Message from @Mersenne
Discord ID: 651618245618696202
colleges
I'll meet you halfway. The internet bolsters a nasty net negative on escalating the insanity, isolationism, and progressive politics that currently saturate the media. But I still recognize the net positive in communication, economics, and quality of life reaped as a reward
what if the world really did end in 2012 and we're dealing with the aftermath
anyone with a bad idea couldn't go very long without that idea being flushed out or else they became fringe
not today
today, if you don't like what i have to say, you can ALWAYS find some group on reddit that beleives in the same hair-brained ideas
it's kind of a double edged sword tho bc the internet was the only way I found ppl like sargon
True, you no longer need to make the pilgrimage to Georgetown to drink the Kool-Aid <:smugon:512048583806025739>
people grow up thinking they always have the option to simply ignore conflict not realizing that ignoring conflict is the best way to INVITE conflict
And that's a sentiment I can passionately agree with
and instead of immediately explaining why certain ideas were BAD ideas, we ignored them, went to our seperate corners of the internet and let them fester and grow
in the past, you either learned to accomidate the wishes of a group in your vicinity, OR you stayed at home ALONE
that social pressure helped regulate society, ESPECIALLY the left
That's the consequence of echo chambers. It's always refreshing to cycle through media outlets. The days of Walter Cronkite are long since past
true, but we are ALL in an echo chamber
all of us
because we are never FORCED to reconcile disagreeements
I'd rather have instant access to information that be subjected to selective information
birds of a feather flock together
Malcolm Gladwell - Blink
Unfortunately. Just talk to anyone who only watches MSNBC or FOX and nothing else, it's insufferable.
In the book, he makes a solid case for why there is NO difference between 1) having not enough information and 2) having TOO much information with no way to filter for relevance
it is a common misconception that more information is always better
It rarely is because at a certain point, we start seeing patterns that don't really exist
Exactly. Which is why no one dare watch a 10 hour impeachment session every day. It's easier to reference trusted and reliable sources.
and, we can justify ANYTHING
evidence takes time and energy. more information just makes it easier to cast doubt on ANYTHING
even the fact that the earth is round
fact is that there is a paradox intrinsic to becoming more and more specialized
But it's still fact. Objective truth exists. When drowning in an ocean of opinion, sound judgement appears as a distant shore. But reason is a life raft. Even with all the information in the world, you can still easily make sound determinations and ignore the bullshit.
the more specialized we become, the more DEPENDANT we become on others who know more about things we do not. However, the less we have to learn to operate in a vacum, the less we are able to determine who we should TRUST and who we should not trust
the internet is creating a MASSIVE divide between the blue collar and white collar style of workers
No. The more specialized we become, whether in politics or tradecraft, the less dependent you become on placing wavering trust in questionable sources. You lean to discern truth from nonsense.
the white collar worker can always steal a minute or two to keep current on a myraid of issues. but the blue collar work doesn't have the luxury of surfin his phone all day and is too tired to do so at home
negative; also in the book but more from live experience
Wisdom = Knowledge + Judgement
you don't develop Judgement by sifting through knowledge
And that equation is where we agree on this.
Without knowledge, you have flawed judgement, and without judgement, you're simply regurgitating information without context.
Owen Benjamin was banned from YT