roslingism is popular with free market types because it works well with markets
everything will be fixed once the price is right
the problem is the price and time may not be right at the same time
Conversation
the market is just 1 mechanism in play, possibly the only one, but that doesn’t mean it’s necessary or sufficient for any given problem to get solved right at the right time, so that’s where i part ways with market fetishists who won’t entertain the possibility of alt mechanisms
1
2
21
other mechanisms, including state action and nonprofit action also reshape problems in unexpected ways, but it’s harder to make the leap of faith that on balance they’ll have a net positive effect
that doesn’t mean they’re off the table, just more subject to hostile scrutiny
1
1
8
the big problem with state and nonprofit mechanisms is that their fans won’t admit that they have as much or worse indeterminacy and externalities built into their operation
there is an illusion of determinate agency around them
the stronger the illusion, the worse the effects
2
1
24
the older I get, the less of a stake I feel in big problems because the likelier it is they’ll stay stable/slowly degrading in my lifetime, and the easier it is to focus on my own narrower interests, and at most concern myself with general potentialities over specific mechanisms
2
3
17
one way I like to reduce this to individual mediocre human scale is to ask what’s at the intersection of effectiveness and non-misery at every life-stage?
unlike Chosen Ones™ mediocre humans can’t be effective while miserable (though they needn’t be actually happy)
2
14
more to the point why bother?
non-misery gives mediocre people something to fight to protect, giving them a reason to be part of the solution rather than the problem, and without coercion
2
1
13
Chosen Ones™ are different for whatever reason
maybe they are geniuses, or were bullied as kids, it doesn’t matter...
you can model them as psychohistorical mules, random anomalous events that seed positive or negative potentialities that reshape the Big Problems Stack™
2
2
23
mediocre people I think should simply try to keep personal misery at bay, but in a broad-minded way, and differently at every life stage, reflecting the stakes of every stage, because if you’re miserable and not a Chosen One™ you’re almost certainly part of the problem
1
1
23
0-18 your best bet is probably skills development
19-35 probably long-term thinking because you have the positivity of youth to overcome the the negativity burden
36-50 probably support/catalyze positive potentials that are developing in your lifetime
50+... ask me after 2024.
6
1
32
turning 46 in a few weeks, definitely on the leeward slope of life in my head, almost certainly more life behind me than in front of me
neither a part of the problem nor part of the solution to anything, but hopefully a net non-negative presence in the world
Replying to
to bring it back around, I can’t really think in time horizons any more, short or long, but I do think in terms of temporal textures like lucky/unlucky timelines, and in terms of transforming bad textures into good ones, or poisonous moods into non-poisonous ones
1
15
maybe mood alchemy is the capability that interests me
2
8
Gen X appears 10 years younger than it is because our prime decade fell through the cracks between the death of old media and the rise of social media. 1995-2005, the missing life decade.
Quote Tweet
Replying to @vgr
I thought you were ~35
5
4
31
We are the undocumented digital migrants 🤣
2
1
17
Though I totally coasted through that decade doing absolutely nothing worthwhile so it’s fair to edit it out
5
Replying to
Thanks for this thread. Made me think about Screwtape Letters, CS Lewis’ novel where one demon is counseling another on how to lead his assigned human away from The Enemy (God). Link to the excerpt. Screencap of intro. renovare.org/articles/futur
This Tweet was deleted by the Tweet author. Learn more
Well somebody has to be Official Online Age Complainer



