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Re: Openness amplifies Inequality?

Posted by glen ropella on Apr 11, 2014; 9:21pm
URL: http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/Fwd-Major-bug-called-Heartbleed-exposes-Internet-data-tp7585135p7585191.html


Again, we're limited by our binary, unidimensional, and translational
understanding of "merit" and the reward for merit.  That
limited/ambiguous understanding is the root of the problem.  And it's
why both Nick and Marcus are both logically right and wrong.

As long as something so base/universal as money is the foundation for
it, meritocracy will be vapid or utopian, perhaps both.  What we need is
a more applicable understanding of merit and reward, fleshed out by
quantitative, experimentally selected models of humans and their
environment.  Anything else is just more bloviation.


On 04/11/2014 01:03 PM, Marcus G. Daniels wrote:

> On Fri, 2014-04-11 at 13:35 -0600, Nick Thompson wrote:
>
>> Doesn’t a meritocracy favor the children of the meritorious,
>> irrespective of their own merit?  Doesn’t a meritocracy favor those
>> who disregard their families?
>
> If the first sentence is true, then they aren't disregarding their
> families.  It is just happening on a different time scale.  That and
> having a children is a choice, not a requirement.  Like smoking and
> drinking are choices.
>
>>   Doesn’t a meritocracy favor those who neglect the quality of their
>> communities?
>
> No, if their income is higher, the community will see that revenue in
> the form of taxes.

--
⇒⇐ glen

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