What I'm looking for is education regarding the side-effects of capitalism (to continue the medical metaphor) rather than an excision. — Baden
I think it would be worth the sacrifice of some economic and even some technological growth in order that human growth be focused on more. — Baden
You are mistaken. Progressivism is the new form of organisation of capitalism. In order to get people to work for the big and large corporations (which is becoming normalised, and a matter of prestige), they introduce all sorts of PR moves such as being green, such as levelling down hierarchies, and so forth. This is a way to get people to accept their chains. On top of this, Hollywood is reshaping morality in order to maximise the efficiency of capitalism. See my post here. — Agustino
Yes. In fact I often rely on my romantic partner to know when to shower, if I haven't had one for several days. She has a more sensitive olfactory sense than me, so she can tell me if I need one.Just curious if any of the folks who are against showering, deodorant, brushing their teeth, etc. have at least one romantic partner. — Terrapin Station
Now, now. Don't pretend that you don't understand the difference between the reasons for washing the hands after defecating, which are based on hygiene and are scientifically uncontroversial, and the reasons for daily showering, which are purely based on advertising and unexamined compliance with social norms.Also, do you folks clean yourself including your hands after you go to the bathroom, or is that an evil plot against you in your view, too?
This is a point in which I'm particularly interested. I wonder a great deal about whether people are generally happier now than they were say 150 years ago. Travel can be fun, but is happiness dependent on it? More importantly, to me, the perceived intensity (novelty value?) of the travel one does is a function of how different the culture one visits is from that in which one habitually lives. Might it be the case that someone hiking to the next county in 1867 rural England would experience more intense novelty - more genuine travel - than someone flying from London to Benidorm in 2017? Put another way, do we in 2017 really think we would be any happier if we could to Mars or Proxima Centauri?Let's take the example of cheap flights, mentioned in the song. .... In Marx's time my forebears were poor uneducated rural labourers..... It's unlikely they ever set foot outside Britain and Ireland. But here I am now in sunny Spain, having been to several countries in several continents — jamalrob
Indeed, that's the billion dollar question, and one that greatly interests the more thoughtful economists. Few would contest that developments that greatly improved public health like the discovery of immunisation have also improved net happiness. And few would contest that the 'invention' of the iPhone 8 makes no difference at all to net happiness. But there's an enormous no-mans-land between the two, somewhere within which lies a boundary. Unanimous agreement, or even a strong consensus, on where that boundary lies is impossible. But only the Trumps of the world would deny that there should be some boundary. Even the USA (for now, at least) places some limits on what limited liability corporations are allowed to do.What is the limit beyond which we should not have gone? — jamalrob
Educate The People about the side effects of capitalism till the cows come home--it won't make any significant difference. Capitalism is a remorseless system, and it isn't going to play nice. What is it about providing an ever increasing flow of profit to shareholders don't you understand? — Bitter Crank
if any one us wants to see ourselves as not enchained to simplistic psychological profiling, then we have to also ditch the idea of ourselves as passive receptacles of ads that inexorably hit their mark. — csalisbury
(and I'd add that I'm more liberal than conservative - I'm just suspicious of the grand visions of both) — csalisbury
And that brings me to 'cool' - 'cool' is a very complex feeling. For one, the very idea of cool is often tied to not "selling out" so that , in placing a product in conjunction with someone cool, the cool person can be drained of his coolness, and so become incapable of associating the product with coolness. — csalisbury
But in any case 'cool' runs up against all sort of psychological defenses so you cant simply beam cool+pepsi to any one who sees the ad. Tho of course you'll hit some targets, I never claimed everyone is invulnerable to every campaign. — csalisbury
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I don't disagree with that, I just don't necessarily buy that Advertising's subconscious plugging-in has deeply amplified dissatisfaction. ( Because I think that to be human is be plugged into in ways we're not fully aware of with consequences we don't fully understand. Life is made of a million fleeting inner conflicts. In other words: I don't think that that distinguishes advertising from most things. So, for instance, we may take a class about advertising and not internalize the things the professor hopes we do, yet we'll still be plugged into etc etc )My issue is not so much that we actually do what the marketers want us to do but that they plug into a part of us that works in ways we are not fully aware of with consequences we don't fully understand.
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