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7/31/11 - The goal of society - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Sunday, July 31, 2011

The goal of society

This is a bit oversimplified, but it does bring some clarity to matters governmental:


Society should be goal-oriented. At present, the only goal of society is to have no goals -- or to allow everyone to be "free" enough to establish their own goals for whatever reasons they see fit. However, you can't predicate your political philosophy on "freedom," because:


1. Where do you decide to draw the arbitrary line? How free should people be allowed to be? If you concede that there should be some limitations, then how is anyone under the guidance of the proposed system free in the first place, and why is freedom the goal touted?


2. There is no such thing as freedom without context; we can only be free from specific things. Evaluate each potential constraint on its own terms, define its qualities, determine the value of those qualities, and then issue a decree regarding the necessity of freedom from the constraint.


3. Freedom from constraints is a means to an end; it can be used for any number of ends, all with their own pros and cons. Why not cut out the archaic Enlightenment rhetoric altogether and define some real goals for your society -- per its ideals?

Posted by Leaving Society at 1:14 PM 

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Labels: governmental systems

4 comments:


Francois TremblayJuly 31, 2011 at 11:22 PM

The "real goal" IS freedom, with all that this entails. Any other "real goal" not compatible with freedom would represent an imposition of harm.


There is no arbitrary line: it's either all or nothing. Either total freedom, or no freedom at all. No stable middle ground can exist.


Reply


Leaving SocietyAugust 1, 2011 at 7:37 PM

So if it's all or nothing, that means that we should be free to rape and torture, yes? If not, then do you have a special definition for "all or nothing"? Better to use the commonly accepted terminology than to make a special case for yourself -- lest things get convoluted.


Further, what differentiates having children from other forms of imposed harm? If it really is a good thing to coerce people into not killing each other, then why can't we coerce people into not reproducing?


The value, here, is not in imposition versus lack of imposition, but rather, the mere elimination of negatives. If an imposition eliminates a negative generated by another imposition, then the former imposition is acceptable for pragmatic purposes; this has to do with what one could refer to as a value equation, which seeks to reduce suffering. It really doesn't matter whether a plus sign makes its way into the equation at some point -- just that what's on the other side of the equals sign is less than the number that we started out with.


Reply


Leaving SocietyAugust 1, 2011 at 7:49 PM

A simple equation:


Let imposition A = -50

Let imposition B = -25


imposition B - imposition A = 25


We have thus generated a positive value of 25, meaning that, while suffering occurred, the amount negated was so great as to push the result into the positive.


Reply


Francois TremblayAugust 2, 2011 at 12:40 AM

"So if it's all or nothing, that means that we should be free to rape and torture, yes?"


Nope. Rape and torture are impositions on someone else's freedom.



"Further, what differentiates having children from other forms of imposed harm? If it really is a good thing to coerce people into not killing each other, then why can't we coerce people into not reproducing?"


And why the hell not? Is it not criminal to impose harm? If you disagree, you better explain why.



"The value, here, is not in imposition versus lack of imposition, but rather, the mere elimination of negatives. If an imposition eliminates a negative generated by another imposition, then the former imposition is acceptable for pragmatic purposes;"


Utilitarian bullcrap.


7/31/11 - No leadership does not equal no regulation - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Sunday, July 31, 2011

No leadership does not equal no regulation

Some axioms:


1. There exist transmittable information patterns which guide the course of other information patterns in the universe. The former patterns are best understood when condensed into discrete concepts, or "ideas."


2. There exist facilitators, senders, recipients, and processors of the aforementioned information patterns. These could be loosely defined as information agents, and are currently most apparent in the form of human beings.


3. Information agents should agree upon a foundational set of information patterns as "ideals." Furthermore, this set should serve as the broadest base for work. For example, "Suffering is unwanted among sentient beings" is a maxim that should probably aid in the foundation of this base.


4. Ideals, while serving as the base of society over both self-satisfaction and ruling groups, should be questioned in order to promote consistency and uniformity among information agents. This axiom is the -- or one of the -- meta-ideals.


5. In theory, a meta-ideal could be questioned by a meta-ideal another layer back in the chain, but as this process has the potential to carry on ad infinitum and has no apparent point of logical termination, it is best, for practical reasons, to avoid it and instead opt to carry out the above in a manner which encourages positive demonstrable results.


On a related note, the IEEE standards are great examples of how information can be centrally standardized without the interference of any particular group of people. No one "rules" the IEEE or keeps "the people" who use its standards "out of power," yet networking technologies seem to get on just fine; likewise, Microsoft, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, etc. do not "enforce" IEEE standards or promise punishment for breaking with them.


Of course, the difference between a truly open system promoting the establishment of standards and the IEEE is that the latter exists within a capitalist paradigm, and is therefore channeled through corporate activities. Imagine if, instead of computing organizations, standards similar to those endorsed by the IEEE existed for nation-states, and that those states, binded by the standards, no longer had a reason to exist.

Posted by Leaving Society at 12:55 PM 


Labels: ideal society, meta-cognition, meta-ideals

1 comment:


AnonymousNovember 2, 2011 at 2:33 PM

Anything you can do, I can do meta.


I can do anything meta than you.


Reply

7/31/11 - Arguments against balance in the universe - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Arguments against balance in the universe

1. The ratio of "empty" space to stars and planets is astronomical. If life is part of some magnificent order, then why is the universe filled with cold blackness instead of green pastures and lakes? The current compilation of evidence points toward there being very little, if any, physical advantage in existing as a complex cluster of matter -- especially the kind that moves around and consumes other clusters of matter in order to resist entropy. Almost all of the universe is hostile to large masses, and life in particular. Seriously, just exiting the Earth's atmosphere is incredibly dangerous for sentient beings. How unfortunately small our safety zone is when contrasted with its encasing!


2. Extinction events happen all the time. Was there balance on Earth during the Permian Extinction, when upward of ninety percent of marine life vanished outright?


3. There is nothing against which we can compare the universe, so any relative statement regarding how structured or balanced it is is shortsighted. The universe's processes are orderly? Relative to what?


Actually, we can compare the universe's processes to another kind of process: the human kind. I'm pretty sure that no one on Earth would think it a good idea to build a computer case the size of a stadium just to store parts no larger than those found in modern PCs.


And if someone ever did? Perhaps the people of the future would marvel in awe and wonderment at the result, but that doesn't mean that they would subsequently desire to imitate it. Fascination does not entail admiration.

Posted by Leaving Society at 12:34 PM 


Labels: anti-bias, anti-nature, bias, life, universe

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7/31/11 Re: Entropy - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Re: Entropy

So I got the following anonymous email today as a complement to a comment somewhere regarding the inevitability of the heat death of the universe:


Even if truth hurts, it is better to accept it and face the

consequences. I. e. that life is ultimately pointless and heads

nowhere. We lost. I laughed. Then cried. Soon I'm dead. Thanks. Not.


First, I want to point out that the reason for why I am writing my reply here rather than via email is because this message was sent by an Austrian remailer. I've had stranger things happen, but regardless, I'm not a fan of one-sided conversations where one of the parties isn't allowed to participate or defend his stance. The reply, unaltered, to... someone:


1. Why are you using a remailer? What are the consequences of revealing your email address to me? Is it so frightening to you to have me know who your ISP is -- or even just your mail provider? What could I possibly do with this information? Google you? Yikes!


Guess not everyone is into the idea of transparent communications.


2. When the ostensibly true "hurts," I embrace the pain for the greater good. What hurts more than the truth, though, is the human species' insistence on promoting absolute certainty with regard to epistemological claims. I find it fascinating that you are able to predict, with such alleged precision, events trillions upon trillions of years into the future. The time scales involved in your claims are absurd to imagine; as a result, your conclusions are even more so.


3. Current predictions regarding the heat death of the universe do not utilize the life variable, because doing so would make any subsequent claims baseless and erratic in conclusion. Life -- and, consequently, intelligent information agents, both artificial and organic -- resist entropic decay by actively seeking to keep themselves indefinitely open as systems. Given that I have no idea what the universe will look like in a trillion trillion years, I have no idea what the implications are for both the success and the failure of these processes. I also have no idea whether one outcome or the other will result; the future of information is more uncertain now than it has ever been in human history.


4. We are presently unable to detect approximately 95% of the universe, and only speculate that it exists because we can measure its effects on the 5% that we can observe. In what ways intelligent information agents will be able to utilize dark energy a billion years from now is unknown.


Something to keep in mind, here, is that, if protons decay into nothing at some point, the universe will not be empty afterward; on the contrary, it will be filled with energy -- so much energy that the energy content at this instant will be laughable by comparison. If current models of the universe are accurate, then dark energy will continue to expand the fabric of spacetime for, potentially, eternity. Does this mean anything for intelligence one way or another? No, because we don't know what dark energy is.


5. During Einstein's time, we only had evidence for the existence of a single galaxy; today, we are aware of hundreds of billions. Furthermore, recent evidence in the field of astronomy has pointed toward the possibility that the universe is at least 250 times larger than we've been thinking it is, and that, as a result of inflation, the light cone spanning the diameter of the visible universe is minuscule in contrast to the vast distance separating our central point of observation from all of material reality outside of the cone.


