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by bithive123 715 days ago
We may not have a lot to discuss if your idea of safety is everyone having loaded guns pointed at each other. To me that is an extremely precarious position especially if we have accepted as wisdom that violence, maybe even preemptive violence, might be necessary. Is indefinite cold war really our highest aspiration?

I'm trying to suggest that human beings engage in all sorts of destructive behaviors, including warfare, because of the way we think about the world. We compartmentalize violence, pollution, etc, advocate for the security of our nation-state at the expense of others, and ignore the "externalities", i.e. the simple fact that everything is connected. This tendency perpetuates the very cycles of conflict that most people feel like we could do without.

And yet somehow it's easier to see that you've gone too far east and to go west instead, or vice versa. But for non-trivial matters it seems people want a fixed action pattern to which to cling ("never use force" or "be ready to shoot first") and get confused by comments such as mine which aren't advocating any fixed strategy because the fixed strategies are what got us in this mess.

1 comments

> Is indefinite cold war really our highest aspiration?

It's literally brought about the longest period of peace between major world powers, in basically the entire history of civilization.

> I'm trying to suggest that human beings engage in all sorts of destructive behaviors, including warfare, because of the way we think about the world. We compartmentalize violence, pollution, etc, advocate for the security of our nation-state at the expense of others, and ignore the "externalities", i.e. the simple fact that everything is connected. This tendency perpetuates the very cycles of conflict that most people feel like we could do without.

At the end of the day human conflict is rooted in simple physics and biology. We compete for a limited set of resources. Even if everyone had every resource they wanted, they'd still compete for sexual partners. You're not going to fix biology or physics. If you have an issue with this, I'd suggest filing a complaint with God.

Literally no movement to ignore these very real constraints has ever been met with success. Some have shown promise on very small scales, but these usually end up petering out due to lack of new converts, or descend into madness upon scale. Can you point to anything that substantiates your point?

> And yet somehow it's easier to see that you've gone too far east and to go west instead, or vice versa. But for non-trivial matters it seems people want a fixed action pattern to which to cling ("never use force" or "be ready to shoot first") and get confused by comments such as mine which aren't advocating any fixed strategy because the fixed strategies are what got us in this mess.

What is your comment? No one can choose on behalf of others. You can only choose on behalf of yourself. Hence the issue.

> It's literally brought about the longest period of peace between major world powers, in basically the entire history of civilization.

What may look to you like peace is still a mexican standoff. On small time scales no one is firing a weapon but it's not an environment I'd call peaceful.

> At the end of the day human conflict is rooted in simple physics and biology. We compete for a limited set of resources. Even if everyone had every resource they wanted, they'd still compete for sexual partners. You're not going to fix biology or physics. If you have an issue with this, I'd suggest filing a complaint with God.

I don't think using physics to explain warfare would be simple at all. Biologically, I agree that situational constraints sometimes do potentiate conflict. But my complaint is firmly with humans, not some made-up external force they imagine to be responsible. If you would use violence to obtain sexual partners that's on you, not God.

I'm not suggesting that people ignore real constraints, that would be as irrational as ignoring the consequences of actions. I'm also not claiming to have a formula, or system to achieve this. I'm saying we discount the possibility of anything new or different at our own peril. I just can't accept that "God made us violent, so stop worrying and love the bomb" is the only conclusion a truly serious person could come to.

> What is your comment? No one can choose on behalf of others. You can only choose on behalf of yourself. Hence the issue.

I agree that there is no simple solution to ending humanity's destructive tendencies because society cannot change from the top down, only the bottom up (or inside out if you prefer).