Cadaverous Pallor |
01-16-2007 11:38 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by innerSpaceman
(Post 114954)
Um, that future is now. Have you been outside your house lately?
The world is almost to the breaking point with stupid people.
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No, dude, I'm talking about serious stupidity. See the movie.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Alex Stroup
(Post 114955)
After having spent some time studying history I'm pretty convinced that we are, on average, no stupider than ever. It is just that history tends to ignore the "lower classes" of ordinary people. But in reading cultural history after cultural history that focuses on the lives or "ordinary" people the same themes of "people are idiots" keep coming to the surface (see, for example, Richard Darnton's The Great Cat Massacre and Other Episodes in French Cultural History; though for a view of what occupied the intelligentsia I can also recommend Darnton's more academic Forbidden Bestsellers of Pre-Revolutionary France).
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What about the concept that no matter what, smarter people will complain about dumber people, no matter how many there are, or how wide the gap is?
My current POV regarding other metrics, like percentage of the world population that has access to leisure time, health care, education, etc, is that probably (I have no proof of this, just my own POV) it's about the same as it ever was. I also believe that there are many factors that keep the percentages stable.
My POV on percentages regarding smarts was basically the same. But now I've thought way too much about it due to this movie and realize that the shockwave that The Pill has caused is incredible. It's only been around for what, 60 years or so? Already the effect is dramatic and totally measurable. Like a stand up comic once said - there's a reason it's called The Pill. They invented medicine that has nearly eradicated polio, but they didn't call THAT The Pill.
It's frightening, but at this point, I'm really starting to believe that Mike Judge's crazy scenario is completely plausible.
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