The moral of the story is thus: Never forget that your time period containing all of the answers to the universe's mysteries is an immense coincidence for you, and that everyone to have ever thought this has been wrong to date. Sometimes it is better to accept that we do not know much about our bizarre situation than to feign authority out of some psychological need to feel secure in our certainty that, yes, the universe is a fatalistic place, and there's nothing that we can do about it.


It may feel good to believe that everything is okay, but feeling secure in our certainty has the same effect regardless of whether we're sure that it's all okay or that it's all terrible. I can tell from your reply that you are consoled by your indisputable grasp on truth; it is, after all, easier to accept that everything sucks -- or that everything is wonderful -- than it is to accept that our context is a gigantic unknown. It's human nurture to tend toward confidence and security, after all. Not having an answer causes discomfort. We can't have that!


Having said all of the above, I have no hope for the future, and think that the most likely outcome for life on Earth is that it will all get eradicated when the sun becomes a red giant. If this does happen, it will be a horrific event, but it is possible that afterward, there will never be any horrific events anywhere ever again. 

Posted by Leaving Society at 11:11 AM 

Labels: absolutism, anti-bias, bias, certainty, entropy, heat death, universe

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7/15/11 - My take on the non-identity problem - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Friday, July 15, 2011

My take on the non-identity problem

As posted previously here:


The non-identity problem forsakes the essence of sentient organisms, because no sentient organism truly has a discrete identity to begin with. You, for example, are probably much more "me" than the seven-year-old kid whom my memory bank has essentially tricked me, for evolutionary reasons, into thinking is me. I likely contain very little, if any, of the original chemical content of that seven-year-old kid -- and my reactions, propensities, ideals, and general disposition are all drastically different as well.


So, then, if there are no "selves" to begin with, what we're actually dealing with are sensations. If we could push a button that removed all the meat and bones which encapsulate the nerves that do the feeling, we'd realize much more quickly that there are no more hard boundaries between one bundle of nerves and another than there are between one asteroid and another. Even the Earth used to be two "separate" planets billions of years ago -- before they collided with one another and formed what we call "Earth" today.


If you spill two drinks onto the floor at the same time, you clean them up as one mess; you don't view them as separate problems. Sensation is no different. In fact, with every child that gets "spilled" onto the carpet of the world, it should become even more prudent for us to initiate a cleanup. If we can quantify our progress, it should be in electrical signals eliminated -- not persons.


Another way of addressing the non-identity problem is by alerting whoever is wielding it to the fact that proactive maintenance is often considered preferable in business environments over retroactive or reactive maintenance. To prevent a server crash, you implement a backup policy on your network; you don't overload your computers or up the heat in the server room intentionally "just for fun" and then correct any errors after the fact. Why should it be any different for living things merely because they possess the illusions of free will and individuality?

Posted by Leaving Society at 7:52 PM 

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Labels: antinatalism, confirmation bias

3 comments:


Francois TremblayJuly 16, 2011 at 3:17 AM

You've made that argument on your blog before and I can't say I really agree with it. However I do have an entry coming on the NIP also.


Reply


Leaving SocietyJuly 31, 2011 at 11:44 AM

I don't understand. Are you professing your allegiance to the ideal of the individual at the expense of the ideal of the collective? What makes anyone's suffering any more real or important than anyone else's?


My argument is merely that the non-identity "problem" isn't even a problem to begin with, as it proposes that it's possible for there to be "potential persons." On the contrary, any potential person has already existed a billion times over; preventing this person from emerging yet again is certainly a good thing, but it's also no more good than doing something about its current existence.


Reply


AnonymousNovember 2, 2011 at 11:46 AM

Oh no! Those poor atomic assemblages undergoing negative electronic stimulation! If you cut them, do they not bleed?


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7/9/11 - People are uninformed and lack direction - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Saturday, July 9, 2011

People are uninformed and lack direction

I once watched a film with a strong environmentalist slant to it which criticized overpopulation and, on some level, the individualistic capitalism required for there to be unregulated reproduction in the first place. I agreed with a lot of what was offered, but not all. However, I appreciated the effort.


I also once visited an Internet message board where someone who very poorly criticized the film was told to "stay the hell away" from the board if he didn't have anything constructive to add, critical or otherwise.


I find this highly ironic, since the best thing to offer the person who'd made the thread would have been education. Rather than shoo the person away for his belligerence, why not interview him? You may not change his mind, but it's equally unlikely that you'll change his mind about continuing to post on the board.


It's ironic because the film criticized social alienation, and what better way to alienate those who oppose our views than to tell them to shut up and leave? This kind of behavior is everywhere in our society; most people enjoy displaying their intellectual accomplishments, but very few are actually living by what they say. Pathetic.

Posted by Leaving Society at 8:50 PM 


Labels: hypocrisy, social problems

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7/9/11 - Why we shouldn't leave anyone in charge - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes


Saturday, July 9, 2011

Why we shouldn't leave anyone in charge

1. Leaving a set group of exclusive people in charge of society necessarily causes good ideas to get excluded from the meme pool.


2. On the other hand, getting rid of government really only means that a manmade government will be replaced by nature. This is why anarchism fails.


3. Therefore, the solution is to be ruled not by men, and not by nature, but by a methodology.


There is no President of the scientific community; on the other hand, "cryptozoologists" aren't considered real scientists for a reason.


All decisions should be made within the parameters of something akin to the scientific community; there is no qualitative difference between "We shouldn't waste resources" and "E=mc^2".

Posted by Leaving Society at 8:21 PM 


Labels: foundational solutions, governmental systems, idearchy

13 comments:


Francois TremblayJuly 12, 2011 at 11:31 PM

"2. On the other hand, getting rid of government really only means that a manmade government will be replaced by nature. This is why anarchism fails."


Sorry, nope. That's not what Anarchism is. Anarchism is the systematic opposition to hierarchies. Not "to be replaced by nature."


Reply


Leaving SocietyJuly 31, 2011 at 11:40 AM

So all variants of communism are also variants of anarchism? It's impossible to have regulation and centralization without hierarchy?


In order to improve ourselves and clean this mess up, we'll need, at the minimum, evaluations of individual competency and self-consistency. Anarchism is the antithesis to this ideal.


Reply


Leaving SocietyJuly 31, 2011 at 11:54 AM

Also, on a side note, I fail to understand your marriage of anarchism and antinatalism. I'm assuming that you are aware that most anarchists are not antinatalists, and vice versa.


It is far more efficient to have centrally administered protocols and standards -- including ones pertinent to ideation, or the process of forming and selecting ideas -- than it is to live without such things. In theory, a hierarchy is not necessary for the existence of common goals and ideals. See Wikipedia and the scientific community for more information.


Reply


Leaving SocietyJuly 31, 2011 at 12:05 PM

Final thought: It is neither the state nor its subordinates who are at fault for human shortcomings; instead, it is a poor (and poorly understood) process for forming and regulating information. Fix the process and you won't need to do away with "the state," because suddenly, the state is an abstraction presiding over ALL groups, leaving no one in particular in charge.


In this environment, groups would form to complete projects -- not to create divisions between themselves and the rest of the population.


Reply


Francois TremblayJuly 31, 2011 at 2:44 PM

"In order to improve ourselves and clean this mess up, we'll need, at the minimum, evaluations of individual competency and self-consistency. Anarchism is the antithesis to this ideal."


... what? That doesn't even make any sense. How does the rejection of hierarchy implies the rejection of evaluation? You do realize we evaluate everything in society, right?


Reply


Francois TremblayJuly 31, 2011 at 2:47 PM

"Also, on a side note, I fail to understand your marriage of anarchism and antinatalism. I'm assuming that you are aware that most anarchists are not antinatalists, and vice versa."


Yes... so what? Is this an argument from popularity? Upholding both positions is the only consistent attitude, if you believe it is wrong to impose harm.



"It is far more efficient to have centrally administered protocols and standards -- including ones pertinent to ideation, or the process of forming and selecting ideas -- than it is to live without such things."


You are deliberately trying to write in an obscure way. "centrally administered protocols of ideation"? Are we talking about mind-control here? How could you think that would be good??


I don't really see any point in debating with someone who thinks mind-control is good.


Reply


Leaving SocietyJuly 31, 2011 at 3:10 PM

"... what? That doesn't even make any sense. How does the rejection of hierarchy implies the rejection of evaluation? You do realize we evaluate everything in society, right?"


Anarchism rejects hierarchy, but its rejection of hierarchy does not define it, because other ideologies also reject hierarchy. Anarchism is defined as a rejection of a state, or central authority.


When mentioning evaluation, I noted that it was a minimum requirement. I also specified the type of evaluation. To be clearer, I will state that I'm in favor of a society where people are conditioned and tested prior to being deemed capable of contributing. How would such a system be implemented under anarchism, which has no central authority capable of administering the tests?


