The Internet as Spoiled Child

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Revision as of 12:13, 26 March 2022 by Tom (talk | contribs) (The Pathologies of the Schoolyard)

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Full Title or Meme

The best place to understand the behavior of the Internet might be a first-grade school playground.

Context

The internet of today does not seems to be a place of culture or higher purpose. This article looks at other aspects of human behavior that might help to understand how it evolves and how long it might take to create a civilized ecosystem that exhibits the better angels of our human nature.

Problems

  • Without governments society is a most unpleasant experience. The lawless nature of the wild west is an example of the sort of life that is nasty, brutish and short which is the state of nature that Thomas Hobbes called "the war of all against all" which can be avoided only by strong, undivided government.
  • John Perry Barlow argues for just that sort of unpleasant experience when he wrote

The Pathologies of the Schoolyard

Modern government basis compliance with law on two principles: (1) the punishment should fit the crime, and (2) the punishment should lead both the perpetrator and all of society to obey the law. The schoolyard has no principles of any sort if the teacher is not looking.

  1. Shame is the earliest form of punishment and has survived until the last few centuries. In the school yard it is applied for any infractions of the perceived law of the jungle. An early infraction of raise racial consciousness was the Sacco case where a careless racial reference ruined the author's life.[1] But shame is an effective weapon only when it is brandished against those who already inhabit a shared ethical universe and can be turned back on the accuser.
  2. Bully behavior typically knows no shame. It is loud, in-your-face coercion.
  3. Noise

References

  1. Recca Rothfeld, Hang your Head New Yorker Magazine 2022-03-28 P 80ff https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/03/28/the-shaming-industrial-complex-cathy-oneil-the-shame-machine-owen-flanagan-how-to-do-things-with-emotions