The Bored Astronaut

Sense and Non-sense, Power and Freedom

September 6th, 2009 by bored

Reading about existentialism, I’m once again made highly conscious of the absurdity of most theories and philosophies about life, what it means, and how to live it. I’m glad there are philosophers to question these things, although that emotion—gladness—is probably unrelated to philosophy or even thought.

Being pleased that there are people treating something important that I also think might be important is just the recognition of other people being like what I think people should be like: me. It’s disingenuous. It hinges on a doubt: as if there was a possibility that there aren’t people like me in the world, that there is a chance that I am unique and alone. A stupid fear that, like the essence of paranoia, is a disguise for the fact that I want to be unique.

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Posted in Boredom, Stupidity, Philosophy, Live well | 2 Comments »

United States in shambles

September 26th, 2008 by bored

Times are frustrating for those of us in the political centre. The political arena is drowning in a sea of rhetoric being spewed from right and left, little of which can be trusted to represent the true opinions and beliefs of the those doing the spouting. The rate at which new crises appear—both real and imagined—is accelerating. And with each new crisis, the less attention seems available to consider the underlying problems. Not that those problems were getting much attention, anyway.

Granted, the problems haven’t changed for millennia; perhaps they are too straightforward to bother with. I say “problems”, but they all boil down to one general challenge: how to manage wealth. Wealth is like energy: it’s neither created, nor destroyed, but simply re-organized. It’s useful (to human beings) in some forms, and not in others. The analogy is disingenuous in at least one way. As I like to keep reminding people, wealth isn’t simply like energy; it is energy. Or in the case of most material goods, it is the product of processes which rely on and transform energy.

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Posted in Philosophy, Economics | No Comments »

June 21st, 2008 by bored

The problem with the act of writing, these days, for me, is of listening to my thoughts and determining which, if any, is clearly more emphatic and distinct than the rest. And isn’t about what I’m doing at work, since I can’t talk about that. (Unlike some Cocoa software developers, but like many other software developers, we keep our cards close to our chest. We emulate Apple in that regard.)

Outside of programming, the pre-eminent question in my mind is rather vague and abstract. How do we organize people to get them to do what’s best for everyone in the long run, instead of everyone doing what they think is best for them in the short term? How do we convince people that what they think is in their best interests probably isn’t? And who are “we”?

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Posted in Boredom, Pessimism, Stupidity, Philosophy, Psychology | 3 Comments »

Is it bad to own an expensive car?

June 20th, 2007 by bored

You can get a lot of mileage with a question like that amongst ethicists.

Today, Adam, one of my co-workers took issue with the idea of owning a car worth six hundred thousand dollars. While I would also take issue with it, I simply don’t like it. Although I could write a long argument which justified (or tried to justify) my opinion, that’s all it would be: an opinion. In fact, it’s just a feeling. Adam narrowly avoided contradicting himself when he explained that he agreed that it was only an opinion, and that even though he wasn’t trying to convince anyone that he was right, that it wouldn’t be right for him, for ethical reasons. That is, he implied that his feelings about (excessively) expensive (luxury) cars, and the (inferred) self-centredness of owning one, underlie his negative feelings about such.

I could have discussed the issue all day, because it highlights all kinds of questions and issues which fascinate me eternally. We didn’t have all day, unfortunately, but only our lunch break. So I will bore you with it now.

Part of Adam’s reasoning is that owning an expensive car would not, for him, be the best way that he could do good in the world with the money which that car cost. More specifically, that in some way, it empowered him to do good in a way which he could not without it. At some point, he also gave me the impression that any person should follow the same kind of thinking. He used complicated logic to state what would otherwise be obvious, except for one point, which he left unspoken.

His argument comes from that of utility. Personally, I love the idea of utilitarianism, but in most cases, you simply cannot evaluate with any reliability the outcome of such decisions in terms of the amount of good that comes out of them, except in the initial act. Moreover, and this is the real point: everyone works on the utility principle anyway, unless they are working on the pleasure principle.

But we are all working on the pleasure principle. We simply all take pleasure from different things. The disagreements in life have nothing to do with anyone being more or less right than anyone else. There is no monopoly on right and wrong, despite what countless people will tell you (including a great number of non-faithful, non-religious yet nevertheless self-righteous people—even me, some of the time, though ideally only in the context of an explicitly or tacitly shared belief system, in which case I am attempting to point out a contradiction in thinking). Utilitarianism itself is about pleasure. Pleasure is the only measure of goodness—except for irrational feelings which seem to transcend pleasure, and are simply intuitive or instinctual morality. You can argue that the satisfaction of such personal morality is itself a pleasure.

Unfortunately for utilitarianism, there is no way to either a) measure relative pleasure, or b) calculate the long-term ethical consequences of any decision. Society is a non-linear complex system. There are certainly some acts which have undoubtedly bad long-term consequences … or perhaps I mean mid-term—it depends on the time scale! The butterfly effect means that by lending someone a quarter to make a phone call, you might set off a chain of events that leads to a bomb being detonated.

