seem to pretend that people can change themselves and that it's so fucking easy when it's not.
There's a compromise between these, that people can change themselves but that the ways to do it are hard and require work over time, and sometimes they require help, and that they can be shown to be responsible, being what they are, for both their successes and failures.
In many ways, I myself am resentful over this, mostly that it feels like every time I see this shit, I feel compelled to spend an hour of my day talking about it.
And then I ask... "What else would I be doing but smoking fat blunts, waiting for sales emails, and planning a finance pitch for a painfully small business loan?"
Anyway, back to smoking the fat blunts.
@southernhybrid, I imagine threads like these happen because people want to argue, somehow, over whether people have an obligation to "reprogram themselves".
I might imagine it survives as a worldview because as perverse as the view that we cannot reprogram ourselves may be, it benefits those who sell the viewpoint. For those who some person who convinces of such a thing, gratitude of them taking on the weight of living and "driving" becomes a thing, attachment and even leadership status granted from those who they convince to believe that they lack freedom of will.
I think The Never Ending Story had it right: those who have no dreams of their own are easy to control.
People sell the abdication of this grand weight of living as a great service and joyful thing, forgetting the reason they ever carried the weight.
Big dreams are surprisingly heavy, and carrying these despite the costs is done because to see a dream birthed into reality is a wondrous thing, often the product of much work and sacrifice... And it is harder to accomplish a dream when others do not work together with you to make it all happen.
We fight for the power to accomplish our dreams, and to do that effectively, we have to plan our actions ahead of time, or at least know how to combine present moments in ways that take us towards what we want. To form immediate pathfinding tasks, we have to at least have an idea of where we want to be or go, even if that is just "not here", but it's certainly something quite attainable that we can expect humans to learn how to do, and when they do not, I think we are well within our rights to keep such chaotic and thoughtless people away from anything important that they could spasm their way into fucking up.
Hard determinism to me has the appearance of an argument that people cannot somehow come to program themselves. So does Libertarianism, or some other such idea that people are not mechanical and thus are not reprogrammable and thus only for for punishment and scaring with threats.
Both of those camps seem to have an issue with the idea that humans' responsibility to police ourselves, and that those who do not have failed in their responsibility to each other, but that they can still change.
Like, hard determinists seem to think that people can't change themselves when they can, and libertarians seem to pretend that people can change themselves and that it's so fucking easy when it's not.
There's a compromise between these, that people can change themselves but that the ways to do it are hard and require work over time, and sometimes they require help, and that they can be shown to be responsible, being what they are, for both their successes and failures.
In many ways, I myself am resentful over this, mostly that it feels like every time I see this shit, I feel compelled to spend an hour of my day talking about it.
And then I ask... "What else would I be doing but smoking fat blunts, waiting for sales emails, and planning a finance pitch for a painfully small business loan?"
Anyway, back to smoking the fat blunts.