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by mjburgess
2084 days ago
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your definition of "work" is a moral/aesethic one, rather than a functional one there is no sense in which a $1k dollar burger weighs on whether a society is functioning your moral distaste at the marginal value of $1k to different people, doesnt strike me, as very relevant to the issue indeed, that, people have different marginal values for $1k is precisely a symptom of how profoundly well rich societies function |
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Do you think that a power plant that produces energy at $10000/kwh "works" next to one that produces energy at $0.1/kwh?
I don't see "works" as a binary, I consider it relative to expectations and possibilities. I hoped the burger example would illustrate that, but maybe it was too close to reality since it probably exists.
Let me try another way: it's great to have clean water, but if you spend all X on providing clean water while others create the same with X/1000, whatever you're doing to produce clean water is not working. But of course it "working" as in "okay, there's clean water", but it's not working in a societal sense, we cannot sustain doing that, we must look for another option.