Jason Harvestdancer
Contributor
You guys want this for sports as well?
Yeah, let's do that.
Equality of outcomes both for team recruitment and for game results. There aren't enough midgets in the NBA.
You guys want this for sports as well?
If I'm a sports fan, a reader of books, a listener to music, a watcher of movies, an eater of food, a student, a driver of cars, a liver in houses, a participant in pretty much anything meaningful in life I don't want to see "equality of outcomes".
I want to see the best teams, the best writers, the best musicians, the best actors, the best chefs, the best educators, the best mechanics, the best architects, the best providers of anything meaningful in life thrive and have incentives to produce more high quality things.
And if not the best, at least someone more capable and motivated than the average guy off the street who gets paid the same whether what he produces is crap or not.
Every single highlighted best in your list is subjective and based on your reaction to these operations including your notion of the ability to absolutely judge these them. Could a great chef cook food you don't like? Could a great architect design a building you think is atrocious? You make a thing of the best sports teams, when a lot of people have exactly zero interest in sports and in fact may resent it when public money is spent building a stadium for these sports. You are speaking from the position of boss of your culture, but actually only reflecting your boss' view of "anything meaningful in life." You are suggesting that "all things that are meaningful in life" are subject to your judgment. A lot of people would disagree with you on that.
You guys want this for sports as well?
If I'm a sports fan, a reader of books, a listener to music, a watcher of movies, an eater of food, a student, a driver of cars, a liver in houses, a participant in pretty much anything meaningful in life I don't want to see "equality of outcomes".
I want to see the best teams, the best writers, the best musicians, the best actors, the best chefs, the best educators, the best mechanics, the best architects, the best providers of anything meaningful in life thrive and have incentives to produce more high quality things.
And if not the best, at least someone more capable and motivated than the average guy off the street who gets paid the same whether what he produces is crap or not.
Every single highlighted best in your list is subjective and based on your reaction to these operations including your notion of the ability to absolutely judge these them. Could a great chef cook food you don't like? Could a great architect design a building you think is atrocious? You make a thing of the best sports teams, when a lot of people have exactly zero interest in sports and in fact may resent it when public money is spent building a stadium for these sports. You are speaking from the position of boss of your culture, but actually only reflecting your boss' view of "anything meaningful in life." You are suggesting that "all things that are meaningful in life" are subject to your judgment. A lot of people would disagree with you on that.
I never ask the wrong questions.
Wow. That is a massive mountain of hubris. You'd be the first person in history for whom that is true, if it were true, which is isn't.
I just don't ask your questions. Luckily, it's a free forum. You get to ask your own, for yourself.
If no one thinks that equality is wrong, then asking why they think that is objectively the wrong question (or at least meaningless and without a possible answer).
Note, even if someone seems to offer and answer, it doesn't make the question meaningful.
Nearly ever poster in the thread has had to reformulate it to make it meaningful. Most posters are saying "It isn't wrong, so there is no "why", but methods of achieving it can be, and here is why that is the case". 1 or 2 people seem to be saying that it is wrong and here is why, but in fact that are saying "Equal outcomes in the context of unequal inputs is wrong", which is not what you asked. IOW, every reply is some form of "not applicable, but here is something more qualified that is applicable."
I don't see a single reply that actually takes your OP for what it asks and offers and answer. That should tell you something about the question.
Wow. That is a massive mountain of hubris. You'd be the first person in history for whom that is true, if it were true, which is isn't.
I just don't ask your questions. Luckily, it's a free forum. You get to ask your own, for yourself.
If no one thinks that equality is wrong, then asking why they think that is objectively the wrong question (or at least meaningless and without a possible answer).
Note, even if someone seems to offer and answer, it doesn't make the question meaningful.
Nearly ever poster in the thread has had to reformulate it to make it meaningful. Most posters are saying "It isn't wrong, so there is no "why", but methods of achieving it can be, and here is why that is the case". 1 or 2 people seem to be saying that it is wrong and here is why, but in fact that are saying "Equal outcomes in the context of unequal inputs is wrong", which is not what you asked. IOW, every reply is some form of "not applicable, but here is something more qualified that is applicable."
I don't see a single reply that actually takes your OP for what it asks and offers and answer. That should tell you something about the question.
