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by wookmaster 11 days ago
There’s an odd goal with “productivity” by CEOs in recent years under some obsession to solve a problem that doesn’t exist. I suspect in the US where it’s shown time and time again businesses don’t value human lives we will not see this which is sad. Humans could improve so much if we chose to.
1 comments

Humans are great at solving problems we put our minds to. But one of the problems humans often want to resolve is "I would like to have more and better stuff". That's why there's a lot of discussion about "productivity", the term refers to a business's capacity to satisfy that demand.

You can, of course, argue that it's wrong for humans to want that. The author refers approvingly to some hunter-gatherer societies where people do 20-25 hours of what we would call labor tasks a week because they simply don't demand any products or services beyond mere subsistence. But there's a hidden judo move here, where he talks a lot about their subjective enjoyment and satisfaction, in order to avoid squarely confronting the fact that their lack of productivity means their material conditions are much, much worse than ours.

In general, if you keep an eye out in detailed anthropological literature, you'll find a lot of similar alarm bells. I just found this matter-of-fact paragraph from Daniel Everett I was vaguely remembering, which is written in a neutral to approving tone and yet clearly describes the men of the Pirahã hunter-gatherers pushing their wives into prostitution (https://web.archive.org/web/20190808091528/https://www.edge....):

> It depends on the river trader, but sex is also a very common trade item. So you see these foreign babies being raised among the Pirahã. It's mainly the husband who works out the deal. Single women can negotiate on their own; wives wouldn't make that offer unless their husband negotiated it. In their dealings with outsiders, men take the lead, and the women won't usually come around unless they're called by Pirahã men. But promiscuity is not a problem for the Pirahã. It doesn't violate any values that they have.

>material conditions are much, much worse than ours.

I wonder how much better (or worse) off they are with mental health. What I see in our culture is a bunch of people scrambling to sell a bunch of plastic bobbles in order to afford a bunch of other plastic bobbles. None of it seems to make us particularly happy while it completely destroys the planet we're living on. In fact a whole lot of our 'material conditions' seem to isolate us and make this time in history uniquely depressing.