Reply


Leaving SocietyJuly 31, 2011 at 3:21 PM

"Yes... so what? Is this an argument from popularity? Upholding both positions is the only consistent attitude, if you believe it is wrong to impose harm."


It's not an argument for or against either anarchism or antinatalism, but rather, a statement about your apparent belief that the logical choice for antinatalists is anarchism. How efficient would it be to promote the end of procreation while simultaneously advocating that no one impose any rules on anyone else?


In anarchism, how do rules get enforced if not through either imposition or education? What is the third alternative, and why is it more efficient than the former two options? If there is no alternative, and anarchism is simply about there being no rules, then why is it superior to government?


"You are deliberately trying to write in an obscure way. 'centrally administered protocols of ideation'? Are we talking about mind-control here? How could you think that would be good??"


We are all mind-controlled by our environments; we are not free from influence, and in fact do not spontaneously think anything. If we fix the negative parts of the environment, then the manner in which we get "mind-controlled" will improve. Again, this is impossible in an anarchist society, which doesn't seem particularly concerned with finding justification for existence or unifying the human species under common values.


If we want to eliminate a negative, then we determine its causes in the environment, eliminate those causes, and observe the results in the humans exposed to the modified environment.


"I don't really see any point in debating with someone who thinks mind-control is good."


Why so sensationalist? I'm certainly not using scare words when describing your arguments, so why are you doing so when describing mine? Are you aware that the substance of a thing is all that matters -- not the connotations of the name that you give it? Are you aware of how many people commit this fallacy in an effort to dominate an argument? It's media tactics 101.


Reply


Francois TremblayJuly 31, 2011 at 11:13 PM

"Anarchism rejects hierarchy, but its rejection of hierarchy does not define it, because other ideologies also reject hierarchy. Anarchism is defined as a rejection of a state, or central authority."


No... sorry. You may think that's the definition of Anarchism, but it's not Anarchism as Anarchists define it.



"How efficient would it be to promote the end of procreation while simultaneously advocating that no one impose any rules on anyone else?"


Perfectly efficient, since one does not interfere with the other.



"If there is no alternative, and anarchism is simply about there being no rules, then why is it superior to government?"


Again, you are trying to define Anarchism for yourself. Anarchism is not anomie. Social rules should be established from the bottom-up, to serve human values, not institutional values. This is superior to government for the same reason that any egalitarian alternative is superior to a hierarchy.


"Again, this is impossible in an anarchist society, which doesn't seem particularly concerned with finding justification for existence or unifying the human species under common values."


The only alternative to what you're saying is a dictatorship which enforces values top-down on the entire "human species." Is that what you believe in?


Of course I don't believe we should "unify the human species." I am not a dictator. I believe in freedom. It's preposterous to argue against Anarchism on the basis that it is not dictatorial.


"Why so sensationalist?"


Look, I am trying to understand your conceptual mush. As far as I can tell, you believe in mind-control. If you don't, then what exactly DO you believe in? You seem to be very eager to defend hierarchies, but it's not clear which you believe in and which you don't believe in.


For example, do you believe in slavery? Why or why not?


Reply


Leaving SocietyAugust 1, 2011 at 7:45 PM

"No... sorry. You may think that's the definition of Anarchism, but it's not Anarchism as Anarchists define it."


dictionary.com:


a doctrine urging the abolition of government or governmental restraint as the indispensable condition for full social and political liberty.


Wikipedia:


Anarchism is a political philosophy which considers the state undesirable, unnecessary, and harmful, and instead promotes a stateless society, or anarchy.[1][2] Anarchists seek to diminish or abolish authority in the conduct of human relations.


"Perfectly efficient, since one does not interfere with the other."


As stated in my other comment, imposition is a means to an end, and is thus not inherently positive or negative; it's what's being imposed, why it's being imposed, and in what ways it alters quantities and qualities that determines whether an act of imposition is either positive or negative.


"The only alternative to what you're saying is a dictatorship which enforces values top-down on the entire 'human species.' Is that what you believe in?"


I believe in a combination of the following:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meritocracy

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memetics

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideation_(idea_generation)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Venus_Project

http://nobadmemes.blogspot.com/2010/12/idearchy-continued.html


Do any of the above links refer to dictatorships?


"It's preposterous to argue against Anarchism on the basis that it is not dictatorial."


...And even more so to strawman my stance in such a manner!


"Look, I am trying to understand your conceptual mush."


It sounds like you are getting emotional. Perhaps you should stop and realize that I am attacking your ideas and not your person?


"You seem to be very eager to defend hierarchies"


See the above links. I see no rational basis for the existence of hierarchies.


Reply


Francois TremblayAugust 2, 2011 at 12:46 AM

"dictionary.com:"


Is not an Anarchist site. You fail. We do not let dictionaries define what we believe in.


"Anarchism is a political philosophy which considers the state undesirable, unnecessary, and harmful, and instead promotes a stateless society, or anarchy.[1][2] Anarchists seek to diminish or abolish authority in the conduct of human relations."


You appear to have missed the last sentence there. That's exactly what I'm sayuing.



"As stated in my other comment, imposition is a means to an end"


Nope. Sorry. Consent is a necessary (but not sufficient, by a long shot) condition for freedom. The case for imposition being anything but evil doesn't even get off the ground.




"The only alternative to what you're saying is a dictatorship which enforces values top-down on the entire 'human species.' Is that what you believe in?"


I believe in a combination of the following:



"Do any of the above links refer to dictatorships?"


Yep.




"...And even more so to strawman my stance in such a manner!"


If it's so hard for me to understand what you're saying, and I am first-rate at English comprehension, then your comments must be pure gibberish.



"It sounds like you are getting emotional."


Now you're posturing. Just more crap.



"See the above links. I see no rational basis for the existence of hierarchies."


If that was the case, you wouldn't be arguing with me.


Reply


Francois TremblayAugust 2, 2011 at 12:47 AM

By the way, I didn't know you were the owner of this blog. Well, that makes even less sense. I can read and understand your entries just fine, so I don't know why you are having such trouble communicating...


Reply


Leaving SocietyJanuary 29, 2013 at 11:02 PM

Well, Francois did turn out to be kind of a jerk, but that aside, here are the problems that seem to exist with anarcho-communism:


1. Equity comes before equality. No two people on Earth are absolutely equal; the equality myth is not based on any kind of science, and comes from people who lived several hundred years ago.


2. Even with equity, you have to remember that freedom, regardless of any connotations of equality, is a religious ideal. Even freedom of speech is suspect if the speaker is speaking in a loop and entirely unwilling to make any amendments or try new approaches, for this promotes stubbornness as a value in society. If someone is unwilling to accept the tentatively constructed baseline ethos of society, then he or she should be eliminated in one way or another (exile, prison, rehabilitation, death), depending on circumstance of the case.


3. Agile methods should be supplemented by meritocratic practices. If you're schizophrenic, mentally disabled, permanently high on opiates, or a religious zealot, then until you have been rehabilitated (if you can be), you are not allowed to participate in societal discussions or have opinions. If you are not an aerospace engineer, then until you have provided at least one insightful suggestion or demonstrated a technical disposition capable of being mutated into that of an engineer, you are not allowed to participate in aerospace engineering discussions or have opinions on aerospace engineering.


4. Who cares about empowering a particular group of people or superficially allocating "control" of means of production to "people" as they exist in various conglomerates? My computer decides for itself which process threads require more devotion by a particular CPU core, and it doesn't feel liberated or empowered as a result; it merely does what's efficient and valuable.


This might all sound like fascism, but that's only because most people are only interested in "equality" and the "right to have an opinion" to the extent that it saves their asses. They're not interested in protecting anyone else aside from themselves and their families, let alone in pressing a play button somewhere and actually watching their opinion in action.


7/8/11 - Do you think you have much to contribute to society? - No Bad Memes / Leaving Society

Friday, July 8, 2011

Do you think you have much to contribute to society?

It bothers me that so few people look upon themselves with disappointment. Members of Bigfoot message boards will be more than happy to provide you with their "opinion" that Bigfoot absolutely MUST exist -- even if they have no idea what they're talking about, and have no credentials relevant to zoology, biology, etc.


Why are such people allowed to provide their opinions on these topics? There is no basis for them whatsoever. Is it okay to let people provide an opinion on some ontological matter just because they want to feel like they belong to something? What if we were to let anyone form an "opinion" on how to build a bridge?


If you were to eyeball the distance between yourself and the clouds above you, what would make your opinion somehow worth considering, given the existence of measuring instruments?


Be honest with yourself: Are you providing your two cents because you have genuine business in doing so, or do you just want everyone to know that you exist? Do you have something to contribute beyond the baseline at which most opinions rest, or do you just want to be recognized? Sometimes the right thing to do is to admit ignorance, even in spite of an interest in the topic at hand, and politely step aside.


Too few people are disappointed in their shortcomings. I am very, very disappointed in mine -- not because I feel as though I've "failed" in life, but because the universe has so perfectly limited me. My brain could calculate things so much faster, judge distances so much more accurately. Most people don't think about stuff like this, because they're after social gratification rather than truth. What a great world it would be if everyone were horrified by their limitations.