In economics, your purchases are the concrete expression of how you value something. If you buy a luxury car, then you are saying that your pleasure in owning that car exceeds the pleasure that would come from, say, that of the group of people who could eat and sleep in a shelter for a few months or years if you were to donate the balance of the money after buying an affordable car (or using public transit, or working within walking distance from home, or whatever).

Buying things is a person’s way of acknowledging their belief that they (pardon my genderless plural singular) are more important than other people. Not buying things says the opposite.

If someone has a problem with one person acting out their belief, as a consumer, in their own superiority over others, then there is little (though not no) point in telling them so. (It’s not “no point” because guilt can be effective, sometimes.)

My preferred method would be to point out that short-term self-indulgence equates to long-term self-neglect, although the vast majority of self-centred people already know this, but simply can’t sufficiently imagine how badly they will feel in a future of poor health from bad eating and other habits and a broken down, desperation-driven paranoid society, versus how good they will feel this minute from chocolate cake, smokes, porn and fast automobiles right now. Of course, it’s even easier to give in to indulgence when one has the mind’s power to rationalize, shift blame, and deny that there will be any consequences to short-term selfishness at all.

So, what was ultimately problematic about Adam’s discussion was that he glossed over the key fact which makes it moot: people aren’t that smart, nor very imaginative, nor very honest. Lacking those essential qualities, then you will be hard pressed to make even the slightest dent in their thinking. Especially since the lack of those qualities generally means that they don’t think very much at all. And certainly not reasonably.

A last word on capitalism. There is no immediate moral or ethical problem with wealth. Money is simply an agreement about how to trade work. Society as a group decides what work is valuable (well, mostly people with money decide that, so unfortunately it isn’t very democratic). But it’s what you do with the money you have that matters. Few people simply hide it under their mattress or stockpile gold and jewels (though I suppose some do). Surplus money is banked or invested. It’s the investment that makes the difference, ethically. Again, it’s not about universal ethics, but merely how well one person’s preferences gel with others’, and in particular, the ethics which are inherent in the law, a reflection of society’s beliefs.

Interestingly, the Bible makes the same point about hoarding wealth (the parable of the talents). Idle money is akin to an idle person. Idleness is to sacrifice tomorrow to a kind of nothingness today. This hurts everyone, and comes from a tendency to self-destruction borne of self-hatred. Though I’m not sure why that parable ignores the case where the money is invested on the stock market before a big correction.

The point is that money is just a concrete representation of effort, and it’s the effort that has ethical value. Wealthy people are not necessarily more selfish than others. It’s a question of how the money (and time) we have is put to use, and how we encourage others to use their time, not how we use the things they produce, necessarily. If we need things (tools) to do something, we will acquire those things, or do our best with the things we have, unless we are are irrational.

All in all, it is best to ignore attempts to evaluate actions on so-called Utilitarian principles. The ends cannot be used to justify the means. You must accept that some actions are ethical in your world view, and some are not, because you cannot effect the cause you want by the efforts you exert in any but the simplest cases, and you certainly cannot determine the happiness of others by your purchases, except for those from whom you buy an enable them to buy things that they need, without with they would be very unhappy. Though who you spare unhappiness in this way is not especially important; it will always be someone.

So you must determine your own virtues, and they must be active, not passive, or they are not real. You cannot profit by idleness or restraint alone. You must act. It is not about not lying, but spreading truth. It is not about not murdering, but about preserving life. It is not about preventing ugliness, but about creating beauty. It is not about escaping ignorance, but embracing enlightenment. Go forth, and do good things.

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Winning Souls for Darwin

June 2nd, 2007 by bored

The Church of Reality has this to say:

The Church of Reality is a religion based on the practice of Realism, believing in everything that is real. Our motto is, “If it’s real, we believe in it.” Since no one knows all of reality, the Church of Reality is really a religious commitment to the pursuit of reality the way it really is. We think about thinking. We wonder about wondering. We try to understand the understanding of understanding. We are Explorers not followers. The phrase “What is Real?” is our Sacred Question and the word “Reality” is our Sacred Message. We talk about reality, think about reality, and make reality more important in society.

I think that is excellent. Some more, from their Sacred Principles:

  • The Principle of Positive Evolution

    Positive evolution isn’t just a belief that we are evolving forward. It is a personal commitment that realists make to ensure that we evolve forward. There is nothing that protects us from extinction except our effort to make sure the human race doesn’t do something stupid and destroy itself.

  • The Principle of Curiosity

    The Principle of Exploration is the about actual exploration, curiosity is the desire to explore. It is the lust for knowledge. It is the need to know everything.

  • The Principle of Honesty and Integrity

    Reality is about truth. It’s about being intellectually honest. It’s about putting your personal positions aside to accept what is real.

  • The Principle of Scrutiny and Doubt

    The Church of Reality is a doubt based religion as opposed to a (blind) faith based religion. Realists are required to doubt everything and to continually test both old and new ideas to verify that they are still true. Blind faith is irresponsible and bypasses accountability. We doubt everything because we care about reality. By doubting we accept responsibility for preserving the integrity of the truth.

    There are two kinds of people in the world, those who don’t know and those who don’t know that they don’t know. Let us never become the latter.

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