• greenskye@lemm.ee
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    18 hours ago

    My personal guess is that while the stated goal of ‘do whatever as long as it doesn’t affect others’ is good, our human biology will fail us in achieving this goal.

    I already feel that humans aren’t built for the world we made, that we can’t handle societies as big and diffused as our current global culture. It breaks our capacity for cooperation and empathy by deliberately abusing the limits we have on caring for too many people or people far away.

    Likewise, I think the end state of social progressiveness is going to butt up hard against core biological limits that will constantly try to push some of us towards bigotry due to outdated instincts that worked great when we were small tribes of monkeys, but are extremely destructive and unhelpful to modern human society.

    • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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      18 hours ago

      do whatever as long as it doesn’t affect others

      This statement is very frequently used as justification for self-destructive tendencies without coming to the conclusion naturally (i.e. having someone tell you that you can do anything as long as you don’t affect others vs figuring it out on your own). It can also lead to belligerence from stupid individuals (eh, we’re surrounded by fields - who cares if I shoot my gun in the air?).

      I don’t disagree with anything else you’ve said.

      • theneverfox@pawb.social
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        12 hours ago

        Well, the same argument is being used to say what you can and can’t do to your body… I’d rather have more accidents than less freedom

        Life is never guaranteed. Giving up your freedom makes you feel safer, it doesn’t actually make people safer