Submitted by Sphaerocypraea t3_xtiajf in philosophy
Dejan05 t1_iqqitt0 wrote
Reply to comment by apriorian in Utopia”: meaning ‘no place’; from Greek: οὐ (not’) and τόπος (‘place’) by Sphaerocypraea
You seem to be under the belief that all people are good and will help eachother, sadly they don't. Most people don't really care about anyone outside of their immediate relationships for one reason or another and some are ready to exploit others for personal gain, a utopia would have already existed if people as a whole were good enough for it to exist
apriorian t1_iqqj7el wrote
I do ehy? Interesting. But then you do not know i am past 70 and i started working on a theory when i was 17. My first intellectual insight i remember is realizing poeple were irrational and if you gave them a chance they would corrupt and destroy everything they were given. My entire life has been spent devising a system than no one, regardless how evil they were, could circumvent and corrupt it, but you are right, an evil person creating a system designed to allow him to freeload off of others will never become a utopia except for him. That much we can agree on.
ThemrocX t1_iqqn4t8 wrote
I'm sorry to disappoint you but most of psychology and sociology have pretty clear answers to the questions you have pondered for so long. First of all you are wrong in assuming that truth is always simpler. The opposite is true: the closer the description is to the reality it describes, the more complex it becomes. This is also the reason for a few of the false assumptions you have: People are neither good nor evil nor are they irrational. Infact people are super predictable. 80 percent of our actions are steered by heuristics exactly because reality is too complex for us to grasp fast enough. This IS a form of rationality, but in complex scenarios it often leads to bad outcomes.
It is also why we are unable to construct a system that is impenetrable to corruption. Because corruption (as in a lack of balance, destabilising the system) is the very thing that keeps societies from dieing. A "perfect" system is a closed system, but a closed system cannot survive. It needs input, but every input introduces instability. There is absolutely no way around this.
apriorian t1_iqqobzx wrote
As to your last point, all you need to do to find a way around this is to change your assumptions.
ThemrocX t1_iqqqa2c wrote
What good is changing your assumptions if the assumptions you are going to adopt are wrong?
apriorian t1_iqqr07o wrote
About as good as starting from the wrong ones in the first place.
And if you go back to my original comment you will note i did not specify for you to change your wrong assumptions into other wrong assumptions, there are an unlimited supply of them but that is no reason to keep choosing them.
But I am sure this is far too complex for you to understand so let me provide an illustration, you assume truth is not simpler than lies when logically it has to be, but you base this assumption on looking at the lies made about the structure or nature of reality and because the more you look the less you see that matches the original assumption about what reality looks like, you think truth is getting more complicated, no. What is happening is that you are covering up one misrepresentations with more complex misrepresentations.
Have you read about Ptolemic picture of the universe and how it made truth look more and more complicated. It was based on a lie.
ThemrocX t1_iqqr6kd wrote
Fair enough (edit: wrote this, before the previous post was desceptively edited), but then let's talk about ehy you think my assumptions are wrong.
apriorian t1_iqqxr9k wrote
Am I to understand you think people edit a book they write to deceive the reader? Can you not conceive of any other possible reason why editing might occur? I actually number my edits so i can keep track of all the versions, this year i edited my webside 107 times, yep just this year. Believe me, I do not edit to deceive. But of course you have your reality and I have mine.
(Warning: this is an edit) .. I may go back to a post three to five times because to do otherwise means the later addition comes before the previous or original comment. So while conspircy theories are fun the truth is usually simpler if more boring.
apriorian t1_iqqrwh5 wrote
You assume you can defeat any system. Why? Because you think you can outsmart any barriers to freeloading. Everyone likes this system because it permits cheating and everyone thinks they are winning more than losing... the house always wins in case you are wondering.
If I said lets cut the pie and pick a slice blindfolded you would agree because you assume you could peek, if i said you cut the pie and will will take turns choosing a slice with you being the last to pick, you would not agree because you could not cheat. Am I right?
Dejan05 t1_iqqjafe wrote
I mean that's an interesting thought, best of luck you succeed in creating such a system
apriorian t1_iqqt4y6 wrote
You think a system is created by one person on a computer, the theory is but the system if you mean a place, requires people.
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