I doubt it; it would probably just be a natural competitive advantage to be against others having more or getting treated better, which is a kind of more. Grooming in mammals is a survival benefit, after all.
And I think that what we consider animals "learning from humans" is mostly them just learning how to get the most out of their magical food/shelter source.
I mean, when a cat rubs its head on a person, it's just sharing its scent with the pack.
And when a dog licks your face, it's just finding out what you ate, hoping that you'd share, you unsharing alpha bastard with the pizza and chicken.
And that leads to the real difference between cats and dogs. Dogs have gained their survival advantage because they make you believe you're the alpha, cat's don't give a crap, because they know they're the alpha.
And if you think you're the alpha in the dog relationship, just stop feeding them for a few days; you'll quickly find out who is who, my friend :-)
I have the theory that domesticated animals learn a lot of what we perceive as their traits from their owners.
For instance, my cat never really cared much about new years eve fireworks. I attribute that to me not being anxious around that time of the year. However, all the pet owners I ever talked to who told me their pet is particularily anxious around new years eve turned out to also not really like fireworks... And I can very well imagine how the pet picks up the vibe of their owner, why shouldn't they...
My cat also freely shared his food bowl and litterbox with visiting cats, which was really adorable behaviour. I attribute that to a rather deep mutual trust betweenhim and me, but thats fishing in the dark...
It's honestly worth asking even about humans. By the time an infant is old enough to display meaningful personality traits, they've been around other humans learning as much as the cats. An infant can't survive in complete isolation, so we have no way of testing how much behavior is truly pure instinct and how much is learned. It's unethical to do this experimentally, so all we have is a sparse collection of historical feral children, but even these were always raised by humans at least through infancy. This paper's intro notes that inequity aversion shows in humans as early as age 4. That is more than enough time for it to be entirely learned.
Our bodies have intrinsically mammalian tendencies, such as our competitive nature, especially over food. At some point in our development, we gain the ability to learn sharing and impulse control and other such higher brain functions.
This is why childhood education is so important, and was such an important part of mid-to-late 1930s German youth education. We are all brainwashed by our upbringing, in whichever directions our mentors exemplify or force upon us, such is the nature of our adaptive wetware.
At some point, we can always exercise our ability to choose, however difficult it may be, and for better or worse, for both ourselves and our cultures.
Animals can show no aversion to inequity and I can still think that aristocracy is immoral because I'm not a base animal but a human with knowledge of right and wrong.
Your reading more into this than can ever be read into it.
Even if animals did show inequity aversion, it in no way implies that they ought to. Animals do many things which we as humans consider as abhorrent, the only reason why you think inequity aversion is desirable is because of your prior moral convictions.
Morality cannot be derived from facts of nature because "what is" and "what ought to be" are two different categories, and without some "moral axiom" there is no way to connect these two categories. Stated differently, you need some initial moral framework to inform you how to react on facts of nature.
Categorical imperatives are not hypothetical imperatives, and there is no way to get to categorical imperatives starting from hypothetical imperatives alone.
In the wise words of Chesterton:
"Darwinism can be used to back up two mad moralities, but it cannot be used to back up a single sane one. The kinship and competition of all living creatures can be used as a reason for being insanely cruel or insanely sentimental; but not for a healthy love of animals. On the evolutionary basis you may be inhumane, or you may be absurdly humane; but you cannot be human. That you and a tiger are one may be a reason for being tender to a tiger. Or it may be a reason for being as cruel as the tiger. It is one way to train the tiger to imitate you, it is a shorter way to imitate the tiger. But in neither case does evolution tell you how to treat a tiger reasonably, that is, to admire his stripes while avoiding his claws."
The key here is that that "woosh" sound you hear is not a bird or a plane or even Superman, it's the joke flying right over your head, my friend ;-)
But, in all seriousness, thanks for that Chesterton quote. I really, really like it.
If you like contemplating our moral nature as human beings (and it looks like you do, thank God), you've come to the right place, my dear, dear friend (not at all joking about that). Here's a conversation I had the other day here about that very subject and how we Sufis understand our human place in the universe vis a vis morality:
We love you! I am at your service. Compassion is a choice we can all make, and should all make, to help make this world a better place for one and all.
What has HN come to... teenager jokes (woosh?) about a serious topic. It's not at all clear you were joking, please remember people cannot hear your tone of voice, or see your body language, all they can see is what you wrote which looks very serious to me and by the responses here, to most others.
