Multiheaded comments on Rationality Quotes May 2012 - Less Wrong

6 Post author: OpenThreadGuy 01 May 2012 11:37PM

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Comment author: Multiheaded 10 May 2012 04:13:45PM *  -1 points [-]

Yet despite all these infractions against stated Western ideals, life isn't measurably massively worse in Singapore than in London.

Taboo "worse"!
If by life not being "worse" you mean the annual income or the quality of healthcare or the amount of street crime, maybe it's so. If one values e.g. being able to contribute to a news website without fear of fines or imprisonment (see e.g. Gibson's famous essay where he mentions that releasing information about Singapore's GDP could be punished with death), or not fearing for the life of a friend whom you smoke marijuana with, or being able to think that the government is at least a little bit afraid of you (this not necessarily being real, just a pleasant delusion to entertain, like so many others we can't live without)... in short, if one values the less concrete and material things that speak to our more complex instincts, it's not nearly so one-sided.

That's why I dislike utilitarianism; it says without qualification that a life always weighs the same, whatever psychological climate it is lived in (the differences are obvious as soon as you step off a plane, I think - see Gibson's essay again), and a death always weights the same, whether you're killed randomly by criminals (as in the West) or unjustly and with malice by the government (as in Singapore), et cetera, et cetera... It's, in the end, not very compatible with the things that liberals OR classical conservatives love and hate. Mere safety and prosperity are not the only things a society can strive for.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 11 May 2012 05:23:23AM *  4 points [-]

whether you're killed randomly by criminals (as in the West) or unjustly and with malice by the government (as in Singapore)

You seem to have an overly romantic view of criminals if you think they never kill with malice.

Heck when the government doesn't keep them in check criminal gangs operate like mini-governments that are much worse in terms of warm fuzzies then even Singapore.

Comment author: Multiheaded 11 May 2012 08:38:23AM 0 points [-]

In the West they operate more or less like wild animals.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 12 May 2012 06:53:42AM 6 points [-]
Comment author: [deleted] 10 May 2012 04:15:11PM *  4 points [-]

If by life not being "worse" you mean the annual income or the quality of healthcare or the amount of street crime, maybe it's so.

Yes. But these are incredibly important things to hundreds of millions of people alive today drowning in violence, disease and famine. What do spoiled first world preferences count against such multitudes?

And you know what, I think 70% of people alive today in the West wouldn't in practice much miss a single thing you mention, though they might currently say or think they would.

Comment author: Multiheaded 10 May 2012 04:27:22PM *  0 points [-]

There's a threshold where violence, disease and hunger stop being disastrous in our opinion (compare e.g. post-Soviet Eastern Europe to Africa), and that threshold, as we can see, doesn't require brutal authoritarianism to maintain, or even to achieve. Poland has transitioned to a liberal democracy directly after the USSR fell, although its economy was in shambles (and it had little experience of liberalism and democracy before WW2), Turkey's leadership became softer after Ataturk achieved his primary goals of modernization, etc, etc. There's a difference between a country being a horrible hellhole and merely lagging behind in material characteristics; the latter is an acceptable cost for attempting liberal policies to me. I accept that the former might require harsh measures to overcome, but I'd rather see those measures taken by an internally liberal colonial power (like the British Empire) than a local regime.

Comment author: [deleted] 10 May 2012 04:29:28PM *  4 points [-]

There's a difference between a country being a horrible hellhole and merely lagging behind in material characteristics; the second is an acceptable cost for attempting liberal policies to me.

The actual real people living there, suppose you could ask them, which do you think they would chose? And don't forget those are mere stated preferences, not revealed ones.

If you planted Singapore on their borders wouldn't they try to move there?

Comment author: Multiheaded 10 May 2012 04:35:06PM *  0 points [-]

Sure, Singapore is much better than Africa; I never said otherwise! However, if given choice, the more intelligent Africans would probably be more attracted to a Western country, where their less tangible needs (like the need for warm fuzzies) would also be fulfilled. Not many Singaporeans probably would, but that's because the Singaporean society does at least as much brainwashing as the Western one!

Comment author: [deleted] 10 May 2012 06:31:49PM 6 points [-]

I don't understand why you think "warm fuzzies" are in greater supply in London than in Singapore. They are both nice places to live, or can be, even in their intangibles. London-brainwashing is one way to inoculate yourself against Singapore-brainwashing, but perhaps there is another way?

