Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6715|67.222.138.85
As this part applies to the thread in general:

I am not so much saying that everyone should turn a blind eye to the outside world as saying the way we approach what we know about the outside world and therefore how we see ourselves in that world is skewed to such an extent that we become dysfunctional. Everyone seems to have latched on to the third paragraph, but it's the fourth that's important. We should be examining our world with the notion of learning the circumstances that have caused current events instead of transfixing our short attention to events that are current and ultimately inapplicable to our own lives.

Varegg wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Varegg wrote:

The election was just one example ... there are many more, too many for you to just leave it as a minor source of importance ...
This is exactly my point though. An election is the only instance where an individual's perception of the outside world has even a marginal influence on that outside world. Being informed about things like wars in the Middle East, the economic downturn, or anything else you might see on then nightly news or read in a newspaper doesn't influence those events at all. They are bigger than everyone who is just reading about them, not interacting with them. It wouldn't matter one bit if everyone did completely tune out to the news, because the whole idea that "knowledge is power" is a naive concept abused by the media to create an entire industry revolving around itself. They inform people because people need to be informed, and for no other reason. The consequences of the informed people are nil.
Okay ... elections is one we agree on ... how about news that sparks protest marches and demonstrations, that surely has some impact outside your own person does it not?

News about economics ... I know about an entire industry that can ruin an entire nation by its actions based on the news ... was close to happen just months ago ...

I get your point FM but I think you brush off the impact a little to lightly ...
But see these impacts are not valid reactions that are the result of a concerted effort by people to change things for the better, they are just the mindless aftermath of 7 billion headless chickens running about. The issue is people watch the news and don't react effectively to it, not that they don't react at all.

Dilbert_X wrote:

Its important to know whats going on to take decisions and also to be able to keep politicians in line.
Is now a good time to join the Army?
Buy a Hummer?
Invest in Gold futures?

Or should we sit back and let govt decide whats right for us?

We must invade Iran cuz dey is evul mooslums - Duh Okeydokey.
The government has already decided what is best for you. You don't matter in the least until the next election at the earliest - until that time you're not even a drop in the bucket.

What's going on in the "being informed" sense really doesn't have a lot to do with any of those decisions, and that's somewhat my point. You can know what the trends are for gold without knowing why. You can know what gas prices are at and what they likely will be without knowing why. You can even find out what the chances are of being deployed (as well as you ever can) without knowing why. It seems to me that someone could get along just fine without knowing a damn thing about the ways of the world outside their town (hence the title).

SenorToenails wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Mekstizzle wrote:

Most people like to know things, whether it affects them enough to actually 'see' for themselves or not. It's almost just human nature to want to be kept informed on what's going on. Or you could say, you'd be hard pressed to find someone who deliberately does not want to know anything.
This doesn't justify the desire to be kept informed.
Innate human curiosity isn't enough of a reason?

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

It wouldn't matter one bit if everyone did completely tune out to the news, because the whole idea that "knowledge is power" is a naive concept abused by the media to create an entire industry revolving around itself.
Scientia potentia est.  If you are uneducated, your ability to influence the world around you is greatly diminished.  If you are educated and have some idea of what is going on around you, all you need is will.
Nice to see you Toenails.

Innate curiosity is still a reason, not a justification.

You need smarts, drive, awareness, and an idea of how to get things done, which is what I find most lack. By most casual definitions there are plenty of people that meet the first three conditions, just as there are a lot of scientists that are very capable in their field that produce a ton of research. It takes a different type of person to understand how to put that research into practice, a different type of intelligence.

The problem is we can't process the information we are given about our world into useful ideas about where we stand in the world and how to use and/or expand our influence.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5366|London, England

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

As this part applies to the thread in general:

I am not so much saying that everyone should turn a blind eye to the outside world as saying the way we approach what we know about the outside world and therefore how we see ourselves in that world is skewed to such an extent that we become dysfunctional. Everyone seems to have latched on to the third paragraph, but it's the fourth that's important. We should be examining our world with the notion of learning the circumstances that have caused current events instead of transfixing our short attention to events that are current and ultimately inapplicable to our own lives.
This pretty much coincides with my belief of learning the root causes of peoples actions and ideas. If you study the base premises of our society, whether it be capitalism, socialism, protectionism, religion, or whatever else you'll have a better understanding of many of the arguments that people make in today's world and can cut out a lot of the bullshit and fluff.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5366|London, England

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

The government has already decided what is best for you. You don't matter in the least until the next election at the earliest - until that time you're not even a drop in the bucket.

