plodder wrote: Sat Jan 11, 2020 5:20 pm
sheldrake wrote: Sat Jan 11, 2020 1:19 pm
plodder wrote: Sat Jan 11, 2020 12:45 pm
Although there is a danger in telling people that success is mainly luck, there’s a greater danger in telling them it’s all due to hard work and gumption. The latter is the route to pointless and fruitless wage slavery for millions, who would be far better off focussing their efforts in improving equality of opportunity.
I do not agree with this at all. Their work is not pointless and fruitless, they create and maintain the abundant society we live in now. What exactly would you have them do instead? how exactly would these masses of people, pulled from their factories, call centres & offices 'improve equality of opportunity' whilst nobody is cleaning the toilets, delivering the food, processing the tax returns etc..?
Most of the population have to do fairly boring sh.t for 40 hours a week for most of their adult life just to pay the bills. They're not doing this because somebody has planned an intricate series of interlocking pointless tasks to keep them busy, they're doing these tasks because somebody else needs them to and is willing to pay them. This interlocking web of 'stuff people want doing' is how all the mundane things we depend on for a 21st-century life is kept ticking. Without it, life would be *way* more barbaric and uncomfortable than it is now. There would actually be
less surplus wealth and time available for people to study the humanities, pursue scientific research, create art etc..
But in order for them to do this we need to collectively recognise the significant inequalities in opportunity we currently have.
People growing up in the UK today have opportunities undreamt of by their ancestors. If you try to eliminate all the differences in how much support parents give their children, you would remove one of the greatest incentives for work that there is.
Societies that believe in the value of individual effort and reward it are more prosperous.
The are stlll big swathes of the Earth where success is actually more dependent on luck than it is here in Britain, and yet many of those societies believe more in their own effort than we do. That's a part of how their economies grow so fast and why when people from those societies emigrate here they often end up more successful than the 'indigenous' within a generation.
There's a really seductive but dangerous tone to the 'life's unfair' narrative.
This deserves a proper response and I don’t have time right now: but in the meantime it’s important not to confuse “having a job” with “knocking yourself silly because Cinderella”
Right-oh. We need to recognise that wage slavery creates opportunities relative to the past, but also reduces opportunities relative to the present.
In other words, we can do and have things that our parent's couldn't, but we can't do things that some of our peers can, because we're priced out. And our parent's didn't see quite the same stratification, and it's getting worse. Can we agree on this?
So what this part of the debate boils down to is how we decide which of these (progress compared to the past vs present unfairness) is most important and for that we need to agree how we define, slice, measure and compare them.
For the former we can look at trends in life expectancy, literacy, health (including the kinds of things that end up killing people), the usual.
But that doesn't tell the whole story. I suspect it was easier for a poor person in the 1980's to become a novelist or a musician or an artist for example, because it was pretty easy to get unemployment benefit compared to now, and there might be some research into this somewhere - I've not found any. It was certainly easier for people to get secure housing, with all the benefits that brings, and I think people also likely had lower levels of personal debt - so it would be interesting to know how much our improved standard of living relies on debt. Also there's a bit of a malaise out there as well that's difficult to define but might be perceptible in use of things like anti-depressants. These are all signifiers (to me) of increased stratification, and I think that they also stem in part from the "just keep grinding away and you'll make it" mentality.
These elements of stratification are mainly rooted in chance rather that poor judgement.