rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Silicon Valley Has an Empathy Vacuum
rhodri's comments
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Silicon Valley Has an Empathy Vacuum
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Silicon Valley Has an Empathy Vacuum
and does punishing children cause them to behave better?
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Silicon Valley Has an Empathy Vacuum
great! perhaps you have been raised well and have managed to recover from emotional trauma you may have experienced in life so far. some people unfortunately have not been so lucky.
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Silicon Valley Has an Empathy Vacuum
the problem is that we are all chasing that buck, rather than imagining what that buck could do
> What if there were simply richer tools for users to rate things?
they would be abused by those with underdeveloped empathy to marginalise views that threatened them. emotional problems require emotional solutions.
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Silicon Valley Has an Empathy Vacuum
they have no interest in spreading technology's monetary or possible systemic benefits to the entire population, and indeed a direct interest in accumulating and then exercising political power.
it's a real problem that cannot be explained away through a lack of education, as many over-educated, under-employed and disempowered young (and old!) people directly experience day to day. open-source software and education are steamrollered by the directed power of hierarchy.
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Silicon Valley Has an Empathy Vacuum
as engineers we spend a lot of time dismissing the ethical or systemic consequences of our work in favour of concentrating on hard problems with deterministic solutions. humanity is more than that, reality is more than that.
there is real, legitimate anger, grief and confusion in the population. if we want to put technology to work for the people, we need to listen to them (us) in all their (our) messy, contradictory beauty/ugliness/realness.
grieving is a process that starts with denial and ends with acceptance.
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: The hole at the heart of economics: the consent of the governed
"Institutions are organisations or patterns of behaviour built by societies to help solve social or economic problems which the law or private markets cannot fully address."
institutions have existed long before the rule of law, or the existence of private markets.
what he does get right is the fallacy of "ceteris paribus" or "all else remaining equal" that is used in most economic arguments with their limited scope.
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Step-by-step tutorial to build a modern JavaScript stack from scratch
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Have Humans Evolved to Be Inaccurate Decision Makers?
we can see this most clearly in our politicians' insistence on their particular model of the economy as their priority, rather than the actual concerns of the citizens they are responsible to.
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Have Humans Evolved to Be Inaccurate Decision Makers?
their general-purpose nature means that our minds take on the additional complexity of context switching as we use our tools for multiple simultaneous tasks, and indeed this generality means that they can be quickly adapted to new contexts. contrast this to specialist tools which, once learned, provide significant increases in efficiency in the specific context to which they have been adapted (including the benefits of increased concentration owing to lack of distraction!) but cannot always be re-engineered easily to suit new contexts.
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: Have Humans Evolved to Be Inaccurate Decision Makers?
rhodri | 9 years ago | on: The fight to cheat death is heating up
rhodri | 10 years ago | on: What Is the I Ching?
rhodri | 10 years ago | on: Terrorism is not about terror
rhodri | 10 years ago | on: How Academia Resembles a Drug Gang (2013)
rhodri | 10 years ago | on: Why a Greece Deal Matters: A Visual Guide
rhodri | 10 years ago | on: Why a Greece Deal Matters: A Visual Guide
The austerity imposed on the Greek people will shrink the economy and ensure that the next few generations will be labouring in servitude to pay off the debts of the previous generations. The supreme irony in all of this is that Germany was able to thrive after WW2 in part because of the writing-off of more than half of their government debt, something that Angela Merkel has claimed is 'off the table'.
Further reading: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jun/29/where-did-the-g... https://medium.com/@gavinschalliol/thomas-piketty-germany-ha...
rhodri | 10 years ago | on: Greeks Reject Bailout Terms
rhodri | 11 years ago | on: Magnetic field applied to brain increases acceptance of false statements (2008)
no amount of good parenting can protect us from real badness