Perhaps, but even so, I feel this is an important symptom of a fundamental shift. At earlier times, people simply didn’t care on the whole; now, we care enough that people expend significant effort in hiding away anything that looks even a bit unkind.zompist wrote: ↑Thu Apr 14, 2022 12:02 amI think you're being pretty naive here. Modern society can be extremely cruel indeed. We just hide the victims better.bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 11:20 pm I think this underestimates the distance between the cultures. [...] What you (implicitly) claim to be equivalent are passive activities performed at several layers of indirection, and often with no actual harm to any living entity at all. (In the case of Ukraine, it’s not like we’re actively provoking anything: people are being hurt anyway, and we’re just watching.
I neither said nor intended to imply that ‘change is always progress’, though I do think this is the case in this specific instance (Western attitudes to animals).(Also, though I do think Western culture is better about animal cruelty than it was 500 years ago, it's a little misleading to imply that change is always progress. Religions in India were against animal cruelty two thousand years ago-- to a degree that even Western vegetarians would find extreme.)
On reflection, you’re entirely right about this. (Though my argument about many of these not being ‘commonplace day-to-day events’ still stands.)Sure, but so what? The question is whether we can make reasonable predictions about the future. Looking at what the elite are doing is in fact a pretty good way of predicting things-- precisely as noted by the Gibson quote you cited.I agree with alynnidalar here: these all existed, but were accessible only to the élite. The bourgeoisie were a small proportion of the population at the time
I think there’s an interesting point to be made here. Technologies can, to some extent, be predicted by extrapolating from our current situation and rate of change. Cultural shifts and overall societal reorganisations, however, are very very difficult to predict, and often somewhat mindboggling. You’re focussing on the former, whereas that Yudkowsky article focuses on the latter.