| ▲ | bluegatty 3 hours ago | |||||||
Thoughtful. Yes 'hack and 'hacking' [1] (Google Ngram Viewer) The traditional use of 'hack' was meant to imply 'half baked' or 'not good' and often used as an insult 'that guy is a hack' etc. 'Hack' as in 'tinkering and improvisation' is relatively new - and it came about at roughly the same time as the 'Phreak' version of 'hack'. Yes - of course norms can simply benefit those with power, I hinted at that, but on the other end:
... if the dissolution of society is 'ahead of the curve' ...For every rule that is broken, probably 95 times out of 100, it as broken for selfish or irresponsible or self aggrandizing reasons. 'Little Egos' are just as capable of acting callously as 'Powerful Egos' and usually without any self awareness. But yes - even in the moments were 'norms should probably be broken' - the 'new norms' can only possibly come about from the 5% which are creating positive new norms, and there underlies the 'Venture Capital' motivation and relationship to 'Hacking'. And that's exactly the essence of the fallacy of the libertarian creed -the churlish assumption that 'rules are the arbitrary imposition of those with power' and that somehow breaking them is more likely good than not, and that one should aspire to be 'ahead of the curve'. The only way out of that trap is a consistent application of a 'moral concern'. Obviously, we can argue about what 'moral' is forever, but at very minimum it's a consideration of the 'greater good', which is fundamentally at odds with the egoism at the root of 'breaking the limitations' which are seen to be constraining the desires of a given ego. [1] https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=Hack%2Chacking... | ||||||||
| ▲ | pdonis 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> the libertarian creed -the churlish assumption that 'rules are the arbitrary imposition of those with power' and that somehow breaking them is more likely good than not This is certainly churlish, but it's not at all "the libertarian creed". People who break rules just for the sake of breaking them aren't libertarians, they're idiots. I agree there are lots of those around, and that many, if not most, people who crow about "breaking rules" are doing it for selfish or irresponsible or self-aggrandizing reasons. But those people aren't libertarians. The libertarian creed is that there are different kinds of rules, and you treat them in different ways. And one key part of that is precisely the "moral concern" that you talk about. Libertarianism includes the non-aggression principle: don't violate other people's rights. (Some, including me, would say that's a bedrock tenet of libertarianism.) If breaking a rule would do that, you don't break the rule. And indeed lots of the rules we have in place in our society are there for that very reason--because breaking them would mean violating someone's rights. That doesn't just include obvious cases like the laws against things like murder. It includes rules about fiduciary responsibility when you're taking care of other people's money (someone mentioned Paypal upthread). And it includes norms that aren't codified into rules, like "don't take your users' data without their consent or even knowledge, and then sell it for profit". Doing it at scale to billions of people, as tech giants do, doesn't change that, and "libertarian creed" isn't a get out of jail free card. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | bluegatty 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
(respond to pdnois thoughtful note) "People who break rules just for the sake of breaking them aren't libertarians, they're idiots. " -> they're not breaking them 'to break them' - they're breaking them because the rule doesn't serve their immediate purpose. Like 'talking loud on a train'. People who do that are not doing so 'just for spite' (sometimes) but rather, the social constraint is too much for them in the moment. They are putting themselves 'above the (social) law'. Most of the time, people lack the self awareness and are oblivious to their own actions in this regard especially under the veil of an ideology. In the more ideological sense, Libertarians are often opposed to 'regulations' on the grounds that it 'limits their choice' etc. but those 'choices' have external effects on those around them. The Ego is the greatest deluder and it's why self awareness is so hard. I believe this is the 'root' of what the author is getting at. The Egoic aspiration towards supposed 'freedom' is often an ideological guise for trampling on others and just the pursuit of raw, unhindered selfish desire. But 'without awareness'. Or worse - 'suppressed awareness'. That's the key factor here: the 'lack of self awareness' and the deep motivation for people to put themselves before others - that drives this. You see it all the time in callous Executive statements - it's why they seem so 'detached' - in their minds they are not acting 'badly' or 'immorally' - they're just doing what's good for them (often under the guise of 'shareholder' ideology, which is rooted in classic free market liberalism.), without any kind of self awareness. And why in some competitive systems, a sense of self awareness can be a detriment. And by the way - this 'tension' is right at the heart of Adam Smith. Adam Smith was deeply concerned with the moral outcome - he was a (Christian) Ethicist, before he was an Economist. He wrote more about the issues of power than comparative value. Friedman is like Adam Smith without the 'self consideration'. | ||||||||
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