← Back to context

Comment by pasquinelli

8 months ago

you're being too fixated on individuals. everyone's doing the same thing: avoiding pain, uncertainty, and the limitation of their future choices; seeking pleasure, security, and to increase their future choices. the very few people who aren't doing that don't matter: history unfolds because people do what makes sense for them, not because some don't.

I think you're being too fixated on your own perspective. History is nothing but the individual having a large blast radius.

History ABSOLUTELY unfolds the way it does because they were tired of being 'taking the reasonable/way that makes sense path'.

You can argue that every invention from the wheel forward has had this approach.

  • > History ABSOLUTELY unfolds the way it does because they were tired of being 'taking the reasonable/way that makes sense path'.

    i think we're talking at cross purposes. quoting myself:

    >> ...everyone's doing the same thing: avoiding pain, uncertainty, and the limitation of their future choices; seeking pleasure, security, and to increase their future choices.

    do you think that doesn't characterize the motivating factors that lead to invention?

    • Re-reading what was said, I believe we might be cross talking.

      The 'reasonable way' that most people believe is to 'do it as its always been done'.

      > do you think that doesn't characterize the motivating factors that lead to invention?

      We as humans tend to to believe that this is the easiest path. Inventors and innovators are not a majority in the population, often popularized as outcasts or outliers in society through popular story tale.

      Only in the last few decades has this narrative changed, but I can agree that indirectly yes, these avoid pain, uncertainty and limitation of their future choices.