Prometheus
Acolyte of Víðarr
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2007
- Messages
- 50,595
Why does it seem so hard to enforce these laws, these behaviors? Why is it so hard to obey them? How many good people are "criminals" on a daily basis as a result of these attempts to enforce these behaviors? Whats the underlining issue there?Garbage. A law is a set of rules determined by society to force or to deter a behavior. If someone does not live by society's rules, you get punished. You have the option of "opting out" by emigrating or living in a forest somewhere.
Okay, I'll bite: What is the underlying issue there?
I dont know![]()
You asked the question first. I see three reasonable possibilities as to why you did so:
- You intended it as a rhetorical question, in which case you must have been trying to make a point. If this is the case, then it would be helpful if you would just state your point in plain language.
- You intended it as a sincere question that you would like to know the answer to. If this is the case, then you must have some reason to believe that knowing the answer to this question would be helpful in the context of this thread. If this is true then you might try explaining why you want to know the answer to this question. That way, one or more of us might be persuaded to try to help you answer your question, and the discussion might move forward on productive ground.
- You were just being careless, and you don't actually have any reason for asking the question in the first place. This is, of course, a completely fogiveable discourse error -- provided, of course, that you explain that this is the case so that we don't waste each other's time any further.
has me leaning towards #3. Am I wrong?I don't know![]()
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You chose not to respond to this. I hope that I did not inadvertantly offend you. Although I was being deliberately sarcastic, any tone of mockery you may have detected is aimed squarely at Fresco, not yourself. In fact, my point is a serious one. What I read on the TVP website and in discussions like this one really does remind me of the language used by apologists for various religions. Including an apparent willingness to believe a lot of fairly outrageous claims, presented in poorly formed arguments rife with logical fallacies, and without any verifiable supporting evidence. Of course, I can certainly understand if you're uncomfortable pursuing this point further, so unless you wish to revisit it, I'll let the matter drop.Prometheus said:Ahh. The dreaded 'Well we can agree that there is a failure of the system.A criminal is as much a failure of the individual as of the system.DevilSystem Made Me Do It' defense. TVP sounds more and more like a religion all the time. Are you sure Fresco isn't really a Raellian?![]()
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Suppose the TVP Central Computer crunches numbers and resource lists and decides that, in order to get the magic robots to supply enough corndogs to the 'distribution center' at the Texas State Fair, they'll need you to put in a 40 hour work week for 50 weeks per year programming and maintaining their systems. Will you do it? Why?With the extra time on my hands I could contribute in many more meaningful ways than I do now. That goes for most of the population I suppose. The majority of the population does not need to do the work they do because machines could do that work right now. Many machines are doing the work now. I see it more and more. The replacement of human labor by machines will be a bigger problem as time goes on. How will we deal with that? What are the consequences of that?Prometheus said:Out of curiousity, just what work/responsibilities do you see yourself undertaking in a TVP world? How/what will you contribute?Just stating the facts.Therefore you absolve yourself of any work or responsibility. Bravo.
Please DO NOT suggest that that amount of human labor won't be necessary unless you can show the calculations and verifiable data to back up the assertion.
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Well, who will be performing this labor? Why will they want to do so?Definitely maintaining and programming and yes its labor.Prometheus said:You previously said that humans would still be involved in designing, building, programming and maintaining the magic robots. That's labor.The labor costs would seem to magically disappear but it would be the technology that would make the labor deminish.No. There is an energy, resource, time, labor etc etc etc cost. It does not magically dissapear.
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What will this city of all scientists be studying? How will their efforts be organized and directed? How will they avoid the sorts of problems encountered by others who have already tried similar experiments? What if they end up proving that such a city cannot work after all?I think the first city would be research so they would all be scientists.Prometheus said:In which case it's not really demonstrating anything except for the present system's ability to provide for a city full of dependant hangers-on who aren't contributing anything back. Such a city would actually constitute proof that our present system is better than TVP could ever be.A lot of what you would see in a demo city could be self sustaining but there would still be the current system that it would have to operate in. It could be a good example though. A lot of aspects of the demo city would run like it would in a RBE.A nice little utopia that is self sustaining with...what exactly? Oh yeah, money from the outside world, resources from the outside world, etc. etc. etc. from the outside world.![]()
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Of course business would exist. Removing money and profit motive doesn't change the fact that stuff has to get done and someone or something has to organize and direct it. Non-profit corporations still need business plans. What's yours?Yes but business does not exist in TVP.Prometheus said:The decision not to compare TVP to a fantasy theme park is perhaps the most reasonable part of your entire argument. Fantasy theme parks actually have a working business model.It would be suggesting a new way of doing thing in society in general and Disney World is not doing that.Its not a threat to anything because it would be treated at the level of Disney World, a nice theme park.