What's going on in the "being informed" sense really doesn't have a lot to do with any of those decisions, and that's somewhat my point. You can know what the trends are for gold without knowing why. You can know what gas prices are at and what they likely will be without knowing why. You can even find out what the chances are of being deployed (as well as you ever can) without knowing why. It seems to me that someone could get along just fine without knowing a damn thing about the ways of the world outside their town (hence the title).
I just finished a book about Warren Buffett and his investment style. He does essentially this. He doesn't follow the stock market, doesn't pay attention to what's going on in the economy and doesn't care who is politically in power. It's irrelevant to him and if he did pay attention, feels that it would lead him to make irrational decisions. He bases all of his actions and chooses all of his investments based on hard numbers coupled with a basic understanding of how the people who's companies he's investing in operate. He has a list of about twelve criteria before purchase and to eliminate as much risk as possible, will not invest unless almost all of that criteria is met. He also stresses staying within your own level of competence. If you don't understand how a bank works, don't invest in a bank.

So yes, living in a bubble can work to your benefit because it cuts out emotion and leaves you to think rationally instead of reacting to the world around you. You gain control over your life instead of constantly being reactionary.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6138|North Tonawanda, NY

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Innate curiosity is still a reason, not a justification.
It's a reason and a justification.  I work in the scientific field right now to satisfy my curiosity.  Does that count as a justification?  I think so since it certainly explains my actions.  I read the news (no television for me) to keep an idea of whats going on in the world, but I realize that I cannot change what has already happened

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

You need smarts, drive, awareness, and an idea of how to get things done, which is what I find most lack. By most casual definitions there are plenty of people that meet the first three conditions, just as there are a lot of scientists that are very capable in their field that produce a ton of research. It takes a different type of person to understand how to put that research into practice, a different type of intelligence.
To try and quote the movie Real Genius, "Let the engineers figure out a use for it".  You are 100% correct on that, and that is also why people who can create new ideas and successfully apply them are so rare.  Not everyone can do it.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I am not so much saying that everyone should turn a blind eye to the outside world as saying the way we approach what we know about the outside world and therefore how we see ourselves in that world is skewed to such an extent that we become dysfunctional. Everyone seems to have latched on to the third paragraph, but it's the fourth that's important. We should be examining our world with the notion of learning the circumstances that have caused current events instead of transfixing our short attention to events that are current and ultimately inapplicable to our own lives.
Today's current events are yesterdays history, and to quote Truman..."Those who do not ... understand history are doomed to repeat it."  Has man ever been good at not repeating history?
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6715|67.222.138.85

SenorToenails wrote:

It's a reason and a justification.  I work in the scientific field right now to satisfy my curiosity.  Does that count as a justification?  I think so since it certainly explains my actions.  I read the news (no television for me) to keep an idea of whats going on in the world, but I realize that I cannot change what has already happened
There is a big difference between a reason and a justification. A reason explains why you do something that you do, while a justification gives a good reason for doing something that you do. We do things all the time for perfectly explicable reasons, but that doesn't mean we are right to do them by some/most/all standards.

SenorToenails wrote:

Today's current events are yesterdays history, and to quote Truman..."Those who do not ... understand history are doomed to repeat it."  Has man ever been good at not repeating history?
If we are continually repeating the mistakes of the past, then clearly something is wrong with how we are examining them. We are making the mistake of the past of continually making the mistakes of the past - so how do we fix it?

As I have been saying we change our idea of what the news is. The nightly news should read less like an encyclopedia and more like Aesop's Fables.

JohnG@lt wrote:

He bases all of his actions ... on hard numbers coupled with a basic understanding of how the people ... operate.
This.
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6138|North Tonawanda, NY

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

It's a reason and a justification.  I work in the scientific field right now to satisfy my curiosity.  Does that count as a justification?  I think so since it certainly explains my actions.  I read the news (no television for me) to keep an idea of whats going on in the world, but I realize that I cannot change what has already happened
There is a big difference between a reason and a justification. A reason explains why you do something that you do, while a justification gives a good reason for doing something that you do. We do things all the time for perfectly explicable reasons, but that doesn't mean we are right to do them by some/most/all standards.
A good reason is awfully subjective.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

Today's current events are yesterdays history, and to quote Truman..."Those who do not ... understand history are doomed to repeat it."  Has man ever been good at not repeating history?
If we are continually repeating the mistakes of the past, then clearly something is wrong with how we are examining them. We are making the mistake of the past of continually making the mistakes of the past - so how do we fix it?