In the wise words of Chesterton, "Mr. McCabe thinks that I am not serious but only funny, because Mr. McCabe thinks that funny is the opposite of serious. Funny is the opposite of not funny, and of nothing else. The question of whether a man expresses himself in a grotesque or laughable phraseology, or in a stately and restrained phraseology, is not a question of motive or of moral state, it is a question of instinctive language and self-expression. Whether a man chooses to tell the truth in long sentences or short jokes is a problem analogous to whether he chooses to tell the truth in French or German. Whether a man preaches his gospel grotesquely or gravely is merely like the question of whether he preaches it in prose or verse."
The presenter in this video claims there is evidence of a desire for "fairness" in many species: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=meiU6TxysCg . Maybe it's a different concept than "Inequality aversion"?
This experiment, listed in one table and in the references but not discussed elsewhere, would suggest otherwise: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=meiU6TxysCg There might be other confounding factors in that experiment, but for the life of me I can't imagine what they would be. My stats knowledge has evaporated over the years so I can't follow exactly what the study is doing to come to their conclusion, but it strains my credulity to suggest that the monkeys in that experiment aren't angry about perceived inequity. I'd be interested to know if anyone can do a TLDR of the study as to why they reached that conclusion in the face of what looks like pretty compelling evidence.
Edit: Now I come to think about it, I suppose a counter-argument is that the angry monkey just knows that the experimenter has grapes and they're angry they're not getting them, rather than being angry that the other monkey is getting grapes while they're not. Feels like that argument makes sense given our tendency to anthropomorphise animals, particularly primates.
My feeling is that because animals effectively have everything they need to survive in wild environments, they know they are not tied to some system to receive what they need and they can just go out and get it. (Not saying experimental situations are ALWAYS like that but that's their general instinct because their lives are mostly like that.) It is only humans that have created a vast system of resources that can only be obtained by participating in the farce of global capitalism, and it is only humans that face inequity on that scale.
if you look at lions two lions fight the one that wins gets to keep the pride while the other wanders even though there are enough mates for both thats a counter example to the chimps
for a more human centric take im homeless right now having a computer or moving a certain way makes you a target like you said but there's no part of me that wants to go kill elon because he is rich but i've seen rich kids that used to vacation in europe talking about abolishing class etc who would who themselves are borderline abusive to enforce their ideology so idk
life is like this incredibly complex multivariate system that optimizes itself and much more complex than anything humans have ever built and trying to make generalizations will always come up short no matter which side
i'll probably die homeless or maybe survive but idk in the grand scheme of things billions have died and lived in so many different ways it doesnt matter
so in short we dont know shit thank you for coming to my ted talk lmao
> if you look at lions two lions fight the one that wins gets to keep the pride while the other wanders even though there are enough mates for both thats a counter example to the chimps
This isn't a counter-example because chimps possess higher order thinking. Chimps have a distinct sense of fairness that is exhibited consistently even when engaged with their human counterparts.
It's the same for us. If laws didn't protect the haves from the have-nots nature would correct itself when the haves reach a certain level of inequality. When law and order breaks down it's very obvious this is nature. Try hoarding canned food in a food crisis. You'll very quickly find yourself in very real danger. Law, as it turns out, is a very unnatural thing.
The so-called "incel crisis" is a variation of this. It's only a crisis insofar as nature cannot correct itself. The 10%, approximately, of men that get the majority of the women on these apps face no real danger from the have-nots (coincidentally this "incel crisis" has prefaced major social upheaval since time immemorial).
The absurd pay difference between executives and the actual do-ers is yet another example.
At the end of the day the systems are put in place by "leaders" to subvert the hierarchy of needs. Nature can never correct itself, so we are doomed to simply suffer. Nature is brutal not because it wants to be but because it has to be. The only natural order is utilitarianism.
"if you look at lions two lions fight the one that wins gets to keep the pride while the other wanders even though there are enough mates for both thats a counter example to the chimps"
This exactly proves the point. Lions are 'rich' because they have a 'pride' of women, which is their riches.
Every few years, they are overrun and killed. The new chiefs kill all of the cubs of the old elites. As soon as there is any accumulation of 'wealth', the new elites become targets. They only survive a year or two.
None are allowed to 'accumulate' wealth, because they are killed and their children are killed.
We only invented this concept in about 1789 anyway, before that it was all about knowing your place, sticking to your inherited rank, not being an upstart. Basic pre-enlightenment moral values.
The question I always have to ask about inequality causing “unhappiness” is why I don’t feel that way.
