In the first phase, analogous to the creation of primary sources in a typical academic peer review process, detailed accounts are to be published, not of observations or sensations, but rather of appetites — Pfhorrest
In the second phase of the process, analogous to the compilation of secondary sources in typical academic peer review, groups of other people are to review and comment on the quality of that original research in media such as journals — Pfhorrest
the third phase, still others are to gauge the consensus opinion held between those secondary sources on what can somewhat reliably, though of course alway still tentatively, be said about what is moral, and publish those conclusions — Pfhorrest
What on earth makes you think all that hasn't already happened in our long history of social interaction. — Isaac
I'm not contesting that something like this has already been happening over the history of civilization, and that through it we've slowly made some moral progress, but I'm advocating like Bacon et al that we recognize that process and practice it intentionally, instead of the mess of baseless authoritarianism that passes for governance today. — Pfhorrest
Who is "we"?And just as there had already been a slow accumulation of knowledge about reality haphazardly following a similar process by the time people like Francis Bacon start advocating that that methodology be recognized and practiced intentionally instead of relying on the mess of baseless authoritarianism that passed for education in their time, so too I'm not contesting that something like this has already been happening over the history of civilization, and that through it we've slowly made some moral progress, but I'm advocating like Bacon et al that we recognize that process and practice it intentionally, instead of the mess of baseless authoritarianism that passes for governance today. — Pfhorrest
For a person who is low in the hierarchy chain, nothing changes, whether those at the top are a religious elite, or a scientific elite.but I'm advocating like Bacon et al that we recognize that process and practice it intentionally, instead of the mess of baseless authoritarianism that passes for governance today.
Yes, it was the second half that I'm asking about. The "recognize that process and practice it intentionally" bit. — Isaac
Who is "we"? — baker
we as a civilization (any civilization, or the global civilization) sure don't seem to be recognizing and practicing it in the political sphere right now. — Pfhorrest
f you think the ordinary legislative processes in use today resemble that process, I'd appreciate if you spelled that resemblance out, because I really don't see it. — Pfhorrest
Being creatures with empathy and a co-operative social structure, we also strive to make the world such that it fits what we think will satisfy those other we live with, both now and in the future. — Isaac
cultural practices become a shortcut to the process of working those out — Isaac
The less dynamic the environment, the less interactions whose feedback need to be accounted for, the less chaotic that probability space is. Hence the many thousands of years of relatively egalitarian societies devolving into the mess we have now. — Isaac
Where in there (in either case) was any actual systematic research and consensus-building done? You just asked some people what they already thought — Pfhorrest
We naturally strive to accommodate those who we care about, but rarely explicitly codify in our processes that we should accommodate everyone, as I'm advocating. — Pfhorrest
And when those cultural practices are entrenched, in law or even just in tradition, we're loath to make exceptions of revisions to them when they fail to work. — Pfhorrest
I'm advocating that if a "law" as written produces a demonstrably bad result, that alone is reason to change the law. — Pfhorrest
Are you suggesting that inequality produces good outcomes more reliably? Or just that it lets us more accurately predict outcomes -- by forcing them to be bad? — Pfhorrest
The part you're talking about is basically my account of how to compile reliable advice on how to avoid conflicts in such a free and equal society, to use both preemptively to prevent such conflicts from occurring, and in the assignment of culpability if such conflicts occur anyway. — Pfhorrest
Yet again, for some reason, assuming everyone but you is an idiot waiting to be instructed. — Isaac
How do you suppose those people arrived at what they 'already thought'? we've a sense of empathy from as young as six month's old. We dedicated that overwhelming majority of our brains to predicting the behaviour of others and how our behaviour will affect them based on that empathy (together with a whole host of other sources). By adulthood people have spent more hours studying other people, putting themselves in their shoes, predicting what the results might be, than any other subject. They've talked about these things with friends, family, colleagues... They've read books with heroes and villains, watched films, plays, songs...
They've all come up with much the same answers when it comes to the obvious stuff, and no law is ever going to tell people to kill innocents, they just won't do it.
But some stuff, the more complex stuff, people's research has yielded different answers, and the rightness or wrongness of those answers can't be tested because a lot of the time it's about consequences too complex to actually follow (like predicting the weather by following air molecules, accurate but impossible). — Isaac
rarely — Pfhorrest
And I can't think of a single person who doesn't already think that. — Isaac
Neither. It's about uncertainty in complex systems. The more nodes in the system the more exponentially complex it becomes. small hunter-gatherer tribes have fewer nodes and so more predictable feedback loops. Larger societies have exponentially more complex networks making feedback practically impossible to predict. Imagine the difference in a game of Chinese whispers with a group of ten compared to a group of ten thousand. How ell could you predict the final word in each case? — Isaac
People come up with folk beliefs about what is real all the time too, and broadly agree on the obvious things, yet disagree on less-obvious things. Does that mean we shouldn't do natural sciences, but instead just poll people on their beliefs? — Pfhorrest
Yes yes complexity I get it... so we shouldn't do meteorology then? — Pfhorrest
You can argue in your defense that you didn't do the thing, or that the thing you did is not the thing the law is against, but "I did the thing the law is against, but it's not wrong to do that" is a non-starter. You don't even get a chance to argue that the law is incorrect. — Pfhorrest
What does this have to do with (in)equality? — Pfhorrest
Societies are bigger now, so we must have authority (and thus inequality) to make them predictabl(y bad)? — Pfhorrest
No, because or model of what is real assumes a shared external source of our sensation, Our model of what feels good does not. — Isaac
No, because I didn't say we shouldn't do ethics (which would be analogous). What we shouldn't do is try meteorology by tracking the movement of every single air molecule, it's too complex, we need shortcuts like pressure and temperature, and even then we don't predict the weather this time next year. Five days is about all we can manage with any accuracy, we are circumspect about our ability to deliver answers and don't do so in situations where we very obviously don't have the data. — Isaac
Nor would you in your system. As described, those matters which cause suffering are determined by a panel of experts. If any individual could argue the case and have it changed in real time on the basis of their argument alone without having to convince any number of people nor with any checks and balances ensuring they're right then it would be chaos. Right now, if an individual believes a law is wrong they can campaign about it, try to convince other people to see it from their point of view, if successful they can lobby, get the 'panel of experts' to agree and it will be changed. It's just a mtter of havign check in place to prevent the law changing every five minutes as some looney thinks they've got an argument against it. — Isaac
What does this have to do with (in)equality? — Pfhorrest
Nothing. — Isaac
The less dynamic the environment, the less interactions whose feedback need to be accounted for, the less chaotic that probability space is. Hence the many thousands of years of relatively egalitarian societies devolving into the mess we have now. — Isaac
"some people don't believe in moral universalism therefore moral universalism is false". — Pfhorrest
your same objections ... have once again flooded another thread and displaced any conversation that might have taken place about the actual topic of it. — Pfhorrest
...while completely ignoring the libertarian deontology that ameliorates pretty much all of your claimed concerns — Pfhorrest
It's a matter of the "looney" being able to convince the expert presiding over the case that he has a point, so that that expert will at least suspend judgement while he (if necessary) escalates the issue to those above him and so on as necessary. Like how if a student in a science class somehow finds something that looks plausibly like new evidence against a prevailing theory -- which should get less likely over time, just as described in the OP -- he can show his professor, who can then begin the process of research that might possibly overturn the scientific consensus. And in the mean time, the professor knows that he shouldn't just outright tell the student he's completely wrong, if the student managed to present plausible evidence to the contrary. — Pfhorrest
why did you mention equality ("egalitarian" = equal-itarian) here? — Pfhorrest
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