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Journal by khallow
I was trying to put together some musings I had about experimentation at the society level with an eye to eventually making society better, but suffered from serious writer's block. So here's what I have.

First, the observation that we can look at a society as a bunch of humans with infrastructure. This infrastructure appears at many levels: individual biology/psychology, culture, rules and trade, the traditional sort of infrastructure (energy generation, roads, emergency services, telecomms, internet), and education/knowledge.

Today, we bring a lot of interesting tools to the table for improving society. First, we have a better understanding and knowledge of the workings of society. Second, advancing technology allows us to do things that weren't possible before. A key one is things are becoming less scarce. We may even be on the verge of the post-scarcity society where basic human needs are "too cheap to meter".

Second, it seems a fine environmental for experimenting with a variety of possibilities that would be legally and culturally acceptable to a degree.

For example, we're already trying out non-traditional relationships like same sex marriage and internet discourse with considerable success.

I wish society was more open to economic/trade experimentation (like gig economy, high frequency trade (and other automated trade mechanisms), and cryptocurrency).

Finally, not much point to experimenting, if one doesn't pay attention to the results. For example, we have vast improvement in the human condition due to the present economic system (global trade, capitalism, plus widespread democracy), but I still see people pushing old narratives that ignore that. Similarly, the economic experiments I mentioned above all have resistance from sources that usually can't be bothered to find an actual problem (gig workers are "exploited", HFT is stealing pennies from grandma every time she trades, and cryptocurrencies are for tax evasion).

On that last point, it doesn't make sense to do experiments, if you can't perceive what works or not in those experiments.
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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 25 2022, @01:31AM (3 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 25 2022, @01:31AM (#1231922)

    It is not enough that I should succeed, others should fail

    More true words of human nature are rarely spoken

    This isn't human nature, it's psychopathy. The entire liberal order following WW2 was founded on the principle that the West would no longer view the world as a zero-sum game.

  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Friday March 25 2022, @02:55PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Friday March 25 2022, @02:55PM (#1232043) Journal

    The entire liberal order following WW2 was founded on the principle that the West would no longer view the world as a zero-sum game.

    And it turns out there's a lot of positive sum in the new game. Maybe time to turn in those earlier narratives of woe and despair?

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 26 2022, @02:40AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 26 2022, @02:40AM (#1232256)

    And the west lost. 1+ billion Chinese fall under Xi's rule that rejects "western freedoms". Now with this latest fiasco that kills the US petrodollar and bails out the Chinese economy as countries use its currency as the reserve instead, we will see the end of "western freedoms" in Africa that is now hopelessly indebt to the Chinese government. the ANC just sold a massive amount of land they had cordoned off as a culture reserve for nature to the Chinese to bulldoze and turn into a military port.

    The west is dead, and any western derived opinions of freedom are gone with it.

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday March 26 2022, @06:32AM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday March 26 2022, @06:32AM (#1232311) Journal
      There's still reason to expect positive changes in China over the next few decades. The Chinese don't need a government obsessed with keeping power at any price. And maybe they can figure out how to get that to happen.