Celebrities having private jets doesn’t upset me at all. Seems quite cool. I’d be more upset if I had nothing, sure, but I’m easily a factor of 100 away from jet land if not 1000. Fancy cars are cool but again, you can just… decide to not care?
It just seems intuitively obvious that what actually matters is the minimum standard, not artificially limiting the maximum.
If a study says that blue is red I’m still going to believe my eyes first hand.
My friend from Lousiana taught me a wonderful saying for when we are faced with absurd hypotheticals:
"If my aunt had a d_ck, she'd be my uncle."
Of course, that doesn't quite land the same in 2024, our finally learning of all the travails our trans brothers and sisters face in this world filled with such mean, ignorant mofos.
The claim was they don’t care about inequality. That’s obviously untrue.
They might not care about specific instances of inequality, but the distinction is important because, for example, other people experience different instances and clearly OP’s “caringness” is highly modulated by their information. Who’s to say they just actually have no fucking clue how bad inequality can be (in either direction), then it’s no surprise at all it doesn’t bother them.
To make it more explicit: it doesn’t bother me either that people have jets or fancy cars. I cannot draw from that observation that “inequality doesn’t bother me.” And you certainly can’t draw from that the suggestion that certain forms or intensities of inequality don’t yield bad outcomes in society totally aside from GP’s personal emotional state.
Yeah, that's fair. Most people's morality is very situational, and oft varies by how they're feeling at the time. The challenge, as always, is to rise above it all, no matter what.
I guess it would bother me if 1+1=3. It ain’t though.
I think a better example is something like e.g. your parents give your sibling far better gifts than you, since you can’t really escape that dynamic as a child.
As an adult it’s like, alright, so my workplace is crap, let me use one of the 40+ years of my adult life to find another one.
I am British, someone working at Facebook in the US earns double or triple what I used to as a software dev for roughly the same work. Does it bother me? I guess? But my first thought isn’t to be upset or something, it’s more like “do I want to live in the US, if so, google immigration lawyers then”, if not, accept and move on.
Uhh right, we don't do the things I described because they violate people's feeling of equality.
Ah, you're British. I see. Well good to know you're not bothered by inequality living in one of the most equal societies in world history.
As mentioned below: not caring about specific instances of inequality is not the same as not caring about inequality. I also don't care about the fact some people have private jets or fancy cars. That's not really what people are talking about, though obviously they're symbolic of the bigger picture.
These are not fair analogies to wealth inequality unless you think all people who have more than you got it by cheating people. A better analogy would be the movie Moneyball, about baseball's inequality.
Effectively the problem is that wealth is an inherent feedback loop that naturally creates Pareto distributions instead of normal distributions. People don't have to be 'unfair' for this phenomenon to occur.
Neither ruleset I proposed involves cheating, and neither GP nor the article are about wealth inequality per se. GP said he doesn't take issue with inequality itself.
Agreed with your broader point. In practice no one's individual emotional response is relevant: runaway wealth inequality is bad because it yields bad outcomes for society.
Capitalism works to the extent that it does because money becomes a signal for what people want, which very obviously fails if overwhelming proportions of money controlled by very few people.
I think inequality manifests itself in two different ways. One is the one you describe, and I agree, meh.
But the other is perhaps the disconnect between median wealth growth and GDP growth. It appears in the West increase in economic prosperity is disproportionately growing just in the top decile (loosely speaking). But you still have everyone else - doctors, builders, teachers, garbage collectors - who do essential work and have to feel part of that growth to put an effort, which everyone needs. The society can't afford them "silent quitting".
It's not that it's fine to be upset that someone else has a private jet and I don't. It's the disconnect between GDP growth and stagnation or decay in standard of living for the median citizen. It's more like, why should I work harder and harder for a mythical GDP growth that seems to go to someone else's pocket, while public services are going to shit.
UK is seeing this. Economic outlook is somewhat grim, but the UK is not officially in recession. But for most of the society, their personal economic situation seems to be getting worse.
The only way I cna square these observations is that due to inequality, the top bit is growing and the bottom bit ain't. And that is IMHO unsustainable.
Very good points indeed. And it's likely to go from bad to worse here in America now that the morons have elected that lying, greedy, amoral fool.
On a minimally brighter side, one of our major healthcare companies has just changed its policies on ending anesthesia coverage mid-surgery, so we've got that going for us ;-)
My general feeling about this is that the objective is to make the system work. If it turns out that it works anyway then meh. Individuals can just choose not to be doctors if they don’t want to.
