I have seen many people who before speaking their opinion reference the classics (or as an achievement that they read works of Plato's dialogue and all other classics) but I find most of them irrelevant and can have infinitely interpretation.
All this further supports the theory that the gods of old were in fact a highly advanced civilization quite apart from but meddling with nascent human civilization. I love that idea :).
I think you mean out of space aliens but technically advanced messengers bringing teachings like agricultur, writing, and metallurgy, demanding offerings in return and keeping relative peace fits the bill just as much, especially if the Lords ventured from places high in the sky, mountains that is.
At a lower layer, it's just veneration of the elders, preservation of memory through old stories traveling through time, not space.
I doubt they "would have loved Alexa" (which doesn't occur again in the body of the article, at all). I mean, of course they would also have loved the idea of owning slaves, but I still don't see how to get from there to Alexa, which is beholden to Amazon, not the user.
> Leisure — skhole — can be seen as one of the acid tests of sorts here: In its positive capacity, it is a characteristic of vita contemplativa as a specific freedom to abstain from the life of a political engagement. Its obverse, ‘un-quiet’ — a-skholia — functioned traditionally as a negative term to characterise vita activa as seen from the philosophical perspective of ‘the absolute quiet of contemplation’.
That's kinda different from "not having to work so there's more time to consume things, and having more money to be able to consume ever more expensive things", which seems to the dream for many... rather than finally having time to ponder everything, finally not having to ponder anything! Because that is work, too. Or as a HN comment put it,
> learning a huge amount of useless facts, [instead of] being able to look them up like the rest of society does
That's the antithesis of the contemplative life. I don't think the Greeks would have liked that, though I don't claim to know, that's just my impression... and at any rate I disagree with them in some things, and agree more with Arendt:
> A rehabilitation of vita activa, and especially of the activity of action, the one defining for the human experience of freedom and for politics
Insofar automation and "AI" is just used by few humans to control many humans without having to face them directly, it doesn't increase the freedom to act. It gives "freedom" from having to be a free citizen, with the illusion of being allowed forever to just graze on land the owners could turn into jungle or a golf course, with the very same machines that make the masses obsolete. I certainly don't buy that those who so far do their best to hoard and exploit will suddenly want to share or even serve, that doesn't pass the smell test for me.
Anyway, what's so unfathomable about making new life and treating it well and being a good friend / parent, rather than a slave?
It's silly to talk about whether androids (Why androids? That's an odd choice of words, like seeming more human to us in shape would have anything to do with their mental or emotional capabilities) "can have a moral sense", considering how we are currently using our moral sense. It's like people who drink and fight all day, and don't have a book in the house, and keep hitting their child on the head all the time, asking about whether it might attend university one day. The actions kinda betray that they're not seriously asking, they just want to be able to say "it wasn't our fault, we hoped our child would make it".
It generally feels more like it's not even about making "another human, or something even more human than humans", but simply robbing humans of their humanity. We seem happy to equate showing all the right "signs of empathy" with actually feeling it on the inside, basically adopting the the approach of a sociopath.
> "All you have to do is keep quiet about the failure of the Voigt-Kampff test here today. You and your colleagues keep going as you are, we start feeding Nexus Sixes into the earth population, and in a couple of years you make out you've suddenly discovered the test mistakes human beings for androids. But by then, it'll be too late to turn the clock back."
> "So human beings won't be able to tell themselves apart from...
I didn't read the article, but I feel like we might rapidly get to the point where technology is magic. As arrogant as using "even" in this context sounds - EVEN people on here generally don't understand more than a few fields. For example, when it really comes down to it, the way pain meds work might as well be magic to me, though I could probably sputter some scientific-sounding explanation that I really don't understand. Same with modern computers - I can mumble about logic gates, but the reality is that my electronics knowledge stops at vacuum tubes, just because that's what's accessible without an EE/chemistry specialization.
we might already be there. The common trend to say, "we will solve X with technology" is pretty much the same sentiment as "we will solve X with magic". as long as technology and magic are amorphous concepts that hold a broad array of human experiences.
To me ‘magic’ is the gap between our internal models of the external world and reality.
You stand before a magician, he is holding a card. You believe this to be true because some photons entered your eyes and your mind constructed a realistic simulation that conforms to the sensoral input.
The magician waves his hand— the card disappears — in a very real sense. The simulation that your consciousness creates and inhabits has updated and erased the card from your reality.
