user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Why Envy Might Be Good for Us
> Better in the way that western civilization (with America leading the way) has been built on hierarchies.
Despite that that is an incorrect statement (it has been addressed by coldtea's comment), my original question tried to hint towards a wider view. It's not as simple as saying western civilization is better. Is it better for the individual? How? Is it better for humanity? How? Is it better because we have cars, computers, airplanes and what not? Would all humans have starved to death without it? And then what is the cost of western civilization? Does it carry those costs? After all, hierarchical systems have stood for some of the worst atrocities in both historic and more modern times. When a ruler can send millions to war with some other ruler because he (let's be honest it's mostly a he) has the power over "his" people.
Western civilization is what we have and know but what is to say that the world couldn't have been in a better place if history had taken some other turns?
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Why Envy Might Be Good for Us
Interesting, in Swedish we have two (main) words too. The most common word, avundsjuk, even though it has sjuk in it (meaning sick or ill), doesn't necessarily have to be negative. E.g. "I'm so avundsjuk on your vacation to the Bahamas but I hope you have a nice trip." Missunnsam (sounds related to Missgunst) OTOH means that you refuse to let someone enjoy the object of envy. "I guess you must do some pretty heavy tax-evasion in order to afford that trip to the Bahamas."
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Why Envy Might Be Good for Us
I agree, fairness != equality. While I'm a great believer in fairness, the problem with it is that it opens up to arbitration. What I consider fair may not be what you consider fair. Equality OTOH is measurable.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Why Envy Might Be Good for Us
> not being envious of anyone, equalises everyone.
This is a very 1st world sentiment. If you live on less than $1/day, you are not equalized even if you're too hungry to feel any envy.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Why Envy Might Be Good for Us
> I'm of the opinion that egalitarianism is not a desirable outcome. Hierarchies [...] are much more preferable and have demonstrated to be the better pick for humanity.
Better in what way? The Ju/’hoansi have lived in this egalitarian society for some 200k yrs[1]. It has obviously served them quite well.
[1] Original article
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Why Envy Might Be Good for Us
> "For while a particularly spectacular kill was always cause for celebration, the hunter responsible was insulted rather than flattered."
This seems to have the same purpose as the Law of Jante[1] we have in the Nordic countries.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Jante
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Back-and-forth exchanges boost children’s brain response to language
This. I studied German for six years in school and have yet to complete a successful conversation. I worked as a volunteer in a children's home in Thailand for a couple of months and while far from fluent in Thai, I can manage most situations.
I very firmly believe that languages are taught the wrong way in school. There's too much focus on grammar but not enough of getting a "feel" for the language. You need to soak in it for that. You shouldn't need to think about how to say something (but that's what German is to me, whenever I try to say things the "is it accusative or dative?"-question pops up in my mind).
Needing to think about how to say what you want to say is like needing to think about how to move your feet in order to walk.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Back-and-forth exchanges boost children’s brain response to language
> 'not one of your long answers, though dad'
I get this a lot too. My 8 yr old daughter frequently tells me she just wants the answer.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Back-and-forth exchanges boost children’s brain response to language
> having access to iPad helped my daughter to learn way more than I thought she could at that age (e. g. English names for colors; count in English and the alphabet song — before she even was three)
While that may sound awesome, I'm not so sure it's better in the long term. Your daughter would've learned the English names of colors and the alphabet eventually anyway. OTOH using phones and pads changes our brains, making us worse and worse at keeping our focus. We become addicted to that something is always changing or moving until reading a book becomes hard. I'd rather start from the other side, reading a lot of books for the kids, letting them learn at a slower rate but with retained ability to focus.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: How scammers get away with fraud
I recently returned from a trip to the USA and was a bit surprised that they asked for ZIP code instead of PIN for my credit card. While the NY subway accepted my non-US ZIP code, some gas stations did not as they apparently checked the entered ZIP code against valid US ZIP codes.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: “It’s Easier To Ask Forgiveness Than To Get Permission”
Det är lättare att be om förlåtelse än om tillåtelse.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: People are recycling too much garbage, and it's threatening the industry
In Sweden we incinerate[1] the trash in super hot ovens and use the resulting heat to heat our homes. We do recycle as well but as we sometimes even import trash to burn (it's a cold country after all) I don't feel so bad when throwing something in the ordinary bin instead of sorting it proper.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incineration
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: What the Airline Knows About the Guy in Seat 14C
We had a flight once where they had assigned my then six year old daughter to a seat on a separate row from the rest of us (me, wife and son) so naturally my wife took that seat and let me sit with the kids.
This was very confusing to the flight attendant. She was like "You need to sit in your seat!" to my wife and as we explained the error by the airline, she scolded us and said "but kids can't sit by themselves!" Uhm, no that's what we fixed... Rest of the flight she looked at us suspiciously as if we were up to something.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: What the Airline Knows About the Guy in Seat 14C
+1 for GDPR!
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Mindfulness Meditation Impairs Task Motivation but Not Performance [pdf]
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: “It’s Easier To Ask Forgiveness Than To Get Permission”
On a related note I've found it's easier to get your way with e.g. your manager if you say "I will do this!" rather than "Can I do this?"
This probably have to do with that in the second case you ask your manager to make a decision, causing them cognitive load. In the first case you already made that decision for them.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: Mindfulness Meditation Impairs Task Motivation but Not Performance [pdf]
Still it's easier and more pleasant to maintain that state of mind not sitting inside a cubicle with a boss yelling at you to work harder.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: X86 assembly doesn’t have to be scary
But with AGA chipset the Amiga got chunky pixels (e.g. write palette index to the framebuffer as in VGA).
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: The Tapplock IoT padlock has multiple security vulnerabilities
The issue isn't that you could break most any padlock using heavy duty tools, the issue is that you can break any Tapplock without arousing suspicion.
Consider using it for your gym-locker. The changing room is typically occupied by at least some people whenever the gym is open so if someone is pulling out a bolt-cutter or an angle grinder it would probably lead to someone notifying the gym-employees/police. Meanwhile someone who just walks up to the lock and seemingly opens it must be legit and goes unnoticed.
user5454
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7 years ago
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on: The Tapplock IoT padlock has multiple security vulnerabilities
While true in many cases, in my experience it's not only the engineers. Unless you have the senior managers on board as well, they'll just lean on the engineers to "ship now".
Despite that that is an incorrect statement (it has been addressed by coldtea's comment), my original question tried to hint towards a wider view. It's not as simple as saying western civilization is better. Is it better for the individual? How? Is it better for humanity? How? Is it better because we have cars, computers, airplanes and what not? Would all humans have starved to death without it? And then what is the cost of western civilization? Does it carry those costs? After all, hierarchical systems have stood for some of the worst atrocities in both historic and more modern times. When a ruler can send millions to war with some other ruler because he (let's be honest it's mostly a he) has the power over "his" people.
Western civilization is what we have and know but what is to say that the world couldn't have been in a better place if history had taken some other turns?