However I think that yes, we probably should be paying essential services more because at least in the UK we have shortages.
Technically, it's causing jealousy, not unhappiness (directly). If we choose (as you intuitively understand) to let jealousy reside in our consciousness, we will become unhappy as a result of living in our lower selves. We should, instead, be focusing on the better aspects of our lives, including living on this wonderful world, in this awesome universe.
We are each tested with either more or less than others. If we have been given more, we are to be generous; if less, we are to refuse to be jealous.
All that said, flying around in private jets is horrible for the environment, and is, therefore, a detriment to us all, so it will be they who will become unhappy for spraying jet fuel byproducts all across the Earth while they're galavanting around. Sure, they might ignore it while they're pleasure-seeking, but karma is "patient like a spider, a Zen spider" (from Gibson's Neuromancer), and we all reap what we sow, whether for our selfishness or selflessness. It is always our choice, every day.
> flying around in private jets is horrible for the environment
It would be more horrible for the environment (in total effect) if people could afford to do it to any significant extent. Instead, like many other activities, its total effect is trivial, but the idea of such carelessness is offensive.
Its total effect is far from trivial. Our atmosphere is six miles thick, with only 2-to-3 miles or so of breathable air.
And I don't call anything "offensive", because I cannot be offended by what anyone does to me or anyone else. That said, what they or anyone is doing has a moral weight to it, being, to some degree, either selfish or compassionate. That is the measure of every human activity, our every choice.
I mean, it's generally offensive, not necessarily to you or me, just to people. And I suppose we have to bear the relatively recently discovered warming effect of contrails, but in terms of carbon emissions, ourworldindata assigns aviation as a whole only a very thin slice of the emissions pie.
But you're apparently talking about, what, PAHs that might give somebody cancer? Not a big deal proportionately, I think, unless you work at an airport.
Celebrities are in a totally different equivalence class from you; unfairness is fundamentally someone getting more of some resource than you , all else being equal. Or even worse, someone else being rewarded for work that you did.
> “someone else being rewarded for work that you did”
This is the main driver for reducing inequality in the West. I keep paying taxes over what I get from my work to give to people that didn’t do it, under the guise of reducing inequality.
The people receiving benefits are not being rewarded for anything. They're simply being helped in a time of need. If you don't know the difference between a helping hand in a time where you desperately need it, and a receiving a fair reward for what you've done, you should really try and think harder about the topic.
You're right, someone being a billionaire has no impact on me, I don't care. But not having enough money to eat or pay for shelter, or having to take any crappy job because I'm desperate... that makes me unhappy.
The question is not about that. The question is whether you feel it's unfair when you perform the same work and receive less than someone else. I suppose you have no idea what the billionaire did and hence you don't care. It would perhaps be different if you knew the billionaire from school, went to the same classes, did the same stuff, but they ended up billionaires while you did not?
Yes I agree it would feel unfair when someone gets lucky and you don't. And you can bet they would argue that it wasn't luck, that it was all hard work and "merit", even if only to convince themselves. While this argument may be true to some degree its usually not enough to warrant the disparity. So perhaps I missed the point of the OP, anyway, thanks for clearing it up if that's the case.
I think you're still missing something, it's also not about "getting lucky" (though in real life, yes, that's often important), it's about someone who has the power to reward you, knowing what you've done, intentionally rewarding you with much less than your friend who did the same things as you. That's what they are measuring. The subjects in the experiment can see that the experimenter is observing the work they are doing, and can see how the experimenter consistently rewards the other subject differently. It's much more like when people at the workplace can see how much money their colleagues are making, while having visibility of what each other is doing, and noticing that some are getting much more money at the end of the month (which is one reason employers try as hard as possible to hide their employees' salaries).
While that is a type of inequality it's not really what they're studying here. The IA they're looking a is more direct and is triggered in situations where equity would be expected. Unless you're a renown celebrity that's just been categorically underpaid it's not really apples to apples because in some sense you don't perceive any actual inequality. That person is doing a job that pays them that well.
the IA here would be more like you and a friend go over to help your elderly neighbor with his yard work. You both rake up leaves and both do the same quality and amount of work. Your neighbor then gives your friend $200, and then gives you $5. Out of a sense of IA you might actually reject that money which is disadvantageous inequity aversion since technically that leaves you with nothing.