Posted by Leaving Society at 7:28 PM 


Labels: egoism, social problems

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7/3/11 - Anitnatalism fourm - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes. - LINK APPEARS DEAD


Sunday, July 3, 2011

Antinatalism forum

There is now an antinatalism forum.


I didn't set it up, but feel free to post. It looks like it could really use more activity.

Posted by Leaving Society at 9:23 AM 

Labels: antinatalism

Asha Degree : MISSING - part one of ?

Today we are going to talk about a missing person's case. This very well may be part one of ? because there is a lot of information to go over.

I'm going to talk about the disappearance of Asha Jaquilla Degree. She was born on the 5th of August 1990. She was nine years old when she went missing. She went missing from Shelby, North Carolina in the early am hours of the 14th of February, 2000. 

I actually first heard about her from a billboard that I saw on the way to Columbia SC a few years ago. Truly proof that billboards do help bring awareness about missing persons. 

It is generally agreed upon that she left from her home of her own free will. She packed a book bag and was actually spotted by several truckers as they traveled down the North Carolina Highway 18. 

One concerned trucker decided to turn around to go check on her. She must have noticed this as it is this point she left the road side and went into a wooded area near the roadside.

It was around a year and a half before a trace of her was discovered. Her still packed book bag was found during construction site near the highway. It was located on August 3rd, 2001. The book bag was intact and was wrapped in a plastic bag. 

The construction worker who found it saw that it had Asha's name and phone number inside. It also contained a Dr Suess book and a New Kids on the Block T-shirt.  The book was from her school library but the origin of the shirt is unknown. Asha was not known to own this t-shirt. I would like to know the size of the shirt and if appeared to be new, dirty, worn before, etc.

On the theory that she was groomed, it should be noted that her family was what many might consider strict or overprotected. They did not have a computer in their house. Activities centered around the church. Someone was almost always home with Asha and her brother. So essentially the common concern she met someone online seems low in this case.

The thing about this though, they did not notice she was missing until the next morning. This makes me wonder if she had snuck out before and we simply just do not know about it. 

We only know about this time because this was the time where something happened. She did share a room with her brother, but he did not even realize she had left the room until later.

It was 6:40 am when officers arrived on the scene after her mother phoned the police after discovering Asha was not home.

Candy wrappers where located at a shed nearby the highway. This was not too far from where she had been observed walking into the woods. A pencil and mickey mouse hair bow was also located. There was also a photo of an unknown black girl who appeared to be around Asha's age. We still do not know who the girl in the photo was. These items were located on February 15.

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

7/2/11 - The "nonexistent people never get a chance to choose" argument - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Saturday, July 2, 2011

The "nonexistent people never get a chance to choose" argument

I see antinatalists constantly struggling to crush an argument that's best summed up thusly:


Nonexistent people never get a chance to choose whether their individual lives are worth living or not. Because a nonexistent person cannot desire things, we cannot make statements regarding whether a nonexistent person will desire life if presented the choice.


Another variant might look something like this:


We don't know whether a particular person's coming into existence will be for the greater good or not, so we have no right to prevent it from happening. For all we know, a person's birth will be, at the minimum, good for the person himself.


An easy way to trump this is to alert the person making the argument to the fact that he or she is actually on step two in the line of questioning. The first step is:


Is life necessary?


If there is nothing necessary about life, then we cannot possibly justify it, given that stakes are present. We can only justify taking risks with stakes involved where it's necessary, or where the stakes are the lowest possible out of all the options. If the lowest possible number of stakes within a given scenario is zero, and the other options are not necessary, then we should choose the option with zero stakes.


Again, if you're not willing to roll a six-sided die with five amazingly pleasurable sides so long as AIDS or stomach cancer or the bubonic plague is on the sixth, please remember that every day, someone gets the "I just fell in love" side, someone gets the "I just won the lottery" side, and someone, somewhere gets the "Wow, I'm HIV positive" side. If you're okay with this but not okay with rolling the die yourself, then you are a hypocrite.


The issue at hand is NOT whether potential persons should be allowed to decide for "themselves" that their lives are good; it's whether there is a real, hard reason to fabricate the dilemma in the first place. I'm sure that ninety percent of the human population enjoys ice cream, but that doesn't give you the "right" to order a friend ice cream for dessert without first asking him if he wants ice cream. What if he's in the ten percent that abhors ice cream?


Now imagine that, not only does he dislike ice cream, but he's lactose intolerant to the point where eating even a single spoonful will cause him to vomit uncontrollably and become hospitalized.


Now imagine that eating ice cream is not of such dire importance that we can ever deem it necessary for anyone.


Hey, you haven't forced the dessert on him yet, so we can't say anything about whether he likes ice cream, right?


So what?

Posted by Leaving Society at 8:19 PM 


Labels: antinatalism, sophistry

1 comment:


AnonymousJuly 3, 2011 at 3:21 AM

So what indeed. I love the metaphor of the ice cream, I use it all the time. Because none of it is necessary, none of it would exist if there was no harm to palliate. There's just no justification to keep this machine going.



7/2/11 - A concession to the antinatalist and voluntary human extinction communities - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Saturday, July 2, 2011

A concession to the antinatalist and voluntary human extinction communities

In a several-months-old post of mine, I said the following:


...it is certainly possible that automated, technological means of redesigning the natural world could emerge at some point, capable of removing negative sensation from that environs. In both cases, given that we can't predict future suffering with any degree of accuracy for now, it makes more sense to voluntarily exist to the end of learning more about our predicament than it does to voluntarily disappear from the universe outright. How irresponsible the alternative must be, if it indeed turns out that trillions of planets contain or will contain mass-energy configurations similar in content and substance to whales and buffalo, and that we can do something about it!


I was reading this post today, and realized that I don't really agree with its content. A couple of thoughts:


1. As previously noted, life, if it truly does exist elsewhere in the universe, must be preposterously rare -- so rare that any attempt to find and subsequently help it would prove incredibly impractical. We don't go out of our way to search for hypothetical abducted children halfway across the world from where they were last seen, do we?


2. How are we ever going to leave this solar system? Even if we were to dispatch energy-efficient nanobots and program them to spend most of their time drifting through space, coasting off their initial energy use, how in the world would we ever find anything without at least some kind of indication regarding where it might exist?


Given these points, I have modified my original stance on this issue. There are three kinds of people to consider, here:


1. Those who would rather end their lives than suffer to any great degree. These people abhor pointless pain, and, quite reasonably, find the concept of life unbearable.


2. Those who would rather live forever, or at least long enough to mentally prepare for eternal nonexistence and/or a huge, uncontrollable unknown.


3. Those who would rather live forever, or at least some substantial period of time, merely because they enjoy life. Note, here, that many life proponents who are also death proponents would probably opt for eternal life if given the choice; their biologically programmed desires do not have expiration dates built into them, so when they say that they think death is "just a part of life," they're usually just lying to themselves.


I see no reason why all of these groups shouldn't be allowed to have things their way simultaneously. The solution, then, is to legalize assisted suicide while working on simulated realities and a cure for aging.


So, if some of us ultimately do decide to stick around, it should be for one or both of the following reasons:


1. We're biding our time until we feel more comfortable with making a decision after which there is no turning back -- regardless of how unlikely the contrary prospects are.


2. We enjoy living.


We're probably never leaving this solar system, and if we do, it's unlikely that we'll find anything of interest out there. Sure, we can look, but looking shouldn't be our raison d'être.

Posted by Leaving Society at 3:24 PM 


Labels: antinatalism, extraterrestrial life, life, voluntary human extinction

2 comments:


AnonymousJuly 3, 2011 at 3:24 AM

Why not make it a goal of mankind? I mean, that's one of the problems right now, is that mankind has no goal worth talking about. We're just running on these ego games, these automatisms, endlessly and without checks or boundaries. Eventually these will blow up in our face. What happens after that, well...


But until we as a species become dedicated to such a goal, there is not even any point of talking about it, except as speculation...


Leaving SocietyJuly 3, 2011 at 9:02 AM

Well, I have my doubts that we can even travel the 4 light-year distance necessary to get to Alpha Centauri. Our best space shuttles can apparently go about 17,500 miles per hour, so it'd take over 150,000 years to get there if we were to use them for that purpose. Worm holes are purely hypothetical to the point where they're basically science fiction, and even if they were real, they'd probably only be small enough for an atom or two to slip through.


If we really wanted to do it, the best option would probably be to target as many of the "Earth-like" planets that Kepler finds as possible, deploy the best equipment we've got at the fastest speed possible, and permanently keep open a two-way radio communication (that way, even if the messages we receive from our probes are thousands of years old or older, there'd never be an interruption -- sort of like a news ticker at the bottom of a television screen).


It'd be an interesting thing to try if we could only design something that didn't struggle just to roll over a couple of humps in the dirt on the Martian surface.