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If you can't see the obvious, there's not much I can do to help you. Have you actually read Marx or any subsequent Marxist philosophers? Eliminating money does not in any way mean that TVP's economy is not Marxist.What’s a Marxist? I hear a lot of definitions lately but they don’t seem to relate to TVP. When people here about TVP there only frame of reference is Marxism but I don’t see the similarities.Prometheus said:This sounds as if your primary complaint with democracy is that its democratic. Are you sure you're not a Marxist?I'm saying your vote isn’t effective to make real change. Also, any changes are superficial and do not address underlining problems. If your agenda is to uphold the same values and power structures then why would you make real changes?More vague statements that answer nothing and say absolutely nothing.
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I guess my main complaint about the current system would be the monetary part and its propensity for corruption in all levels of society but I'm talking about voting for political candidates.Prometheus said:Choosing not to participate for even a single day in the system that safeguards you and your belongings, that nourishes, shelters, clothes and entertains you, that makes it possible for you to sit around dreaming up all this nonsense in the first place and maintains the worldwide computer network on which you spout it, just because you don't 'believe in it? Yes, I would call that LAZY.So people choose to not vote because they're lazy but never because they don't want to participate in a system they don't believe in?Sure it is. I consider that "statement" on par with the apathetic and lazy crowd. Not much relevance.
You think that corruption requires money as a motivating factor? Have you never witnessed anyone cheating at a game when there was no money at stake?
I don't need to tell myself anything to make myself feel better. When I feel down, I play with my daughter or I go out and help someone who needs assistance. Both strategies work fantastically well. As to the perceived futility of voting, I often feel the same way that you describe. Luckily, since 2000 I now have a ready example to help me keep my sense of perspective. Do you really believe things would be the same today had George Bush not been 'elected' by what amounted to only a few hundred votes and a bunch of technical glitches? Voting does make a difference--not necessarily consistently or predictably, but your participation does count. Yes, electoral systems have lot's of room for improvement, and change comes slowly. Compare the political system of today with that of Venice during the Renaissance, though, and you might not be so down on the current system.If its this guy or that guy is almost totally irrelevant. They will both run the country in very similar ways and the average person will not see a difference in their daily lives. Either one can win. They are there to uphold the current structures so why would they make change? I think it makes people feel like they a part of something but it doesn’t really mean they are participating in any meaningful ways. You can tell yourself that if it makes you feel better though.
Tell that to the Iraqi's.I pay taxes so I participate regardless of if I vote or not. And I do vote BTW. I'm not sure it matters though. Not voting is not "not participating". I pay tax and live in society so I'm in it. Voting is irrelevant.
I didn't say that you are lazy. I said that not voting and otherwise participating in society is lazy. If you vote, and otherwise participate, then obviously this comment does not apply to you.Also, if I’m lazy, why do I volunteer my time to the Cancer Society or ride bikes for miles every day. Define lazy. People have strange definitions of lazy it seems.