Now if your friend had cleaned the gutters and fixed the toilet and you had just swept the porch you would not feel as unequal since the tasks were different, but given a sense of equal effort you would likely not be so casual about being snubbed and come next year maybe you won't even help your neighbor, or at least not with the same friend.
and you could probably narrow that gap down if the snubbery were consistent. Maybe you help your neighbor all the time and he consistently gives your friend $10 and you $5. after the 6th or 7th time I would be surprised if you didn't begin to harbor a sense of inequality over a mere $5, and for a job you would be willing to do for free anyway.
Surely you know/understand that:
1. The minimum standard, even in the West, is not high enough.
2. The resources spent on the vanity projects and luxuries of the ultra wealthy could raise that minimum standard instead.
You say, "you'd be more upset if you have nothing" but that is the actual reality for people actually living here. Our system is extremely fickle and contrary to popular belief, does not directly reward hard work with success. I know many people that work very hard jobs, that make a tiny fraction of what probably the lowest earners on this forum make.
In the UK I don’t really agree. I think that the minimum standard is fine. I think that the common standard for workers is too low, but I don’t think that this exists as a result of resource distribution as such but rather regulation, basically the Government prevents building housing which is slightly different as a problem, the rich would do it but they aren’t allowed.
If we had enough housing to go around basically every other problem would be irrelevant.
I think the luxuries could do almost nothing to improve the minimum standard, which is dictated by national productivity and the efficiency of systems.
I think you could seize the assets from every billionaire in the US and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference in day to day life. It wouldn't create more housing or more health Care because production and supply is what limits availability.
Your billionaire is not using a million times more medical services or living in a million houses or eating a million hamburgers.
It seems to me that democratic society runs best where the distance is minimized between individuals with maximum agency vs. individuals with minimum agency. Agency is power, the ability to move other people to get things you want done, to make purchases, to amplify certain viewpoints over others.
In this regard, I usually think of wealth as a proxy for agency. There are other (negatively correlated) proxies that can be conveniently disregarded by certain political persuasions:
* Debt - effectively going into debt is sacrificing future agency for the sake of the present. In the moment of obtaining a loan you will of course have more liquidity at your disposal but after that moment in time your freedoms are limited due to your debt obligations. It's more obscured with purely financial loans - the way it negatively impacts democracy is more obviously seen in quid pro quo arrangements.
* Welfare dependence - like any other dependency relying on welfare decreases an individual's agency. They cannot afford to live without the welfare apparatus they depend on for survival.
In a democratic system we want every voting individual to have as close to the average agency as possible so that there isn't a non-democratic force continually applied corrupting the democratic process. Conversely we know that human beings are strongly motivated by agency maximization which society also needs for progress - in other words, humans need opportunity. The job of a statesman should be to manage these competing priorities.
I don't really care about these things that much, but I care about inequitable power.
A wealthy person should not be able to decide that they don't like some small minority and then influence public policy to enact policies which make them so miserable that some of them are driven to suicide.
This assumes glutinous consumption has no consequence outside of whether or not it bothers _you_.
All of the 1st world massively overconsumes. The most wealthy are the most egregious.
This has consequences outside of jealousy.
Although for the twerk tic influenza, obviously your real life is a database entry in a corporate software platform. So, if the poles melt, or 99% of species go extinct, it doesn't really affect you right?
Because wealth is money that could be used to help people who need it.
Also climate change obviously leads to criticizing those lifestyles.
You're going to say it's political.
Those celebrities leading happy lives don't mean they're taking happiness from other people, but money is a resource that could use others to reach a minimum amount of happiness, at a low cost to the celebrity.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 128 ms ] threadThis raises the question: Do cats learn jealousy from humans?
And I think that what we consider animals "learning from humans" is mostly them just learning how to get the most out of their magical food/shelter source.
I mean, when a cat rubs its head on a person, it's just sharing its scent with the pack.
And when a dog licks your face, it's just finding out what you ate, hoping that you'd share, you unsharing alpha bastard with the pizza and chicken.
And that leads to the real difference between cats and dogs. Dogs have gained their survival advantage because they make you believe you're the alpha, cat's don't give a crap, because they know they're the alpha.
And if you think you're the alpha in the dog relationship, just stop feeding them for a few days; you'll quickly find out who is who, my friend :-)
For instance, my cat never really cared much about new years eve fireworks. I attribute that to me not being anxious around that time of the year. However, all the pet owners I ever talked to who told me their pet is particularily anxious around new years eve turned out to also not really like fireworks... And I can very well imagine how the pet picks up the vibe of their owner, why shouldn't they...
