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stavros 14 days ago

I disagree. I definitely have the curiosity to break into things all the time. There's a difference between unlocking a car, leaving a note saying "I unlocked your car" and locking it again, and unlocking it to crash it.

yyyk 12 days ago | parent | next [-]

That's not as innocuous as you put it. From Godfather's horse head to the Bibilical story of Saul's robe, that can have a very different meaning and feeling.

kelnos 14 days ago | parent | prev [-]

I think both of those things do give people that rush of power and control over others. Certainly one is harmless and the other... not so much.

stavros 14 days ago | parent | next [-]

It doesn't give me a rush of power or control, I just like solving puzzles, and locks are puzzles.

ludston 14 days ago | parent [-]

I don't know how to explain that the feeling of solving a puzzle is a "rush of power". If it weren't, you'd be equally happy fiddling with a pile of puzzle pieces and making no attempt to solve it as you were to searching for a solution.

There isn't anything inherently unethical about enjoying power, but neither is it in any way virtuous.

lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 14 days ago | parent | next [-]

This comment redefines the "power" as it's defined above, in particular by forgetting that it's "over others":

> I think both of those things do give people that rush of power and control over others.

That was presumably unintentional; I just wanted to point out that it's a different philosophical topic.

I don't strictly disagree with the idea but it's not the same as saying that someone solving a sudoku is doing it for the sake of having power over the puzzle's creator and/or the curator of the book/app that included the puzzle. It seems more likely that they're doing it instead because when they would solve puzzles in the past they would get a hit of dopamine, which taught them that solving puzzles is rewarding. I think this seems to fall under "rush of power" per this meaning but it's not "rush of power and control over others" per the initial one.

stavros 14 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I still disagree. You're making a false dichotomy that there can be either "rush of power" or "nothing". Instead, I feel a sense of achievement at a job well done. To say that that's "power" requires stretching some definitions.

ludston 14 days ago | parent [-]

You can take the position of "achievement isn't a feeling of power" if you'd really like to, in which case I simply say find and replace all prior uses of "feelings of power" with "feelings of achievement" and the argument still stands. I'm happy to use whatever definitions you want. Taking joy from your success in doing things (whether you refer to it as achievement or power) is simply not an valid ethical justification when it is at the expense of violating other peoples right to control of their possessions.

ToValueFunfetti 14 days ago | parent [-]

I don't know that the argument stands with "feelings of achievement". I agree that you can't justify a moral infringement by taking pleasure in it, but upthread you were trying to distance the motivation from virtuous ones like curiousity and activism. Being driven by achievement is absolutely a virtue. I'd argue it's the same virtue that drives curiousity, and you've essentially just said exactly that ("the feeling of solving a puzzle is a 'rush of power'" s/power/achievement).

throaway2501 14 days ago | parent | prev [-]

solving puzzle pieces is trivial. you just keep looking for the right parts till it fits. it is designed to be solved. unlike a car door.

beeflet 14 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Security systems also give you power and control over others. Whether or not it's harmless to break them is a case-by-case question.