Comment author: Multiheaded 10 May 2012 07:48:20PM 0 points [-]

Have you been to Singapore for any amount of time? I haven't (my dad had, for a day or so, when he worked on a Soviet science vessel), but I trust Gibson and can sympathize with his viewpoint. At the very least I observe that it does NOT export culture or spread memes. These are not the signs of a vibrant and sophisticated community!

Comment author: [deleted] 11 May 2012 12:03:33AM 5 points [-]

At the very least I observe that it does NOT export culture or spread memes.

What could you mean by this that isn't trivially false?

I haven't read the Gibson article (but I will). I know that "disneyland" and "the death penalty" are both institutions that are despised by a certain cohort, but they are not universally despised and their admirers are not all warmfuzzophobic psychos. Artist-and-writer types don't flock to Singapore, but they don't flock to Peoria Illinois either do they?

Comment author: Multiheaded 11 May 2012 08:58:20AM *  -1 points [-]

Artist-and-writer types don't flock to Singapore, but they don't flock to Peoria Illinois either do they?

Downvoted without hesitation.

If you have the unvoiced belief that cultural products (especially high-quality ones) and memes are created by some specific breed of "artist-and-writer types" (wearing scarves and being smug all the time, no doubt!), then I'd recommend purging it, seeing as it suggests a really narrow view of the world. A country can have a thriving culture not because artistic people "flock" there, but because they are born there, given an appropriate education and allowed to interact with their own roots and community!

By your logic, "artist-and-writer types" shouldn't just not flock to, but actively flee the USSR/post-Soviet Russia. And indeed many artists did, but enough remained that most people on LW who are into literature or film can probably name a Russian author or Russian movie released in the last half-century. Same goes for India, Japan, even China and many other poor and/or un-Westernized places!

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 12 May 2012 06:58:40AM 4 points [-]

And indeed many artists did, but enough remained that most people on LW who are into literature or film can probably name a Russian author or Russian movie released in the last half-century. Same goes for India, Japan, even China and many other poor and/or un-Westernized places!

Notice how this more or less refutes the argument you tried to make in the grandparent.

Comment author: [deleted] 11 May 2012 02:01:34PM 3 points [-]

You seem to have read some hostility towards artists and writers into my comment, probably because of "types" and "flock"? These are just writing tics, I intended nothing pejorative.

I hold no such belief, and I'm glad you don't either. I only want to emphasize my opinion that Singapore does have a thriving culture, even if it does not have a thriving literary or film industry. But since you admit you don't know a lot about it I'm curious why you have so much scorn for the place? A city can have something to recommend itself even if it hasn't produced a good author or a good movie.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 11 May 2012 04:11:50AM 3 points [-]

Konkvistador's point is that third world countries attempting to imitate western countries haven't had much success.

Comment author: Multiheaded 11 May 2012 08:44:52AM *  0 points [-]

When Turkey was modernizing it sure as heck was looking towards Europe for examples, it just didn't implement democratic mechanisms straight away and restricted religious freedom. And if you look at Taiwan, Japan, Ghana, etc... sure, they might be ruled by oligarchic clans in practice, but other than that [1] they have much more similarities than differences with today's Western countries! Of course a straight-up copy-paste of institutions and such is bound to fail, but a transition with those institutions, etc in mind as the preferred end state seems to work.

[1] Of course, Western countries are ruled by what began as oligarchic clans too, but they got advanced enough that there's a difference. And, for good or ill, they are meritocratic.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 12 May 2012 06:49:15AM 5 points [-]

I'm not familiar with Ghana, but both Japan and Taiwan had effectively one-party systems while modernizing.

Comment author: Multiheaded 12 May 2012 07:55:32AM *  -1 points [-]

I don't care all that much about political democracy; what I meant is that Japan, India or, looking at the relative national conditions, even Turkey did NOT require some particular ruthlessness to modernize.

edit: derp

Comment author: SusanBrennan 12 May 2012 09:36:13PM 4 points [-]

even Turkey did NOT require some particular ruthlessness to modernize.

Could you explain the meaning of this sentence please. I'm not sure I have grasped it correctly. To me it sounds like that you are saying that there was no ruthlessness involved in Atatürk's modernizing reforms. I assume that's not the case, right?

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 12 May 2012 09:27:59PM 4 points [-]

Taboo 'ruthlessness'. For example Japan was certainly ruthless while modernizing by any reasonable definition.