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#1 |
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FFR Player
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Every weekend in autumn, my neighborhood has a wonderful ritual every pater familius partakes in. In the morning, they all go out with their leaf-blowers and spend a tiresome hour or two blowing leaves into each others yards, never actually sending them anywhere or cleaning up their own yards.
Wouldn't it be common sense to just go inside and all watch football? It'd save hours of work, the same amount of productivity would get done and everyone would benefit. So why don't we do it? Because we, as individual homeowners (and yardworkers, boludo), don't function as a group rationality. We see things as a single person. We either don't trust the neighbors to cut it out or think "I can make my yard the best on the street!" Either way, we end up pushing the costs onto the neighbors by avoiding football and blowing leaves instead. Let's take a look at something you might have experienced for yourself. You're at the ballpark, you've just got your nachos, hot dog (if it's a Friday), soda or whatever from the concession stand. That's not the economics we're worried about right now. We're worried about an in the park home run. You just sit down, set your food to the side and look up. There's the crack of a bat, the batter starts running and you stand up to get a better look over the sea of heads in front of them. But you can't. Everyone else stood, too. They also wanted to see what was so interesting and see it well, so they all stood, too. You could have all saved yourselves the standing and just remained seated but, again, you're all thinking the same thing. "If I stand, I can see better," or, "if they stand and I don't, I'll see worse." Since the major cost of standing isn't on you, but the person behind you, you only see the benefit of standing. This tends to be the case. In things that people feel the costs of, they tend to behave more conservatively (buying groceries, for instance). When costs have spillover effects, or as economists call them "negative externalities", people have a tendency to throw caution to the wind because they have no idea what harm they're causing. PS- coberst Q |
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#2 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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Erm...that's interesting, and you are correct in your assessment of the situation but uh...is there actually a question or topic for discussion in there?
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#3 |
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Little Chief Hare
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Yes there is, the prevalence and applicability of these types of scenarios happens to be one of the principle issues behind contentions between Capitalist and Socialist conceptions. The discussion could range from purely Philosophical implications to the ideal place for government, and that's just a way of building on top of the issue. Investigating the causality of the issue would be a much greater work, and would delve into both Philosophy and Biology, easily among other subjects.
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#4 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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Well, if he'd said any of that, we could be discussing it right now, instead of talking about whether there's anything to discuss *grin*
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#5 |
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Little Chief Hare
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Yeah. Well then, is there anything in that list of potential discussions you're up for? I could go for any of them.
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#6 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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Well, I'm curious what you think are the root causes of the "me-first" behavior exhibited in the baseball example. I mean, you see it -everywhere- people pushing and shoving in line when an orderly line would actually move faster, and so on.
Part of me wants to think it is a throwback to when pretty much all aspects of life were competeing for quite limited resources, and you really see it in action during sales at stores etc. When your concern is for your own benefit, you tend not to especially consider the effect of that action on other people. Sure you get a better view if you stand up and people behind you don't, but everyone behind -you- has someone in their way, which is what starts the cascade of everyone standing up. It is an argument that people are inherently capitalistic, but I'd debate whether the situation arises because people are capitalistic by nature, or whether people become capitalistic by nature because the situation keeps arising where it is advantageous to be so. Or more to the point, if you no longer -needed- to stand up to get a better view than others, would you still instinctively do it anyway? |
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#7 |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Storm Sanctuary!
Posts: 255
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Honestly, I believe everyone is greedy in their own way. You love someone because you maybe believe they will love you back. You get money just for yourself. This may be a bit crazy but I believe that even the greatest people are greedy in a certain way. A person helps others because it makes themselves feel good. Can't this be considered greedy or at least a little? I know it's really nice, but shouldn't there be a pinch of greed in this?
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#8 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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It is one thing to think that maybe there is, and quite another to think that maybe there should be...
At the end there it sounded like you were advocating acting from a standpoint of greed and personal benefit. Was that just a side-effect of word-choice or do you believe that? |
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#9 |
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Little Chief Hare
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Well, it looks like this topic is quickly getting overbalanced and might tip over, so I think it's important I introduce some new language and terminology and we work towards using common definitions in general.
Capitalism: The notion that capital is in some way the essential component of human interaction Free Market capitalism: The notion that exchanges in capital should only occur by means of voluntary cooperation Socialism: A belief that third party controls and restrictions of capital interactions can result in greater benefit for a greater number Dialectic Materialism: A perspective of human interaction which attempts to reduce all human conflict down to problems in how capital is exchanged or otherwise employed. Invisible Hand: The name given by economist Adam Smith to the observable way in which selfish actions taken by individual parties result in benefit for all parties. Ok, moving on to specific posts. Last edited by Kilroy_x; 05-26-2007 at 05:38 PM.. |
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#10 | ||||
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Little Chief Hare
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Last edited by Kilroy_x; 05-26-2007 at 04:29 PM.. |
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#11 | |
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Little Chief Hare
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Quote:
Last edited by Kilroy_x; 05-26-2007 at 05:40 PM.. |
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#12 | |
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FFR Hall of Fame
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Of course the fundamental assumption of game theory is that every individual plays to maximize their own utility without regard for everyone else. If you want to force an ESS that allows everyone to be societally utility-maximizing then you're going to have to have some higher force governing the game rules. If you read back through a microeconomics textbook, that the area of externalities is one of the few sections where government intervention is required to maximize utility. It's the same principle here.
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#13 | ||
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Little Chief Hare
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#14 | |
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Private College
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Lol badger
Posts: 536
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<img src="Bent Lines" /> |
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#15 | ||
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Little Chief Hare
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#16 |
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Private College
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Lol badger
Posts: 536
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Which is where the misunderstanding lies. When I say "every individual," I refer to each and every separate individual, rather than the collection of individual persons. Every individual cares only about his/her payoff, not the payoff of every other individual person or the collective society as a whole.
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#17 |
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Little Chief Hare
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Yet there are only two options, everyone wins or everyone loses. An individual acting rationally in their best interest would also be acting perfectly in the interest of every other individual.
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#18 |
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Private College
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Lol badger
Posts: 536
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If the person in front of you is sitting, you get up. You now have an amazing view.
If the person in front of you is standing, you get up. You can now see. No matter what, standing up is going to increase your payoff in the immediate future.
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#19 |
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Little Chief Hare
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In that case, what's the problem at all? There doesn't seem to be any serious or long term loss of utility.
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#20 | |
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FFR Hall of Fame
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Sit Stand Sit 3, 3 0, 5 Stand 5, 0 1, 1 3 3 is the societal maximum
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