My cat also freely shared his food bowl and litterbox with visiting cats, which was really adorable behaviour. I attribute that to a rather deep mutual trust betweenhim and me, but thats fishing in the dark...
This is why childhood education is so important, and was such an important part of mid-to-late 1930s German youth education. We are all brainwashed by our upbringing, in whichever directions our mentors exemplify or force upon us, such is the nature of our adaptive wetware.
At some point, we can always exercise our ability to choose, however difficult it may be, and for better or worse, for both ourselves and our cultures.
In a just world, they would be added to the "Conflicts of Interest" section. ;-)
Even if animals did show inequity aversion, it in no way implies that they ought to. Animals do many things which we as humans consider as abhorrent, the only reason why you think inequity aversion is desirable is because of your prior moral convictions.
Morality cannot be derived from facts of nature because "what is" and "what ought to be" are two different categories, and without some "moral axiom" there is no way to connect these two categories. Stated differently, you need some initial moral framework to inform you how to react on facts of nature.
Categorical imperatives are not hypothetical imperatives, and there is no way to get to categorical imperatives starting from hypothetical imperatives alone.
In the wise words of Chesterton:
"Darwinism can be used to back up two mad moralities, but it cannot be used to back up a single sane one. The kinship and competition of all living creatures can be used as a reason for being insanely cruel or insanely sentimental; but not for a healthy love of animals. On the evolutionary basis you may be inhumane, or you may be absurdly humane; but you cannot be human. That you and a tiger are one may be a reason for being tender to a tiger. Or it may be a reason for being as cruel as the tiger. It is one way to train the tiger to imitate you, it is a shorter way to imitate the tiger. But in neither case does evolution tell you how to treat a tiger reasonably, that is, to admire his stripes while avoiding his claws."
But, in all seriousness, thanks for that Chesterton quote. I really, really like it.
If you like contemplating our moral nature as human beings (and it looks like you do, thank God), you've come to the right place, my dear, dear friend (not at all joking about that). Here's a conversation I had the other day here about that very subject and how we Sufis understand our human place in the universe vis a vis morality:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42317164
We love you! I am at your service. Compassion is a choice we can all make, and should all make, to help make this world a better place for one and all.
And if you think you're speaking for "most" people here, what can I say?
Edit: Now I come to think about it, I suppose a counter-argument is that the angry monkey just knows that the experimenter has grapes and they're angry they're not getting them, rather than being angry that the other monkey is getting grapes while they're not. Feels like that argument makes sense given our tendency to anthropomorphise animals, particularly primates.
In nature if any single Chimp somehow did get a pile of 'tokens' and was 'rich', he would be attacked and overrun.
They did this in a laboratory where they couldn't literally eat the rich, in nature they would be eaten.
for a more human centric take im homeless right now having a computer or moving a certain way makes you a target like you said but there's no part of me that wants to go kill elon because he is rich but i've seen rich kids that used to vacation in europe talking about abolishing class etc who would who themselves are borderline abusive to enforce their ideology so idk
life is like this incredibly complex multivariate system that optimizes itself and much more complex than anything humans have ever built and trying to make generalizations will always come up short no matter which side
i'll probably die homeless or maybe survive but idk in the grand scheme of things billions have died and lived in so many different ways it doesnt matter
so in short we dont know shit thank you for coming to my ted talk lmao
This isn't a counter-example because chimps possess higher order thinking. Chimps have a distinct sense of fairness that is exhibited consistently even when engaged with their human counterparts.
It's the same for us. If laws didn't protect the haves from the have-nots nature would correct itself when the haves reach a certain level of inequality. When law and order breaks down it's very obvious this is nature. Try hoarding canned food in a food crisis. You'll very quickly find yourself in very real danger. Law, as it turns out, is a very unnatural thing.
The so-called "incel crisis" is a variation of this. It's only a crisis insofar as nature cannot correct itself. The 10%, approximately, of men that get the majority of the women on these apps face no real danger from the have-nots (coincidentally this "incel crisis" has prefaced major social upheaval since time immemorial).
The absurd pay difference between executives and the actual do-ers is yet another example.
At the end of the day the systems are put in place by "leaders" to subvert the hierarchy of needs. Nature can never correct itself, so we are doomed to simply suffer. Nature is brutal not because it wants to be but because it has to be. The only natural order is utilitarianism.
This exactly proves the point. Lions are 'rich' because they have a 'pride' of women, which is their riches.
