Technology and its side effects

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/Ra4PkLtDn8gnYtqcj/technology-and-its-side-effects

Link post Progress is messy. On the whole, over the long run, the advance of technology and industry has improved life along almost every dimension. But when you zoom in to look at each step, you find that progress is full of complications. Some examples:

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/Ra4PkLtDn8gnYtqcj/technology-and-its-side-effects?commentId=94PSoMnToxWpqKHCa

But if you want to criticize a technology, show that there is a viable alternative, and that it doesn’t sacrifice important properties such as cost, speed, productivity, scalability, or reliability; or that if it loses on some dimensions, it makes up for it on others. sometimes I want illegible things. The issue is that when I try to go have those things the legibility tribe rolls through with superior weapons and smashes my shit periodically.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/Ra4PkLtDn8gnYtqcj/technology-and-its-side-effects?commentId=QdS6hprQLDezamLJC
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/Ra4PkLtDn8gnYtqcj/technology-and-its-side-effects?commentId=kAMHaEXTuWGMnavtz

I think this post makes a great point. For example, some friends were recently talking about some possible improvements to farming, and they mostly talked in terms of how it would solve specific problems with the current system of industrial agriculture, but had no answers for how it would address the issues already solved by industrial agriculture without risking a backslide to conditions conducive to frequent famine or that would unreasonably raise the cost of food such that people would starve as a result. It’s not that we can’t do better, but it is that doing worse than we do now would have serious consequences and likely result in death and suffering, so it’s important that the improvements we seek are broad improvements, not different trade offs along the same frontier.