ddrcrono
ddrcrono t1_is87zk6 wrote
Reply to Ethics of Nuclear Energy in Times of Climate Change: Escaping the Collective Action Problem by CartesianClosedCat
My general understanding of why nuclear, despite looking so good has been basically ignored is that countries that have it have a wink wink nudge nudge agreement not to let it proliferate any further because of concerns about nuclear arms proliferation and not for any of the overtly stated reasons.
Thinking about it that way, and looking at how sketchy some of the global state actors are, I'm not sure this is, despite how inefficient it is energy-wise, the worst decision.
ddrcrono t1_is84fi9 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Police Killings per Capita v Homicide Rate per Capita for Select OECD Countries [OC] by dr5c
Yeah but you also have to consider how many police there are per capita vs how many capita there are per capita.
ddrcrono t1_ircv7y4 wrote
Every neat thing I've done more or less started on a whim.
ddrcrono t1_irbvj3f wrote
Whenever I see something like this I can't help but think that somewhere in the fine print there's going to be something that actually ends up being really bad for the average person despite sounding nice.
ddrcrono t1_iqz19s6 wrote
Reply to comment by wjbc in Bronze Age China - Shang dynasty [1600 ~ 1045 BC] by gimhae_pyeongya
>moral
In Pinker's case, he's talking about society and statistics in general, but I think it's generally the case that individuals grow up within and are affected by a society - the most immoral anyone can "get away" with being in one place and time is different than another.
That particular point aside, I actually got the impression that OP was talking about moral standards in general and using the sorts of things rulers did as examples to highlight the state of affairs.
My general train of thought here is that if society and/or rulers were held to higher standards over time that it would be analogous to the arguments that Pinker makes, or more generally, to the overall idea that morality develops over time. (You don't need to think specifically about Pinker for this, as it's a point that's been made elsewhere in different ways).
ddrcrono t1_iqyww81 wrote
Reply to comment by wjbc in Bronze Age China - Shang dynasty [1600 ~ 1045 BC] by gimhae_pyeongya
This is just an off-the-cusp thing but my understanding is that some research has found a correlation between the complexity of moral/religious systems and the size/complexity/density of society. It makes more sense since keeping track of people individually gets harder / there's more anonymity / you have problems you wouldn't have had in a sparser setting. I'm not sure I'd say more moral in this case, though.
There are also some writers like Steven Pinker who actually uses violent crime, etc. statistics to argue that the world has gotten more moral / good over time. (I find this somewhat tenuous in that it might just be that we're better at making people not want to do bad things, rather than them actually being morally superior).
ddrcrono t1_is8vqma wrote
Reply to comment by jbr945 in Ethics of Nuclear Energy in Times of Climate Change: Escaping the Collective Action Problem by CartesianClosedCat
When I say energy inefficient, I mean that choosing not to pursue nuclear is an inefficient energy policy.