Every few years, they are overrun and killed. The new chiefs kill all of the cubs of the old elites. As soon as there is any accumulation of 'wealth', the new elites become targets. They only survive a year or two.
None are allowed to 'accumulate' wealth, because they are killed and their children are killed.
“Equity” isn’t a shared value in any society that I’m aware of.
Celebrities having private jets doesn’t upset me at all. Seems quite cool. I’d be more upset if I had nothing, sure, but I’m easily a factor of 100 away from jet land if not 1000. Fancy cars are cool but again, you can just… decide to not care?
It just seems intuitively obvious that what actually matters is the minimum standard, not artificially limiting the maximum.
If a study says that blue is red I’m still going to believe my eyes first hand.
If you go play soccer and other people’s goals are worth 3 points while yours are worth 1?
I’m doubtful.
"If my aunt had a d_ck, she'd be my uncle."
Of course, that doesn't quite land the same in 2024, our finally learning of all the travails our trans brothers and sisters face in this world filled with such mean, ignorant mofos.
Those sayings really have a nice flow to them.
They might not care about specific instances of inequality, but the distinction is important because, for example, other people experience different instances and clearly OP’s “caringness” is highly modulated by their information. Who’s to say they just actually have no fucking clue how bad inequality can be (in either direction), then it’s no surprise at all it doesn’t bother them.
To make it more explicit: it doesn’t bother me either that people have jets or fancy cars. I cannot draw from that observation that “inequality doesn’t bother me.” And you certainly can’t draw from that the suggestion that certain forms or intensities of inequality don’t yield bad outcomes in society totally aside from GP’s personal emotional state.
(Made famous in the UK by Gina D'Acampo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-RfHC91Ewc)
I guess it would bother me if 1+1=3. It ain’t though.
I think a better example is something like e.g. your parents give your sibling far better gifts than you, since you can’t really escape that dynamic as a child.
As an adult it’s like, alright, so my workplace is crap, let me use one of the 40+ years of my adult life to find another one.
I am British, someone working at Facebook in the US earns double or triple what I used to as a software dev for roughly the same work. Does it bother me? I guess? But my first thought isn’t to be upset or something, it’s more like “do I want to live in the US, if so, google immigration lawyers then”, if not, accept and move on.
Ah, you're British. I see. Well good to know you're not bothered by inequality living in one of the most equal societies in world history.
As mentioned below: not caring about specific instances of inequality is not the same as not caring about inequality. I also don't care about the fact some people have private jets or fancy cars. That's not really what people are talking about, though obviously they're symbolic of the bigger picture.
Effectively the problem is that wealth is an inherent feedback loop that naturally creates Pareto distributions instead of normal distributions. People don't have to be 'unfair' for this phenomenon to occur.
Agreed with your broader point. In practice no one's individual emotional response is relevant: runaway wealth inequality is bad because it yields bad outcomes for society.
Capitalism works to the extent that it does because money becomes a signal for what people want, which very obviously fails if overwhelming proportions of money controlled by very few people.
But the other is perhaps the disconnect between median wealth growth and GDP growth. It appears in the West increase in economic prosperity is disproportionately growing just in the top decile (loosely speaking). But you still have everyone else - doctors, builders, teachers, garbage collectors - who do essential work and have to feel part of that growth to put an effort, which everyone needs. The society can't afford them "silent quitting".
It's not that it's fine to be upset that someone else has a private jet and I don't. It's the disconnect between GDP growth and stagnation or decay in standard of living for the median citizen. It's more like, why should I work harder and harder for a mythical GDP growth that seems to go to someone else's pocket, while public services are going to shit.
UK is seeing this. Economic outlook is somewhat grim, but the UK is not officially in recession. But for most of the society, their personal economic situation seems to be getting worse.
The only way I cna square these observations is that due to inequality, the top bit is growing and the bottom bit ain't. And that is IMHO unsustainable.
On a minimally brighter side, one of our major healthcare companies has just changed its policies on ending anesthesia coverage mid-surgery, so we've got that going for us ;-)
But it is worth noting that whilst GDP is going up (due to immigration), GDP per capita is actually declining (due to immigration).
However I think that yes, we probably should be paying essential services more because at least in the UK we have shortages.
We are each tested with either more or less than others. If we have been given more, we are to be generous; if less, we are to refuse to be jealous.