As I have been saying we change our idea of what the news is. The nightly news should read less like an encyclopedia and more like Aesop's Fables.
How can that be?  Aesop's Fables have a moral or some other meaning...not all bits of news have that.  Car accidents, natural disasters, etc... just don't lend themselves to anything more than fact-like presentation.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

JohnG@lt wrote:

He bases all of his actions ... on hard numbers coupled with a basic understanding of how the people ... operate.
This.
I've always thought that those who are smart enough to be in positions of power in the government are also smart enough to know they don't want the job.  And those who have always wanted to be politicians are likely the very last people you want for the job.  Warren Buffet obviously knows what he is doing, and has done very well for himself in life.  If more people thought like him, the world would probably be very different...but that kind of thoughtful decision making is not likely to be found in the average person.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6715|67.222.138.85

SenorToenails wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

It's a reason and a justification.  I work in the scientific field right now to satisfy my curiosity.  Does that count as a justification?  I think so since it certainly explains my actions.  I read the news (no television for me) to keep an idea of whats going on in the world, but I realize that I cannot change what has already happened
There is a big difference between a reason and a justification. A reason explains why you do something that you do, while a justification gives a good reason for doing something that you do. We do things all the time for perfectly explicable reasons, but that doesn't mean we are right to do them by some/most/all standards.
A good reason is awfully subjective.
I am only asking that you take an objective look at what you gain from being informed as that means to us now, and then decide if there is truly any subjective benefit.

SenorToenails wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

SenorToenails wrote:

Today's current events are yesterdays history, and to quote Truman..."Those who do not ... understand history are doomed to repeat it."  Has man ever been good at not repeating history?
If we are continually repeating the mistakes of the past, then clearly something is wrong with how we are examining them. We are making the mistake of the past of continually making the mistakes of the past - so how do we fix it?

As I have been saying we change our idea of what the news is. The nightly news should read less like an encyclopedia and more like Aesop's Fables.
How can that be?  Aesop's Fables have a moral or some other meaning...not all bits of news have that.  Car accidents, natural disasters, etc... just don't lend themselves to anything more than fact-like presentation.
I would say that most bits of information that need to be disseminated are the type that have a moral of some sort. Why do you need to know about a car accident? Why do you need to know about a natural disaster through the news?

SenorToenails wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

JohnG@lt wrote:

He bases all of his actions ... on hard numbers coupled with a basic understanding of how the people ... operate.
This.
I've always thought that those who are smart enough to be in positions of power in the government are also smart enough to know they don't want the job.  And those who have always wanted to be politicians are likely the very last people you want for the job.  Warren Buffet obviously knows what he is doing, and has done very well for himself in life.  If more people thought like him, the world would probably be very different...but that kind of thoughtful decision making is not likely to be found in the average person.
Who you want in power and who is in power are two very different things. I hope you realize that.
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6138|North Tonawanda, NY

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I am only asking that you take an objective look at what you gain from being informed as that means to us now, and then decide if there is truly any subjective benefit.
I place value in being informed about certain things-- and no value on others.  I see what you're saying, but it is entirely up to the individual to determine these bounds.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I would say that most bits of information that need to be disseminated are the type that have a moral of some sort. Why do you need to know about a car accident? Why do you need to know about a natural disaster through the news?
What if I had family in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina?  Or what if I had family that got snowed in somewhere in the midwest and had no lines of communication.  I would probably want to know what was going on, since they wouldn't be able to tell me themselves.  On that same note, why report on the results of sports games--there is no moral there, right?  Or what about homicides?  Or robberies?  Should those be not reported either?  I see what you're saying, but I would rather that the news was encyclopedic and I could use my own brain to try and discern meaning from what is reported.  That way, if they report an accident on I-90 that is slowing traffic, I can plan an alternate route around it--or if I don't need to drive on 90, I can merely ignore it.  See what I mean?

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Who you want in power and who is in power are two very different things. I hope you realize that.
That is implied by what I said, so yes...I understand this.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6550|Texas - Bigger than France
FM:
A waited a little while to figure out what side you were on for this one.

I see opportunity in being informed.  If you know something, you can create something worthwhile.  For instance, as a CPA I make my living by knowing more than my clients.

In other words, increase the size of your bubble.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6715|67.222.138.85

Pub wrote:

I see opportunity in being informed.  If you know something, you can create something worthwhile.  For instance, as a CPA I make my living by knowing more than my clients.

In other words, increase the size of your bubble.
So long as there is a bubble, yeah. The way things are right now though people don't see any boundaries, they want the whole world to be their bubble. It's not reasonable and it's a mentally crippling attitude.

SenorToenails wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I would say that most bits of information that need to be disseminated are the type that have a moral of some sort. Why do you need to know about a car accident? Why do you need to know about a natural disaster through the news?
What if I had family in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina?  Or what if I had family that got snowed in somewhere in the midwest and had no lines of communication.  I would probably want to know what was going on, since they wouldn't be able to tell me themselves.  On that same note, why report on the results of sports games--there is no moral there, right?  Or what about homicides?  Or robberies?  Should those be not reported either?  I see what you're saying, but I would rather that the news was encyclopedic and I could use my own brain to try and discern meaning from what is reported.  That way, if they report an accident on I-90 that is slowing traffic, I can plan an alternate route around it--or if I don't need to drive on 90, I can merely ignore it.  See what I mean?
The traffic news is the only kind of information that actually changes how you would live your life.

