▲ | _heimdall a day ago | |||||||
To me the middle ground is where its really interesting, jumping from one extreme to the other has so many unknowns. Surely we free up brain power for other, newer things bit that comes at a cost. We lose a lot of potentially useful details of how and why we got here, and that context would be really helpful as we march towards the next technology. For example, most people (I'll stick to the US here) stopped producing most of their own food decades ago. Today most people don't really know where there food comes from or what it takes to grow/raise it. Its no wonder that we now have a food system full of heavily processed foods and unpronounceable ingredients that may very well be doing harm to our overall health. | ||||||||
▲ | idopmstuff a day ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> Its no wonder that we now have a food system full of heavily processed foods and unpronounceable ingredients that may very well be doing harm to our overall health. Sure, but in the old system people just starved to death when there were problems with their crops (Irish potato famine, dust bowl, etc.). The current system isn't perfect, obviously, but this example seems to pretty clearly demonstrate a case where it's better that we've outsourced this knowledge to others. Also, it's worth bearing in mind that we're now at a point where basically all of the information that people have "lost" is now once again available on the internet. Most people don't use it, because there simply aren't enough hours in the day, but people who care can find out more than any farmer 100 years ago about food and source theirs accordingly. | ||||||||
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