It's quite common in political speeches and suchlike for people to speak positively about equality of opportunity. Not simply equality. Which implies something wrong with equality of outcome, or at least that it's a less worthy goal. Some (usually conservolibertarians) go so far as to directly condemn equality of outcome without reference to specific means of realising it.
Why, then, seems a reasonable question. I'd guess because they tacitly assume the false dichotomy Bilby so wittily exposes above, and/or that they are (or think they'd be) the winners.
Wow. That is a massive mountain of hubris. You'd be the first person in history for whom that is true, if it were true, which is isn't.
I just don't ask your questions. Luckily, it's a free forum. You get to ask your own, for yourself.
If no one thinks that equality is wrong, then asking why they think that is objectively the wrong question (or at least meaningless and without a possible answer).
Note, even if someone seems to offer and answer, it doesn't make the question meaningful.
Nearly ever poster in the thread has had to reformulate it to make it meaningful. Most posters are saying "It isn't wrong, so there is no "why", but methods of achieving it can be, and here is why that is the case". 1 or 2 people seem to be saying that it is wrong and here is why, but in fact that are saying "Equal outcomes in the context of unequal inputs is wrong", which is not what you asked. IOW, every reply is some form of "not applicable, but here is something more qualified that is applicable."
I don't see a single reply that actually takes your OP for what it asks and offers and answer. That should tell you something about the question.
It's quite common in political speeches and suchlike for people to speak positively about equality of opportunity. Not simply equality. Which implies something wrong with equality of outcome, or at least that it's a less worthy goal.
One thing that hasn't been considered: people themselves desire different things and different outcomes. Some people would rather work more hours and make more money, some would rather work less and have more leisure. Having everyone work the same hours and have the same amount of leisure is this a reduction in quality of life for those who have different preferences.
Another thing to consider: if outcomes are equal, far fewer people will invest their financial resources and make sacrifices of time and effort for the purpose of achieving a better outcome for themselves and their family. That makes everyone poorer.
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Another thing to consider: if outcomes are equal, far fewer people will invest their financial resources and make sacrifices of time and effort for the purpose of achieving a better outcome for themselves and their family. That makes everyone poorer.
No, but advocating equality of opportunity rather than equality implies you think there's something wrong with equality of outcome. "Chocolate ice cream" rather than "ice cream" on a list of recommended dishes means other flavours aren't. Not that ice cream and equality are really comparable.Wow. That is a massive mountain of hubris. You'd be the first person in history for whom that is true, if it were true, which is isn't.
I just don't ask your questions. Luckily, it's a free forum. You get to ask your own, for yourself.
If no one thinks that equality is wrong, then asking why they think that is objectively the wrong question (or at least meaningless and without a possible answer).
Note, even if someone seems to offer and answer, it doesn't make the question meaningful.
Nearly ever poster in the thread has had to reformulate it to make it meaningful. Most posters are saying "It isn't wrong, so there is no "why", but methods of achieving it can be, and here is why that is the case". 1 or 2 people seem to be saying that it is wrong and here is why, but in fact that are saying "Equal outcomes in the context of unequal inputs is wrong", which is not what you asked. IOW, every reply is some form of "not applicable, but here is something more qualified that is applicable."
I don't see a single reply that actually takes your OP for what it asks and offers and answer. That should tell you something about the question.
It's quite common in political speeches and suchlike for people to speak positively about equality of opportunity. Not simply equality. Which implies something wrong with equality of outcome, or at least that it's a less worthy goal.
If you crave chocolate and order chocolate ice cream does that imply you think their is something "wrong with" every other flavor?
Frequently not. We couldn't, for example, all own factories even if we were all equally entrepreneurial and determined.In fact, equal opportunity results in equal outcomes, whenever their is equal inputs and use of opportunities.
Patently wrong since they do. Because such people typically don't assume equal inputs.Thus, promoting oppportunity indirectly promotes equality under many circumstances. Thus a person who thought equal outcomes were generally wrong and to be avoided, would not support equal opportunity.
Not really.Back to the ice cream, opportunity is like chocolate ice-cream with nuts.
If the two typically come together, as you suggest above with equality of opportunity and outcome, it would indeed imply that they have a problem with nuts.People order that ice cream, and you ask them "What's wrong with nuts?" Its a dumb question, because those people clearly have no problem with nuts, they just don't prefer an entire bowl of nothing but nuts over all other options.