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I use the term 'Venusians' as shorthand for "Proponents of The Venus Project." I do not know if that's what you consider yourself to be or not, but it seems like a reasonable guess, so far.Am I a Venusians? What is that exactly? Do they despise capitalism? Can I like Capitalism and be a "Venusian"? If I can't like Capitalism and be Venusian at the same time then I suppose I am not one. I reap the benefits of our current social structures on a daily basis and am happy doing so...it is getting pretty old though. Like I said before, it is showing its age. It has many problems and is downright scary in many respects yet I thrive in it. Not all people interested in the concept of a RBE are bitter at the worldPrometheus said:LOL. So rather than actually change the system they despise, Venusians just want to sit around and wait for it to change all by itself, then they plan to take credit for the change!This system will not vanish and be replaced with fantasy but over decades it will evolve into a better system and that system might be "post scarcity".Looks like you've caught to the level of High School civics class. Congrats. Agreed so it changes NOT vanished into a puff of smoke to be replaced by an untried fantasy based system.![]()
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For an extremely stimulating and in depth discussion of these questions, I'd recommend this book to you. Briefly, the capacity for violence and competition is important, but the same evolutionary principles that make this so, also make it likely that exceptions to the rule will sometimes arise.Can you briefly tell me what it is? Does it have something to do with competition and violence? Why am I not this way? Have I not been exposed to an environment that makes me show it? Am I not "human" enough?Prometheus said:Is that what you think we mean when we say 'human nature'? No wonder you're confused! First of all, claiming that human nature doesn't exist is nonsensical. Humans have something which allows us to define them as human. Whatever that something turns out to be is our nature. Certainly, many people disagree about just what that nature is, but saying it doesn't exist at all is just irrational. As to the question of what that nature is, I suggest you might want to read up on some science. Particularly since you seem to think TVP will be science-based.I don’t ignore human nature. It doesn’t exist. It works pretty well as a cop-out excuse for many human's to keep doing what they are doing though. "I cant help killing, competing and destroying! Its human nature!" Please.How does your TVP deal with this problem where human nature(which you seem to ignore) contradicts hard facts?
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Fair enough.I'm aware it is old. I've had similar conversations a decade or two ago. This very subject has gone on for...probably hundreds of years now. I'm just not finished yetPrometheus said:Not as long as you wish to ignore the fact that the arguments/evidence against it need not be original either. In fact, both sides of this discussion have, thus far, been nothing but old hat. Add some more History to the reading list, when you get through with Science.Its not totally original. If it is or is not original is totally irrelevant.Same thing, just dressed up in shiny clothes and robots. Do you realize how unoriginal this idea is?![]()
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Personally, I think that a far more fruitful avenue to explore is that of changing the electoral system to use something like either Approval Voting or Condorcet Voting, plus putting a lot more resources into education. Such change would help to empower the voting population to advocate for its own wants and needs a lot more effectively, and thus eliminate the sort of futility that you described above. That's a discussion for another thread, though.I love this question! So how might we do better? What would it look like and why? Would a medium of exchange such as money or barter be involved? Why? If so then how would there be any real change? What does the future look like?Prometheus said:Do you actually think there's anybody on Earth who doesn't think that we could do things better in the future?The longer I vote and remain involved in the current social system the more I become convinced that there are better ways we could do things in the future.In YOUR OWN WORDS:" I don’t want a real democracy because I would need to vote 100 times a day on every decision and I don’t have the knowledge to vote on everything. I'm ignorant to many important subjects just like all of us are so why would I put my ignorant, worthless opinion on everything we need to do?"
Tell me what should I assume?![]()
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I'm not directly trying to change the current system at all. I spend my time teaching illiterate adults to read, helping high school drop-outs get into college, and helping immigrants to become U.S. citizens, find jobs and start their own businesses. I get to see substantial positive results from my labors a lot faster than those who are out to change the world.I'm thinking about it, talking about it, even taking indirect action towards it. What are you doing?Prometheus said:Well, then what are you doing about it?I'm not wishing it away.That continues to be false no matter how often you repeat it. The problems are as much about human nature as much as technical problems. Wishing it away won't make it so.
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Advancing technology has never much reduced the amount of labor people have to do. All it does is make it possible for them to achieve larger or substantially different effects for the same amount of labor, and it sometimes alters the type of labor required. I suspect that this will continue to be true in the future.The AI would be there for managment of our resources but not our personal lives. It would reduce the need for many aspects of our current government and corporate bodys as well.Prometheus said:Well then why bother with AI in the first place?The AI doesn’t need to worry about us. We do.Really? How will your AI make actual decisions without such information? As have been mentioned by others, the only way for your AI to be even semi-reliable is to monitor everything.