That it is in fact behind his hand and that he was able make your internal model of reality diverge from actual reality with some words and a gesture is what creates magic.
So how does this apply to technology — if the technology is so advanced that your mind can’t model it’s behavior — then it perpetually creates that divergence by merely existing. You’re always going to have to update your mental model to account for what it does.
But I think that sort of magic is fairly temporary, because people are nothing if not adaptable — hand an iPhone to a toddler and it’s simply another new thing to explore and understand, no more mysterious than the light sparkling from a glass of water or a leaf blowing in the wind.
9 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 34.1 ms ] threadAt a lower layer, it's just veneration of the elders, preservation of memory through old stories traveling through time, not space.
I doubt they "would have loved Alexa" (which doesn't occur again in the body of the article, at all). I mean, of course they would also have loved the idea of owning slaves, but I still don't see how to get from there to Alexa, which is beholden to Amazon, not the user.
http://arkbooks.dk/leisure-in-ancient-greece-with-hannah-are...
> Leisure — skhole — can be seen as one of the acid tests of sorts here: In its positive capacity, it is a characteristic of vita contemplativa as a specific freedom to abstain from the life of a political engagement. Its obverse, ‘un-quiet’ — a-skholia — functioned traditionally as a negative term to characterise vita activa as seen from the philosophical perspective of ‘the absolute quiet of contemplation’.
That's kinda different from "not having to work so there's more time to consume things, and having more money to be able to consume ever more expensive things", which seems to the dream for many... rather than finally having time to ponder everything, finally not having to ponder anything! Because that is work, too. Or as a HN comment put it,
> learning a huge amount of useless facts, [instead of] being able to look them up like the rest of society does
That's the antithesis of the contemplative life. I don't think the Greeks would have liked that, though I don't claim to know, that's just my impression... and at any rate I disagree with them in some things, and agree more with Arendt:
> A rehabilitation of vita activa, and especially of the activity of action, the one defining for the human experience of freedom and for politics
Insofar automation and "AI" is just used by few humans to control many humans without having to face them directly, it doesn't increase the freedom to act. It gives "freedom" from having to be a free citizen, with the illusion of being allowed forever to just graze on land the owners could turn into jungle or a golf course, with the very same machines that make the masses obsolete. I certainly don't buy that those who so far do their best to hoard and exploit will suddenly want to share or even serve, that doesn't pass the smell test for me.
Anyway, what's so unfathomable about making new life and treating it well and being a good friend / parent, rather than a slave?
It's silly to talk about whether androids (Why androids? That's an odd choice of words, like seeming more human to us in shape would have anything to do with their mental or emotional capabilities) "can have a moral sense", considering how we are currently using our moral sense. It's like people who drink and fight all day, and don't have a book in the house, and keep hitting their child on the head all the time, asking about whether it might attend university one day. The actions kinda betray that they're not seriously asking, they just want to be able to say "it wasn't our fault, we hoped our child would make it".
It generally feels more like it's not even about making "another human, or something even more human than humans", but simply robbing humans of their humanity. We seem happy to equate showing all the right "signs of empathy" with actually feeling it on the inside, basically adopting the the approach of a sociopath.
> "All you have to do is keep quiet about the failure of the Voigt-Kampff test here today. You and your colleagues keep going as you are, we start feeding Nexus Sixes into the earth population, and in a couple of years you make out you've suddenly discovered the test mistakes human beings for androids. But by then, it'll be too late to turn the clock back."
> "So human beings won't be able to tell themselves apart from...
You stand before a magician, he is holding a card. You believe this to be true because some photons entered your eyes and your mind constructed a realistic simulation that conforms to the sensoral input.
The magician waves his hand— the card disappears — in a very real sense. The simulation that your consciousness creates and inhabits has updated and erased the card from your reality.
That it is in fact behind his hand and that he was able make your internal model of reality diverge from actual reality with some words and a gesture is what creates magic.
So how does this apply to technology — if the technology is so advanced that your mind can’t model it’s behavior — then it perpetually creates that divergence by merely existing. You’re always going to have to update your mental model to account for what it does.
But I think that sort of magic is fairly temporary, because people are nothing if not adaptable — hand an iPhone to a toddler and it’s simply another new thing to explore and understand, no more mysterious than the light sparkling from a glass of water or a leaf blowing in the wind.