anon 0x423 said in #2480 2mo ago:
clickbait title but maybe you can help me out on this one.
i've noticed that people get really committed to principles as the good in themselves, and if they do this in excess they become incoherently bloated thinkers who just live on heuristics like empty calories. they'll do this so fervently that they'll be fine with neglecting the Good that the principle was in service of.
1A is a good normie example of this. "free speech" was very smart political maneuvering in 1776. smart gentlemen *will* be meeting to discuss controversial political matters, actually. but i suspect with enough time it has externalities that result in the destruction of the sort of civilization that once could harbor it. making sure it was legal for tiktok to tell your kids how awesome it is to explore their gender and sexuality wasn't high on john jay's to-do list. libertarianism is the odious sort of extreme here.
"democracy" is another. just bottom-feeder levels of deception and vulgar principle that has degraded everything great.
rationalism is also a sort of principle. "we need to be rational because... we just do, ok??" you can't really pull any oughts out if it, despite its immense utility up to a point.
so what do we do with principles? is it possible to build a civilization that is not obsessed with principles? we will need principles at every given point. but how do we pre-plan the ability for the priests to steward everybody into new principles when needed?
am i thinking about this correctly
i've noticed that people get really committed to principles as the good in themselves, and if they do this in excess they become incoherently bloated thinkers who just live on heuristics like empty calories. they'll do this so fervently that they'll be fine with neglecting the Good that the principle was in service of.
1A is a good normie example of this. "free speech" was very smart political maneuvering in 1776. smart gentlemen *will* be meeting to discuss controversial political matters, actually. but i suspect with enough time it has externalities that result in the destruction of the sort of civilization that once could harbor it. making sure it was legal for tiktok to tell your kids how awesome it is to explore their gender and sexuality wasn't high on john jay's to-do list. libertarianism is the odious sort of extreme here.
"democracy" is another. just bottom-feeder levels of deception and vulgar principle that has degraded everything great.
rationalism is also a sort of principle. "we need to be rational because... we just do, ok??" you can't really pull any oughts out if it, despite its immense utility up to a point.
so what do we do with principles? is it possible to build a civilization that is not obsessed with principles? we will need principles at every given point. but how do we pre-plan the ability for the priests to steward everybody into new principles when needed?
am i thinking about this correctly
referenced by: >>2482 >>2487
clickbait title but