No, but advocating equality of opportunity rather than equality implies you think there's something wrong with equality of outcome. "Chocolate ice cream" rather than "ice cream" on a list of recommended dishes means other flavours aren't.Wow. That is a massive mountain of hubris. You'd be the first person in history for whom that is true, if it were true, which is isn't.
I just don't ask your questions. Luckily, it's a free forum. You get to ask your own, for yourself.
If no one thinks that equality is wrong, then asking why they think that is objectively the wrong question (or at least meaningless and without a possible answer).
Note, even if someone seems to offer and answer, it doesn't make the question meaningful.
Nearly ever poster in the thread has had to reformulate it to make it meaningful. Most posters are saying "It isn't wrong, so there is no "why", but methods of achieving it can be, and here is why that is the case". 1 or 2 people seem to be saying that it is wrong and here is why, but in fact that are saying "Equal outcomes in the context of unequal inputs is wrong", which is not what you asked. IOW, every reply is some form of "not applicable, but here is something more qualified that is applicable."
I don't see a single reply that actually takes your OP for what it asks and offers and answer. That should tell you something about the question.
It's quite common in political speeches and suchlike for people to speak positively about equality of opportunity. Not simply equality. Which implies something wrong with equality of outcome, or at least that it's a less worthy goal.
If you crave chocolate and order chocolate ice cream does that imply you think their is something "wrong with" every other flavor?
The validity of an analogy lies in the comparibility of the logical relations among things. The similarity of the things themselves has no relevance. What is comparable is the logical fallacy in your argument and the one in inferring an anti-vanilla position in a person who orders chocolate. They can adore both, but choose chocolate. There is no logical nor psychological connection between having a relatively higher preference for A over B, and thinking that B is wrong.Not that ice cream and equality are really comparable.
Frequently not. We couldn't, for example, all own factories even if we were all equally entrepreneurial and determined.In fact, equal opportunity results in equal outcomes, whenever their is equal inputs and use of opportunities.
First, I explicitly stated that the relationship is conditional and not guaranteed, so your example that you (wrongly) think doesn't have this relationship has zero relevance to my argument and provides no support for yours. Equal opportunity eliminates one major source of unequal outcomes, thus overall the more opportunities are equal, the more outcomes will be equal. Thus, one is indirectly supporting overall increase in equal outcomes by supporting equal opportunity. Second, your example is invalid because you wrongly presume equal opportunity to own a factory. Opportunity is only partly impacted by law. It is also restrained by logic and the basic properties of reality. The fact is that we absolutely can all own a factory, so long as it is either not simultaneously and/or we each are the sole employee of the factory we own. It is only true that it implausible for us all to own a factories simultaneously that employ other people. That is a constraint imposed by the basic fact of existence that a person cannot be in two places at once. Thus, the moment one person owns a multi-employee factory, that reduces the opportunity of everyone else who doesn't own one from owning one. Thus, opportunity is not equal and that is partly why the outcome is not equal.
Patently wrong since they do. Because such people typically don't assume equal inputs.Thus, promoting oppportunity indirectly promotes equality under many circumstances. Thus a person who thought equal outcomes were generally wrong and to be avoided, would not support equal opportunity.
Not really.Back to the ice cream, opportunity is like chocolate ice-cream with nuts.
If the two typically come together, as you suggest above with equality of opportunity and outcome, it would indeed imply that they have a problem with nuts.People order that ice cream, and you ask them "What's wrong with nuts?" Its a dumb question, because those people clearly have no problem with nuts, they just don't prefer an entire bowl of nothing but nuts over all other options.
Why is equality of outcomes wrong?
I don't know if it's wrong or not but I don't think equality of outcomes is something that is necessary.
I don't think people care if outcomes are equal or not. They just want to know that they had a fair chance at success. IMO that's one our problems right now: the game is rigged so everyone doesn't have a fair chance at success.
As an example:
If I shell out $80,000 for my kids education, I am paying for him to be educated, not have a fair chance at being educated.
We don't need to pay CEO's 300 times the average workers wages to get enough qualified CEOs. How do I know this? Because when we paid CEOs only 30 times the average workers wages we had no shortage of qualified CEOs willing to work. There is a disincentive when you pay them too much and you base their pay on short term results, they are willing to take too much risk on to earn their bonuses realizing that they can collect their bonuses for three or so years and then have a comfortable retirement.