PARANORMAL: The Hinsdale House

So today we are going to take a look at a haunted location that I find incredibly interesting. This place is supposed to be the real deal, unlike places like Amityville that are probably just a money-grabbing nothing burger. 

Just taking a little break from all this Lanza business. I'm wanting to write about this because I recently took a trip to tha norf and there was a place called Hinsdale. 

I then proceeded to freak out because I thought there the was a chance for me to actually see it, but it was further... in tha norf...

It's also called the Dandy House. This is from the fact that in the 1970's Clara and Phil Dandy were the occupants in the house. They experienced paranormal shit and then left after an exorcist was called and that really didn't do a thing.

Location : 3830 McMahan Rd, Hinsdale, New York

You can actually book it which was what I was gonna do but then I realized I had my location state-wise mixed up.

It's thought that the primary event that kicked off the hauntings and paranormal activity is the fact that in 1799 a massacre of native people occurred there. And we know that never leads to anything good.

In the 1800s, there was a pair of brothers who lived there and they were doing the dumb shit. Their whole thing was to raid passing stage coaches. They would then proceed to kill them and buried them in either the cellar or in the hills behind the house.

The property also features a hanging tree, and the word is that a pregnant woman was hung there. 

The also found a beehive hidden under the floor at some point. That's probably something someone put there with some kind of intent. If you know, you know...

7/2/11 - An Ideal Society, Part 4: Language - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Saturday, July 2, 2011

An Ideal Society, Part 4: Language

I'm going to make a rather bold statement:


There should be only one language.


Honestly, why the redundancy? It's not as though, if English were to "crash," we'd have Italian waiting on standby to pick up its slack as part of some array of languages. The less that we are able to understand one another, the worse off we are.


We can't solve the problem by becoming multilingual, either, because:


1. It'd be pretty difficult to learn every language on Earth.


2. If I know English and Spanish and you know English and Spanish, that's two people who each have two distinct symbols in their brains for every imaginable human conception. Multiply this waste of time and space by six billion and you'll see where I'm going with this. You should only learn a second language if you need to in order to understand someone who doesn't already know your language -- but in an ideal society, this problem wouldn't exist in the first place.


Imagine having two cars, but living alone. Imagine owning two pairs of shoes when you only need one to protect your feet. Imagine having two computer keyboards that you occasionally swap back and forth for fun. Imagine having two beds to sleep in and oscillating between them at random.


A duplicate item needn't be identical to the original in order to qualify as being functionally void or needlessly redundant. Sure, you may enjoy the aesthetic variation, the novelty, the sheer variety; perhaps these qualities supersede boredom. There's nothing wrong with this, but if you're acquiring duplicate items at the expense of something more materially valuable at that moment, then you're woefully ignoring opportunity cost, which necessarily leads to your generating wasted space.


Brain space is no different from other forms of space; it's certainly finite, above all else. Don't waste time learning a new version of something with which you're already familiar when there's much more to be learned in its place; doing otherwise promotes pretentiousness, frivolous socialization, and, ultimately, a fragmented species intermittently predominated by huge communications holes.


Important disclaimer: If you're not American, British, Australian, or Canadian and you read this blog, you're likely bilingual. Please take note that it isn't your fault that a second language has been imposed upon you by academia; furthermore, considering the gradual encroachment of the English language upon much of the territory of the other languages of the world, there may be some practical benefit in your knowing English. Just keep in mind that it'd be really dumb of you to decide to learn Arabic for fun or to show off how cultured you are to friends. In any case, this post isn't about what you should be doing with your own personal life, but what a society as built from scratch should look like.

Posted by Leaving Society at 1:35 PM 


Labels: grammar, ideal society, language, linguistics

No comments:

7/2/11 - Statement of the day - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Statement of the day

It is better to be right than happy.

Posted by Leaving Society at 12:00 PM 


Labels: statement of the day

1 comment:


AnonymousNovember 2, 2011 at 6:21 PM

What's that? I'm to busy being controlled by bad memes to listen to your stupid fucking aphorism.

6/15/11 - To reiterate: Pleasure is relief - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes


Wednesday, June 15, 2011

To reiterate: Pleasure is relief

Pleasure results from the termination of a negative state of experience; it is a form of relief.


Remember: It really isn't your "choice" to enjoy what you enjoy about life. If you were to cease all enjoyable activities for even a few days, you'd be dead -- and after a horrific episode of torment and horror at that. We are punished by our central nervous systems for not chasing objects of desire.


The titular maxim is best exemplified in the case of itching. Itching, while not the worst form of suffering imaginable, is nevertheless a negative/unpleasant sensation born from the body's desire to rid itself of some perceived threat to its attempts to stave off systemic decay. People do not enjoying itching; they would rather rid themselves of an itch than allow it to continue unhindered. Ever try ignoring an itch in a hard-to-reach spot on your body? It's incredibly difficult, because itches are meant to be distracting; they're meant to shift your brain's focus from the other negatives you're constantly running from to a fairly immediate -- if usually innocuous -- one.


Ignoring an itch produces a fairly large amount of discomfort and cognitive distraction; it is an undesirable thing. If you ignore an itch, prepare to have your concentration greatly diminished in favor of absurd, obsessive thoughts regarding something silly.


Scratching an itch, on the other hand, feels pleasurable; we sometimes even sigh with satisfaction upon scratching a particularly distracting and uncomfortable itch. Scratching itches is perceived by our brains as a good thing.


Now, after scratching an itch, try scratching where the itch used to be. You'll be using the same fingernails, the same amount of pressure. Why doesn't it feel pleasurable anymore? It's the same skin, composed of the same chemicals. Where did the pleasant scratching sensation disappear to?


The answer is that you needed the bad feeling in order to receive the good one; you needed something negative to be relieved from. You can't just decide on a whim to start scratching all over yourself and expect to enter a state of ecstasy.

Posted by Leaving Society at 9:24 PM 


Labels: negative sensation, negative utilitarianism

2 comments:


AnonymousJuly 3, 2011 at 3:31 AM

But you can caress yourself. Enough said. :)


AnonymousNovember 3, 2011 at 9:58 AM

Thus, how good I feel when I stop reading your stupid blog.


6/5/11 - Cognitive dissonance as a staple of modern culture - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Cognitive dissonance as a staple of modern culture

When was the last time that you had an argument with someone? Did either you or the other party end up changing stances by the end? Probably not. More than likely, this is what happened instead:


1. You introduced stance A.


2. They introduced stance B.


3. You provided a fairly sturdy argument for stance A.


4. They provided a fairly transparent argument for stance B -- even if, on the surface, it appeared to have some solidity to it due to its use of platitudes and memorized, regurgitated phrases.


5. The both of you went back and forth for a while, neither budging. Despite their stance being obviously flawed, you couldn't find a way to really hit them over the head and wake them up to this fact.


6. Finally, you introduced a poignant, concise meme which crushed the opposing argument directly and explicitly. The absurdity of the other party's argument was subsequently quite out in the open.


7. The other party replied with "You're starting to frustrate me. Why do you have to overanalyze everything? Can't we talk about something nice for once?"


8. The argument ended abruptly with no resolution and the prospect of such growing vanishingly small. The other party then appeared uncomfortable and confused.


What has just been described, I hypothesize, is the result of terrible parenting. The other party participating in the argument realized, in some recess of their consciousness, that your logic was sound, but another, more biologically beneficial part of their mind interceded.


What happened? Well, during childhood, your conversational partner had probably participated in similar conversations that went something like this:


"Dad, why can't we see god?"


"I don't know, son. That's just the way it is."


"But how can we know he's real if we can't see him?"


"He's testing us. It'll all make sense when you get to heaven. You'll be rewarded for waiting so long!"


"But... how do you know that?"


"Look, he's just real, okay? What's with these questions all of a sudden? I'm trying to watch the news. Why don't you go outside and play ball with the kid next door?"


Upon encountering the problematic "foreign object" within a logic chain, kids are programmed to switch routines and do something personally rewarding or pleasurable. Because our society is relatively affluent, everything from happy meals to high tech video games is almost always a few seconds away from the grasp of children, so there is zero incentive to do "the right thing" when immediate self-satisfaction can so easily be substituted in its place -- with no consequences or scoldings.


The mentality birthed during this period of development apparently carries over into adulthood, where it germinates until it becomes a contributor to the monstrosity that is our current situation.


This is absolutely unacceptable for adult humans in this day and age. We cannot continue to act like children.

Posted by Leaving Society at 9:19 PM 

Labels: cognitive dissonance, human value system, value, values

3 comments:


Sister YJune 6, 2011 at 12:36 AM

Yes, except it's probably more genetic than about parenting.

Leaving SocietyJune 6, 2011 at 6:28 PM

Interesting. I think that genes do play a very important role in child development, but I'd like to know more about what you mean, exactly.

AnonymousNovember 3, 2012 at 5:36 PM

Yeah, managing computer networks is low-level work and should be abolished by inventing better software and smarter machines. Let only the fit breed, say those with an IQ of at least 110 and we will have a society of Einsteins: in such a society, all work would be done by robots.