Why do you need to know if your relatives are dead? You want to know, but you don't need to know and knowing doesn't do them any good.
Why do you need to know the results of a sports game? Of a crime that was committed? If you aren't directly involved, we don't need to know. The information is entirely useless.
SenorToenails
Veritas et Scientia
+444|6138|North Tonawanda, NY

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Why do you need to know if your relatives are dead? You want to know, but you don't need to know and knowing doesn't do them any good.
Why do you need to know the results of a sports game? Of a crime that was committed? If you aren't directly involved, we don't need to know. The information is entirely useless.
Alrighty then.  Is that also implying that most education is also useless?  I mean, I don't need to know the medieval history of Europe or how to deal with logarithms or how to anything like that, right?  I merely want to know...which isn't the same as 'need'.

If I want to have a bubble of people I influence, I would include my family in that.  If they were killed or isolated or something in some way, that certainly impacts my 'bubble'.  And you were just telling Pug about bubbles, right?  Maybe that information directly pertains to my bubble, and has nothing to do with yours.  I can retain the knowledge...and you can filter it out.  Why let someone else make that decision for you?
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5366|London, England
A better thread title would've been "Operational Detachment".
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6715|67.222.138.85
But John it's not as catchy!

SenorToenails wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Why do you need to know if your relatives are dead? You want to know, but you don't need to know and knowing doesn't do them any good.
Why do you need to know the results of a sports game? Of a crime that was committed? If you aren't directly involved, we don't need to know. The information is entirely useless.
Alrighty then.  Is that also implying that most education is also useless?  I mean, I don't need to know the medieval history of Europe or how to deal with logarithms or how to anything like that, right?  I merely want to know...which isn't the same as 'need'.

If I want to have a bubble of people I influence, I would include my family in that.  If they were killed or isolated or something in some way, that certainly impacts my 'bubble'.  And you were just telling Pug about bubbles, right?  Maybe that information directly pertains to my bubble, and has nothing to do with yours.  I can retain the knowledge...and you can filter it out.  Why let someone else make that decision for you?
History is pretty useless for anything except a moral lol. Logs can be pretty useless too depending on your career. A hairdresser certainly shouldn't waste their time.

It's not about limiting information, it's about our approach to information.

It's not like information about crime or natural disasters shouldn't exist, just that we shouldn't spend an hour a day looking at them. As we get better and better at filtering the vast amounts of information available on the internet, it only makes sense that this type of personalized information will be easier and easier to come by. True news should only be about what is immediately relevant to us, nightly national dialogue should be about methods and solutions not previous results.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6114|eXtreme to the maX
I think its important, I like to know the back story behind the back story behind the back story.

Its useful in catching liars. If you're ignorant about most things you'll have no idea when you're being told the truth. Catch someone, eg politicians, in a lie and you know not to trust them in the future.
For this you need to be educated in current and past events.

Its not that long ago that the media basically toed the establishment line. All newspapers were owned by bigwigs who liked to be part of the establishment rather than not. In those days it was as diifucult to be educated about many things as it was in Russia when the only news was written by the govt and printed in Pravda.

I'd rather not be the mindless drone who plods to work, plods home, watches half an hour of some generic ball-kicking game and goes to sleep.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2009-12-13 19:46:53)

Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6550|Texas - Bigger than France

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Pub wrote:

I see opportunity in being informed.  If you know something, you can create something worthwhile.  For instance, as a CPA I make my living by knowing more than my clients.

In other words, increase the size of your bubble.
So long as there is a bubble, yeah. The way things are right now though people don't see any boundaries, they want the whole world to be their bubble. It's not reasonable and it's a mentally crippling attitude.
Sorry, increase the size of your sphere of influence.

If it's not reasonable and leads to an uneducated lot...how are you going to use this to your advantage?  aka PT Barnum - sucker born every minute.
specops10-4
Member
+108|6751|In the hills

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

So what, people are supposed to be blind to everything around them? No, it's just that the concrete is not nearly important as we make it out to be for most of us. The ideas that eventually form the concrete circumstances are what is important - natural laws of human behavior that are every bit as real as the laws of physics, if more difficult to accurately analyze. Looking at the base cause of events is important, not their inevitable outcome. Asimov wrote about a science where mathematics could be used on large populations to predict future events; we may not have it down to a science, but it's not difficult to see a chain of astoundingly simple causes and effects if one is willing to go deep enough to look for it. Reacting on the present in context of the future is a lot better than reacting on the past in context of the present.
Made me think of this:

article wrote:

machines like the Edinburgh black box have thrown up a tantalising possibility: that scientists may have unwittingly discovered a way of predicting the future.
http://www.redorbit.com/news/display/?id=126649

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