All that said, flying around in private jets is horrible for the environment, and is, therefore, a detriment to us all, so it will be they who will become unhappy for spraying jet fuel byproducts all across the Earth while they're galavanting around. Sure, they might ignore it while they're pleasure-seeking, but karma is "patient like a spider, a Zen spider" (from Gibson's Neuromancer), and we all reap what we sow, whether for our selfishness or selflessness. It is always our choice, every day.
It would be more horrible for the environment (in total effect) if people could afford to do it to any significant extent. Instead, like many other activities, its total effect is trivial, but the idea of such carelessness is offensive.
And I don't call anything "offensive", because I cannot be offended by what anyone does to me or anyone else. That said, what they or anyone is doing has a moral weight to it, being, to some degree, either selfish or compassionate. That is the measure of every human activity, our every choice.
But you're apparently talking about, what, PAHs that might give somebody cancer? Not a big deal proportionately, I think, unless you work at an airport.
It's actually causing envy, not jealousy.
"Envy is when you want what someone else has, but jealousy is when you're worried someone's trying to take what you have."
https://www.vocabulary.com/articles/commonly-confused-words/...
We pedants can't eff anthing up, can we? Talk about unfairness!
:-)
This is the main driver for reducing inequality in the West. I keep paying taxes over what I get from my work to give to people that didn’t do it, under the guise of reducing inequality.
They literally receive money from the taxes I pay over my work, for doing nothing their entire life.
https://www.nber.org/digest/nov13/intergenerational-transmis...
the IA here would be more like you and a friend go over to help your elderly neighbor with his yard work. You both rake up leaves and both do the same quality and amount of work. Your neighbor then gives your friend $200, and then gives you $5. Out of a sense of IA you might actually reject that money which is disadvantageous inequity aversion since technically that leaves you with nothing.
Now if your friend had cleaned the gutters and fixed the toilet and you had just swept the porch you would not feel as unequal since the tasks were different, but given a sense of equal effort you would likely not be so casual about being snubbed and come next year maybe you won't even help your neighbor, or at least not with the same friend.
and you could probably narrow that gap down if the snubbery were consistent. Maybe you help your neighbor all the time and he consistently gives your friend $10 and you $5. after the 6th or 7th time I would be surprised if you didn't begin to harbor a sense of inequality over a mere $5, and for a job you would be willing to do for free anyway.
You say, "you'd be more upset if you have nothing" but that is the actual reality for people actually living here. Our system is extremely fickle and contrary to popular belief, does not directly reward hard work with success. I know many people that work very hard jobs, that make a tiny fraction of what probably the lowest earners on this forum make.
If we had enough housing to go around basically every other problem would be irrelevant.
I think you could seize the assets from every billionaire in the US and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference in day to day life. It wouldn't create more housing or more health Care because production and supply is what limits availability.
Your billionaire is not using a million times more medical services or living in a million houses or eating a million hamburgers.
In this regard, I usually think of wealth as a proxy for agency. There are other (negatively correlated) proxies that can be conveniently disregarded by certain political persuasions:
* Debt - effectively going into debt is sacrificing future agency for the sake of the present. In the moment of obtaining a loan you will of course have more liquidity at your disposal but after that moment in time your freedoms are limited due to your debt obligations. It's more obscured with purely financial loans - the way it negatively impacts democracy is more obviously seen in quid pro quo arrangements.
* Welfare dependence - like any other dependency relying on welfare decreases an individual's agency. They cannot afford to live without the welfare apparatus they depend on for survival.
In a democratic system we want every voting individual to have as close to the average agency as possible so that there isn't a non-democratic force continually applied corrupting the democratic process. Conversely we know that human beings are strongly motivated by agency maximization which society also needs for progress - in other words, humans need opportunity. The job of a statesman should be to manage these competing priorities.
A wealthy person should not be able to decide that they don't like some small minority and then influence public policy to enact policies which make them so miserable that some of them are driven to suicide.
Btw, it's not "unhappiness", it's a different feeling entirely.
All of the 1st world massively overconsumes. The most wealthy are the most egregious.
This has consequences outside of jealousy.
Although for the twerk tic influenza, obviously your real life is a database entry in a corporate software platform. So, if the poles melt, or 99% of species go extinct, it doesn't really affect you right?
In fact, it's kind of cool...
Also climate change obviously leads to criticizing those lifestyles.
You're going to say it's political.
Those celebrities leading happy lives don't mean they're taking happiness from other people, but money is a resource that could use others to reach a minimum amount of happiness, at a low cost to the celebrity.
https://wwnorton.com/books/Are-We-Smart-Enough-to-Know-How-S...