6/5/11 - The fundamental nature of consciousness-raising - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Sunday, June 5, 2011

The fundamental nature of consciousness-raising

When it comes to memes of such immense gravity that they demand we spread them on a global scale, which do you, personally, think applies?


1. Progress, like the propagation of the memes themselves, is incremental; we must "spread the word" in any way that we can, with every "convert" being an indicator of progress.


2. Progress is spontaneous and holistic; we must find ways to access those methods which are most likely to bring about the change that we desire in a manner akin to searching for the lottery ticket that will be the winner.


I think it's more like 2., in which case, even if you wind up with a "following" of, say, ten million people, in a world of almost seven billion, it may ultimately turn out that you have accomplished nothing at all. When it comes to infrastructure, routines, rituals, and resource management, the nature of "societal transformation" is binary; either you're using the new model or you're not.


Islam, liberalism, and celebrity worship are tough opponents.

Posted by Leaving Society at 12:08 PM 


3 comments:


AnonymousJuly 3, 2011 at 3:38 AM

I vote for option 1. Every little bit counts. Every single person who converts who was about to breed potentially prevents hundreds or thousands of new lives in the long run.

Leaving SocietyJuly 3, 2011 at 8:55 AM

That's an interesting point. In the case of convincing someone to abstain from breeding, you are permanently terminating one particular evolutionary line, thus saving an unknown number of lives that could potentially be in the hundreds of thousands, or more.


I guess I just have trouble making a relative comparison between the number you've prevented, even if it's in the millions, and the far larger number that you haven't. The ratio must be way out of whack.


But you're right. When it comes to the antinatalism argument in particular, every little bit does count.

AnonymousJuly 3, 2011 at 4:01 PM

And think about it: we're only a handful of people, so even if we are only able to convert two people who were going to breed, we most probably "break even," and possibly end up ahead.


Of course I agree with you that it would be better to save more potential people. I am no gradualist. But I still recognize that we're doing real good here, we're not just spinning our wheels. If one person reads our stuff and realizes something that gets them not to breed, I'd be genuinely happy.


6/2/11 - An Ideal Society, Part 3: Communication; Law - Leaving Scoiety/ No Bad Memes


Thursday, June 2, 2011

An Ideal Society, Part 3: Communication; Law

Communication is something that we've been bad at from day one. In some ways, we've gotten better at it (e.g. the lack of revenge killings between "groups"), while in others, we've gotten worse (e.g. passive aggression, political correctness, bureaucracy). I'm not sure if we've really broken even per se, but the situation is nevertheless not very good.


What would it look like if it were?


Well, all of our communications media would be consolidated and centrally monitored. At birth, everyone would be assigned an ID number in addition to a name; however, unlike a social security number, this new number would be made available to everyone on Earth by everyone on Earth.


The news media would be incorporated into the future equivalents of RSS feeds and email subscriptions. If, for example, a powerful earthquake were to hit a given part of the world, rather than finding out in a more traditional way, you would receive a news update via email -- not because you'd be subscribed to a service of your own volition, but because the central computer would utilize something like IP broadcasting for sending out messages to all communications addresses on Earth.


For those not familiar with the process, all computers connected to IP-based networks -- or at least those configured to receive their addresses from a server -- must first communicate with any nearby servers in order to negotiate for an address. The problem is thus: How can something ask for an address -- that is, communicate -- without already having an address? Well, the solution to this problem is to design an address which can be utilized by any network object at any given time, but whose messages are also intended for all objects located within a given network segment's boundaries. This allows more or less any network object -- computer, printer, etc. -- to send out a quick, undirected broadcast to as many other objects as possible, with little preconfiguration, and no need to know who to contact beforehand.


In other words, we already have the ability to broadcast messages from one computer to any number of computers at once -- even if we don't know the individual addresses of the recipients; furthermore, rather than needing to keep track of which devices are currently online or within the replication boundaries, we can allow an address to be dedicated to the task of sending messages to every device, regardless of status.


Imagine what the world would be like if we were to apply this concept to the media. You'd no longer receive text messages and voicemails solely from friends, family, and stalkers; you'd also receive them from any number of organizations, including the government (if there were one at all, which there shouldn't be), schools, academies, research centers, your local news station, etc. If you were born into the society, it would be a requirement that you not only possess at least one portable communications device, but that you also be capable of receiving text messages and videos from literally anyone.


Communications devices would each have the future equivalent of a MAC address/IP address hybrid. If you ever wanted to replace your communications device with a new one, you'd simply go to an area where devices are distributed -- regardless of whether you were returning your current device(s) -- and check one out by swiping it through a computer on your way toward the exit; this would update the central database by mapping your personal ID number to the "IP address" of the device, thereby allowing all subnetworks on Earth to realize that, when that "IP address" does something, you're doing it -- not someone else. To put it simply, we'd do away with host names and domain names, and would instead utilize personal names and IDs for everything.


Staying informed would only be the beginning, however. With global broadcasting and a centralized Internet, help could be requested -- and subsequently received -- at lightning speed. Has someone just fallen from a building and shattered his spinal column? Don't call 911; send out a broadcast. Message options would have any number of designations, from "interesting" to "urgent," and everything in between. An urgent message, for example, would cause a person's device to buzz or beep, while most messages would not immediately interfere with daily activities. This way, in the event of an emergency, everyone within a given zone or sector would be aware of the situation. On top of this, if we apply my idea that first aid and mild medical knowledge should be taught at a young age to everyone on Earth, then it would be a rare thing indeed for an accident to go unattended, or to be attended in an untimely fashion.


The world is a big place, of course. Sending out broadcasts to everyone on the planet would be ridiculous; no one would be able to read all of their messages, and the whole system would become pointless in less than a day after its implementation. Therefore, while unicast and multicast messages would remain global in nature, broadcasts would come in three major types:


1. Those sent by the central computer, as input by some body of individuals who've deemed the message(s) globally relevant. These messages would first need to be approved, and would perhaps also need to be limited according to how many messages had recently been sent in succession in this manner. Examples of relevant information might include asteroid impacts, tsunamis, terrorist attacks, and major social transformations.


2. Those sent by anyone who feels that they are educational or otherwise interesting, but not urgent. These would be akin to the news, advertisements, etc., and would be grouped according to category on a central server rather than replicated locally on each individual device. These messages would not be broadcasts in the literal sense, but rather, free information available on the Internet. We more or less already receive these messages today.


3. Emergency messages pertaining to local events, such as a person having a heart attack in the street. These broadcasts would be the only kind that could be sent by an individual communications device, and would be designed with immediacy in mind. They would also be limited to particular population centers; every time that you'd leave a population center for another, in fact, a sensor would get triggered that would update the central computer as to the location of the communications device(s) that you'd be carrying.


If someone were to be assaulted unprovoked and you were a witness to this, you could submit something along the lines of a "trouble ticket" as a broadcast to the entire population center, complete with the approximate time of the interaction and the coordinates of the specific area within the center wherein the interaction occurred. Even if the interaction were to occur within a camera's blind spot, any interested parties could nevertheless consult the logs for the coordinates on the map for who'd triggered the sensors during that time.


For example, if the fight occurred at 30:20 (30 megaseconds and 20 kiloseconds) and you were a witness, you could simply broadcast an "email" that would be sent only to those within the population center; in computing terms, this would be something like how packets of data might only get sent to those hosts defined as within a domain, subdomain, workgroup, etc. behind a particular switch or router.


Next, Wikipedia-style communication would occur between interested individuals, who would then negotiate who got to investigate the skirmish. Because you were directly involved, you would be deemed valuable as a witness, but your role in making decisions would be diminished to prevent biases from influencing the consensus.


After that, logs would be checked in order to determine all of the people who had, from 30:19 to 30:21, walked "into" the invisible lines defining the particular sector of the population center (they would be much like modern alarm systems, only they'd belong to one, unified system, which would know where each sector existed via the previously mentioned GPS system). Whenever a sector's sensor would get triggered, data from a person's communications device would be downloaded to a server; this data would then get logged in order to ascertain which devices last triggered the sensor -- and, by extension, which individuals, as each device, again, must be mapped to a specific person's ID number in the central database.


Each sector, complete with its own unique coordinates, would be relatively small, and perhaps of standard dimensions. Because of the granular nature of each population center, let's say that only twenty individuals other than yourself had been registered as having entered the area during the three kiloseconds wherein the action occurred. Within little time, the people who'd remotely communicated their desire to be involved in evaluating the situation would then be in direct contact with the twenty people who'd been in the area from 30:19 to 30:21. Furthermore, even if you were unable to identify the "suspect," with some interrogation, it wouldn't take long before the investigation party would have an idea as to who perpetrated the assault.


More on interrogation methods, punishment, and the absence of police in a forthcoming post.

Posted by Leaving Society at 10:26 PM 


Labels: ideal society

No comments:

5/29/11 - An Ideal Society, Part 2: Time - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Sunday, May 29, 2011

An Ideal Society, Part 2: Time

We currently do a horrible job of keeping track of time. The two things that immediately come to mind when I think about how time is kept on Earth are:


1. Our time system doesn't integrate very well with our other measuring systems; in fact, it has nothing to do with them at all, which is strange.


