I find it pretty depressing tbh.
My uneducated recollection is that his work is hotly debated, because his arguments have plenty of holes and metrics he opts to use are "questionable".But Steven Pinker has shown empirically and scientifically that life is better than it ever has been in the history of humanity.
My life's awesome I'd say![]()
Sometimes I think negativity is a self imposed trick.I found it helpful to learn about the negativity bias, our brains' tendency to be "velcro for bad experiences and teflon for good ones," and to pay roughly five times more attention to negative stuff (e.g., what's wrong) than to positive. Turns out, there are good evolutionary reasons why this is so. Once you're aware of this, you can counteract it to some degree in your head, and work to shift the balance.
My uneducated recollection is that his work is hotly debated, because his arguments have plenty of holes and metrics he opts to use are "questionable".
There has to be some sort of trauma where I've already made up my mind of what the book is and what is says before even reading it, and having these elaborate counter-arguments to claims that he is probably not even making in the book.Uneducated sounds about right
There has to be some sort of trauma where I've already made up my mind of what the book is and what is says before even reading it, and having these elaborate counter-arguments to claims that he is probably not even making in the book.
I imagine he's using child mortality as a metric, and GDP as a metric, etc yet i'm too lazy to actually read the book.
I guess there's something about those "empirically and scientifically proven" pro-status quo types that rub me the wrong way.
The bullshit detector goes off even without delving deep into it, sort of like when reading anything by nobel prize winning Daniel Kahneman, Krugman and other economists and assorted pseudo scientific bullshit peddlers.
I have a very high bar to what qualifies as science, most of that stuff is "scientism" or as Richard Feynman would call it "cargo-cult science".lol @ calling Daniel Kahneman a pseudoscientific bullshit peddler
Not really. I can entertain the thought that they are wrong, and even if they are wrong the policies the sustainable environment activists push for are generally positive.Does your bullshit detector have the same reaction when people appeal to the authority of climate change science they haven't read/don't understand?
Indeed it is. It's human nature to try to solve problems and so we tend to focus on the bad over the good. But Steven Pinker has shown empirically and scientifically that life is better than it ever has been in the history of humanity. Bad things still happen to good people but the smart ones recognise that on the balance of things, we still have it pretty damn good and just soldier on.
Some people involuntarily view the world through a different lens and it just plain sucks. I have a decent job, friends, family and living situation but my interactions with the world just make me feel like I don't belong here.Then you are looking at just the bad stuff. Lots of really fun ridiculously insane fun stuff to play with.
I have a very high bar to what qualifies as science, most of that stuff is "scientism" or as Richard Feynman would call it "cargo-cult science".
Not really. I can entertain the thought that they are wrong, and even if they are wrong the policies the sustainable environment activists push for are generally positive.
For the most part. I don't see the "oh, no, we were wrong, climate change wasn't caused by humans after all, oh no, what have we done" scenario.
I can however very easily imagine how human population, which has grown by ~840 mil in last 10 years alone (2.5x US population every 10 years), and couple bils in your life time depending on when you were born, could cause some ... environmental strain.
Yes yes I see... hmmm. Interesting.
This can only be true if we have established a value hierarchy so that we associate a good life with high values for certain metrics such as access to health services, education, food, etc. When the baseline for so many people is high in comparison to old times it makes sense that they would be prone to misery. Many times this baseline is artificially heightened via social networks.
If we want a "happy population" it is just as important to have good metrics as it is to have such a population being able to experience it. I don't see how we can do this without an overpowered government or religious institution, bringing about artificial conflicts. Softer solutions would be akin to mandatory military service. Perhaps making people experience a difficult era in human history via virtual reality. I don't know.
He has established the metrics. You don't need to go and reinvent the wheel. Go and read first.
Nah.Indeed it is. It's human nature to try to solve problems and so we tend to focus on the bad over the good. But Steven Pinker has shown empirically and scientifically that life is better than it ever has been in the history of humanity. Bad things still happen to good people but the smart ones recognise that on the balance of things, we still have it pretty damn good and just soldier on.
That gaylord actually came to my university and tried to spew his shit. Needless to say, I never attended.He has established the metrics. You don't need to go and reinvent the wheel. Go and read first.
Your insufferability would be justified if you learned to read. I'm not talking about defining metrics. They are obviously defined, but they are nothing more than conventions.
I was trying to be nice but the saying that one can "scientifically show that life is better" is patently absurd.
EDIT: If things were clear cut as you would wish then there would not be doubts about Sam Harris' project of giving objective foundations to moral questions. This is not the case.
Nah.
Life's a BITCH! AND THEN YOU DIEEEE!
That gaylord actually came to my university and tried to spew his shit. Needless to say, I never attended.
I regret going to university, to be honest.Evidently
I regret going to university, to be honest.
All i got was $29000 in student debt.