2. Our time system is based on a medieval peasant's work day. Also strange.


Daylight saving time may conserve sunlight, but unless you don't have electricity, I don't really see why it's necessary. Actually, it's worse than unnecessary: It breaks the system. It's one thing to arbitrarily label a moment when the sun is positioned at a specific angle in the sky as 6:00 PM EST, but it's another altogether to later claim that that same angle occurs at a moment labeled as 7:00 PM EST, or 5:00 PM EST.


Wouldn't it be easier to get up at a different time than to change time?


Think about it: A lot more people than we might realize forget to set their clocks back, and while I'm most certainly in favor of automating all such menial processes to avoid lapses in memory, this particular one really doesn't need to exist in the first place. Furthermore, no credible academic or governmental body -- not even the U.S. Department of Energy -- has found any significant reduction in energy use or costs as a result of daylight saving time, with many studies reporting as little as a 0.5-1% difference in electricity use.


Worse still is that DST doesn't apply to all time zones, and some people frequently travel from one time zone to another, causing confusion regarding DST rules, which differ from region to region. Does this make any sense? If we are going to impose a confusing, arbitrary standard with no benefit to anyone whatsoever, can we not at least universalize it?


You might think that my proposal to do things at different times of day depending on sunlight output is myopic. First of all, in our technological society, it's extremely rare that the amount of sunlight matters to anyone for getting something done -- especially a mere hour's difference. Second of all, if our society didn't so rigidly impose its schedules, we wouldn't have to worry about reminding ourselves to do things at different times of day -- were schedules ever necessary in the first place. In an ideal society, if you really had to change how early you got up in order to increase the length of the day,  because your boss wouldn't care whether you took lunch at 12:00 or 1:00, you'd eat whenever a "natural" break presented itself in the day. This would ultimately deemphasize the importance of arbitrary scheduling, which almost never accounts for scope creep, and certainly does not parallel the processes of human work and energy use.


If you need to be at work by 8:00, and the sun starts rising earlier, then change your time of arrival from 8:00 to 7:56, and keep gradually knocking it down a few minutes every few weeks until the sun starts rising later in the morning again. A guestimate really is good enough for stuff like this.


The problem of conserving sunlight isn't that we need to find a better way to transition from one time* to another; it's that we need to find a better way to transition from doing things at one time to another -- or even that we need to stop caring whether we're five minutes late for work in the first place (OR, that we shouldn't "work" in the way that we currently do!).


Time zones are also pointless. They're dictated by time of day, of course, but again, the day is an archaic unit of measurement restricted by the activity of the sun. If you want to eat dinner on one part of the Earth, perhaps you do so at 6:30 PM, but if you move, does it really matter if it's suddenly dark outside at 3:00 PM? Do you have to wait until 6:30? What's more important -- the little numbers on the clock, or what's happening in the world?


Finally getting back to point 1. above, consider that the metric system is widely used throughout most of the first world (outside of the United States) for measuring physical quanta. Why not for quanta within the fourth dimension as well? Instead of sixty seconds to a minute, there should be one thousand seconds to one kilosecond -- not because the latter are somehow the "right" units to use, but because consistency is important for avoiding slop. There would then be one thousand kiloseconds per megasecond, and so on, with the base unit (seconds) remaining the suffix to each unit in order to remind us of its fundamental nature. Not only would this ally our time system with our other measuring systems, it would also standardize the time system itself.


Why base a particular scale of measurement on how long it takes for the Earth to revolve around the sun or rotate? We no longer need to track how many days we have left until we have to start preparing for the winter. Why does where the moon exist in the sky matter to us? What is the point of the month as a unit of measurement? Instead of each unit containing 60, 24, 30, or 365 of the previous, why doesn't each simply contain 1,000 of the previous, regardless of its scale? Wouldn't that be much simpler?


If we ever wind up living somewhere else -- a prospect which I find rather unlikely, admittedly -- then we will need to acknowledge that days and years are meaningless, anyway, given the extreme variation in them from one planet to another.


* The little numbers on the clock -- not the actual time per the activity of the solar system and universe

Posted by Leaving Society at 1:00 PM 


Labels: ideal society, time

1 comment:


AnonymousDecember 19, 2017 at 6:32 PM

What about the consideration that people's sleep and wake times usually (roughly) correspond to when the sun rises or sets in whatever location they're currently in? For most people this is a natural occurence rather than an arbitrarily-imposed external constraint, and typically serves to regulate the timing of various internal bodily processes for its optimal overall functioning. Here at least there seems a legitimate need for a discrete unit of a "day", if not weeks or months.


5/28/2011 - Statement of the day - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Statement of the day

You do not need to dislike a sensation -- or even imagine what it must feel like -- in order to understand that other beings dislike it.


More ideal society posts forthcoming, I think.

Posted by Leaving Society at 8:31 AM 


Labels: statement of the day

No comments:


5/24/11 - Why suffering can be evaluated empirically - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Why suffering can be evaluated empirically

I've gone over this plenty of times, so I'm sure that if you're a regular reader, you know the drill by now. However, regardless of who you are, I've come up with another way to phrase "Suffering is bad" so that it sounds more empirically testable. Here it is:


Those who suffer do not want to suffer.


If we can verify this statement empirically, then that's all that we need to do; there is no more to "prove." You can't want to suffer; as soon as you come to enjoy something, it's no longer causing you to suffer.

Posted by Leaving Society at 7:08 PM 


Labels: empiricism, rationality, suffering, value equation

1 comment:


AnonymousNovember 3, 2011 at 9:56 AM

Those who use circular logic, use circular logic.

5/24/11 - Revisiting a great meme: "Life is a gamble" - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Revisiting a great meme: "Life is a gamble"

Pleasure cannot justify suffering in any instance -- not even in instances where the pleasure experienced greatly dwarfs the negative state of desire experienced prior. Here's why:


Think of life as a six-sided die. The five greatest things about life that you can imagine occupy five of the six sides -- perhaps intense orgasms, spiritual fulfillment, growing old with a significant other, having ten trillion dollars, and access to an endless supply of great music (these definitely wouldn't be my choices; they're just examples). The sixth side is occupied by a fifteen-year battle with AIDS -- vomiting, loss of control over bowels and all.


Would you roll the die? If not, congratulations; if presented the choice to be born or to remain in your state of nonexistence, you'd choose to remain in your state of nonexistence. In other words: You wouldn't choose life.


We don't all get AIDS, you say. Well...


1. "We" don't exist as discrete selves in the first place. I remember things that happened to a ten-year-old kid, which gives me the impression that the kid was me, but he wasn't; he lacked my ideals, conceptions, desires, hormones, and even most (if not all) of my atoms. Therefore, that ten-year-old kid is no more "me" than anyone else to have ever lived -- yet all sentient organisms utilize the same chemical compounds and electrical signals in order to experience pain and pleasure, making them chemically equivalent. Clearly, then, there is no need for "me" to experience the worst parts of life: the universe experiences them, and that's bad enough.


2. It's very probable that we will all die -- most of us from cancer, possibly while in a tremendous amount of pain for a prolonged period of time.


The worst that life has to offer might not ever get inflicted upon you, but every day, we roll the die, and every day, many, many people roll the bad side. If you wouldn't want to live through it, then how can you justify its existence?


I ask again, and hope that you leave a comment with your answer: Would you roll the die?

Posted by Leaving Society at 6:46 PM 

Labels: life is a gamble, negative utilitarianism, value equation

10 comments:


AnonymousJuly 3, 2011 at 3:43 AM

Would I roll the die? Maybe. Would I roll it for someone else? HELL NO.


Leaving SocietyJuly 3, 2011 at 9:10 AM

I wouldn't roll it. I would say that I don't care if people decide for themselves to roll it, but that'd be like saying that I don't care if people waste all of their money in casinos or make other poor life decisions. I want to help them to see how irrational their own personal choices are so that they both course correct themselves and lead by example.


AnonymousJuly 3, 2011 at 4:03 PM

Well I can't disagree on that. On the whole, we're all better off in a society where people act more rationally than in a society where people act less rationally. That's a no-brainer (no pun intended).


AnonymousJuly 3, 2011 at 4:13 PM

By the way, I just rolled a virtual d6 and I got a 3. See, I would have won. Curse you. ;)


Leaving SocietyJuly 3, 2011 at 5:11 PM

Haha, if only.


A coin analogy is also good for illustrating the lack of balance between pain and pleasure. You can put the bubonic plague on one side and billions of dollars on the other to make it especially obvious.


I'd love to get some hard statistics on who would roll the die/flip the coin, though. It'd be interesting to procure a decent sample size and ask.


Francois TremblayJuly 4, 2011 at 6:51 AM

I might take 5/6 odds, but not 1/2.


AnonymousNovember 3, 2011 at 9:55 AM

Risk aversion=Fallacy


You stupid cunt.


Leaving SocietyNovember 4, 2011 at 10:33 PM

I've heard this before, but I've never been able to figure out what the hell it means. Wikipedia returns no results, other than an interesting study on how the human brain tends to be more easily influenced by losses than gains. Sounds like a good enough reason to avoid risk to me.


Leaving SocietyJanuary 29, 2013 at 10:34 PM

Maybe this would work better if we distributed incidences of each outcome in a way that scales up to life on Earth. Let's have someone roll two, six-sided dice with the following sides:


Die 1


1. Starvation and all of its most odious symptoms

2. Delicious ice cream

3. Sex with a fairly attractive member of your preferred gender

4. Your favorite song

5. A side-splitting joke

6. 250 billion dollars


Die 2


1. A two-year battle with stomach cancer

2. A bad back

3. A stomach bug (norovirus) with lots of both vomiting and diarrhea

4. Social alienation and feelings of inadequacy

5. Unemployment; money problems

6. A thought-provoking film


Let's say that the time during which your result will be applied to you is unknown; you could get to watch an awesome movie tomorrow, or you could get cancer twenty years from now (or vice versa).


If you wouldn't play this game, then please do not force others to play it against their will, and promptly stop being a hypocrite.


AnonymousApril 29, 2013 at 10:59 AM

No good can justify evil. Rolling the dice is immoral.


5/24/11 - How to make intellectual progress 101 - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

How to make intellectual progress 101

1. Leave fear of new ideas -- the cause of most knee-jerk reactions -- out of any formulation of premises and conclusions; do not foam at the mouth.


2. Express hope that the person whose ideas you're critiquing will come around to seeing things your way.


3. Express awareness of the possibility that you are in error, and that the person whose ideas you're critiquing may be able to provide you with a learning experience.


Failing to adhere to even one of these three will eventually lead to your species fighting wars with itself.


Class dismissed.

Posted by Leaving Society at 12:59 AM 

Labels: common sense, logic, social problems

No comments:

5/24/11 - James Randi Educational Foundation: Take 2 - Leaving Society / No Bad Memes

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

James Randi Educational Foundation: Take 2

More convenient strawmen and haughty disdain, this time on page 2:



Posted by Sophronius:

I disagree that empathy is a bias. I have always considered empathy to be a source of information: By allowing us to sympathize with others, we gain a better understanding of them. It would be much harder to predict someone's behaviour without empathy, I think.


From dictionary.com:


em·pa·thy


[em-puh-thee] Show IPA

–noun

1.

the intellectual identification with or vicarious experiencing of the feelings, thoughts, or attitudes of another.

2.

the imaginative ascribing to an object, as a natural object or work of art, feelings or attitudes present in oneself: By means of empathy, a great painting becomes a mirror of the self.



Empathy means to live vicariously through someone else, to truly feel or imagine what it must be like to be them, temporarily. If we were to attempt this for all beings to have ever felt anything, we'd fail miserably; nevertheless, the welfare of billions of beings is important -- something that we can ascertain via logic.


Empathy and sympathy completely block any attempts to fix problems, and in fact are part of "the problem," for they cause selfishness. When we identify with those like ourselves, it feels good, but it has no rational basis, and so is entirely founded on emotion.


Examples:


I'm a cripple, so when someone picks on cripples, I empathize; I get upset. However, when someone picks on an obese person, perhaps I laugh, because I'm not obese myself, and, for one reason or another, lack the ability to put myself into the shoes of the obese person.


Because I'm black, I sympathize with victims of slavery. Because I'm female, I sympathize with female rape victims. Because I'm obese, I sympathize with those who attempt to spread awareness of heart disease.


We shouldn't be limited by what we've been conditioned to be capable of empathizing with. I can't cry when I hear that a bunch of people died last night in a tornado, so if I rely on empathy alone, I'll not rationally concern myself with the event, or the fact that such events happen outside of my personal life. If I feel something for someone who's experienced a tragedy, I'm going to neglect those for whom I feel nothing who've also experienced tragedies -- especially if I'm presented with a choice between these two options, and need to make a decision per the law of opportunity cost. Is this fair? Is this unbiased?


Well, he seems to make an error in the first paragraph when he claims that we consider life intrinsically valuable due to having gotten "emotionally attached" to our ego.


Strawman. I stated that we fabricate excuses for why life needs to exist in the first place -- not for why life is valuable. Furthermore, I'm in favor of the idea that SENTIENT life is valuable; plants and bacteria can be tortured for hours for all I care.


How difficult is it to understand that something can be precious, even in spite of its lack of functionality or purpose (and thus, need to be continued on the production line)? When you perform a mercy killing on your pet, does the fact that you don't believe that it should continue to exist negate the fact that you find its life valuable?


The explanation for us valuing life seems the logical result of natural selection, and as such is intrinsic to our nature. But eh, minor point.


Completely disagree. The general goal of valuing things as a phenomenon sprung from natural selection seems to be to perpetuate genes at the individual level -- not to value life itself. Members of early human tribes were no different from members of chimpanzee troupes or lion packs in their valuing of those genotypes most closely resembling their own -- and, thus, the individual genes whose goals were to perpetuate themselves feverishly and for no good reason.


Very few humans value "life" as a concept nowadays, anyway; they value their own lives, their own personal satisfaction, their nations, and the lives of those closest to them. If you mean to say that humans value their own lives, well, the fact that people are addicted to their various desires does not make those desires functional, imbued with purpose, or somehow objectively worth perpetuating.


Valuing life requires intellectual effort -- at the expense of one's genetically motivated inclinations to scorn all life but that which is reminiscent of oneself. This is evident all throughout the animal kingdom; dogs do not value life, but their own self-satisfaction.


It's a bit odd that he suggests that life is the cause of everything negative in existence, or that "the world might be better off without you". Negative is a human concept and wouldn't exist without sapient creatures to experience it.


This is silly. When baby birds starve to death in the absence of super important humans capable of deeming such a thing negative, is it somehow less unpleasant for the baby birds? Negative is not only a concept, but a sensation. Does the fact that we've contrived the concept of sex change the fact that animals have sex?


It also doesn't make much sense that he distinguishes between creating a positive and ending a negative, since the net effect is the same.


There is no such thing as a positive derived out of thin air; all "positives" are contrived from states of deprivation. I distinguish between the two merely because the former isn't physically possible.


He then claims that having emotions is dangerous. He backs this up by citing things like genocide, which would not occur if humans had no emotions. Even if true, this completely ignores the fact that we consider genocide bad because of our emotions.


That's precisely the point, isn't it? If emotions can lead to nasty consequences, then adding more emotions to the pile is going to make things nastier than they already are.


What you're saying is akin to stating that cancer wouldn't be so bad if we were biologically like plants instead of animals. Isn't that an obvious inference?


We'd also have no genocide if there were no humans, but that is kind of missing the point.


And what point would that be? Can you justify genocide? Short of Jesus and heaven, you're going to have a tough time finding something to put on the other end of the scale that balances everything out. Are you sure that you're not as religious as the fish in a barrel that you like to shoot so often?


He actually does seem to argue that human existence is bad at some points... while simultaneously praising productivity as if it's our highest goal.


1. Suffering is bad.


2. Human existence leads to suffering, so there's certainly something bad about human existence. Whether human existence will ultimately lead to less suffering or a discovery of some metric of value far greater than what we're currently using is hard to say.


3. Even if, hypothetically, all of human existence were a bad idea, wouldn't it be productive to do something about that bad idea? You're framing "productivity" as some kind of linear initiative where positive quantities continuously increase, which is an extremely limited approach to productivity -- a word which always needs context in the first place.


He is right, however, that people will have children even when this is a bad idea (natural selection at work again), but that's nothing new.


Newness is a terrible thing to value by itself. The Nazis were new for a time.



Posted by I Am The Scum

You really need to stop reading this blog. It's absolutely terrible.


I think I'm going to start using this kind of rhetoric in my research papers. I wonder if my grade will go up or down if I start the first paragraph of a paper on nuclear fusion by referring to it as "really horrible and stuff." Hmmm.


In his computer example, he mentions that a computer would have an understanding of how others feel, and lack empathy. That's what empathy is.


2+2=4 does not require empathy; it requires logic. Understanding evolution does not require empathy; it requires empirical observation, from which logic is eventually derived by logic agents. Computers can understand these things.


Empathy is an emotional response to an imagined scenario; see above for its official definition. Empathy requires sentience -- a central nervous system designed for sight, touch, smell, hearing, taste, or some combination of these. A computer does not require a central nervous system in order to understand that 2+2=4, or that circles are round, or that things that don't feel good don't feel good (or that some organisms don't want certain sensations).


We should stop trying to make things better...


What?


We should stop trying to solve problems...


Huh? Have you read any of this blog?

Posted by Leaving Society at 12:19 AM 


Labels: bias, empathy, logic, logic over emotion, logical fallacies

1 comment:

AnonymousNovember 2, 2011 at 9:10 PM

You know who else responded to strawmen? NAZIS


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