One of the great mistakes of our time is the idea, anything in existence or thinkable can be made a good with a price.
@Kuechenmonk the quantization of all information in terms of value. It's something I dislike as well.

@0x3F It is a shame, since it encourages or rather forces everyone to market him-/herself, to optimize, to streamline...

What I am especially worried about is the idea, all the collected data would give an accurate picture of reality.

@Kuechenmonk turning humanity into individual economic engines isn't a good idea. Ugh, the belief that with enough tech we can solve all problems really rubs me the wrong way.

@0x3F "Progress & Empire" still appear to be a valid motivation.

I wonder, how to organise society around other core principles besides debt-driven greed. What could lead out of that misery?

@Kuechenmonk i have wondered this question for long time, and i have no solution. I truly believe technology cannot give us a solution there. Humans will have to come up with some system of distribution on that scale. I hope people much smarter than me are working on i, because so far I don't even know how to approach that problem.
@0x3F Alas, I have no magic cure either. But there's a documentary, I recently watched, that gave me some insight into the ideas of selflessness, friendlyness and charity. Do you speak German or French?
@Kuechenmonk no I dont speak either of those languages, but subtitles maybe? I'll be sure to check it out.
@0x3F The idea now is to teach people to enlarge that in-group over the entire planet. If we recognise ourselves in that poor fellow on the street or the plantation in Brazil or in the factory in China, we start to act good. You cannot exploit easily those who are like you.
@Kuechenmonk I can agree with that. Just getting it to scale is the difficult part. How do we make it so people who can't speak the same language, or have the same ideas, communicate and identify with each other, recognize the other as part of our group? A fellow sufferer, a person, a friend.
@0x3F Language isn't the problem. One of the benefits of capitalism is the spread of the Enlish language. Without globalisation I doubt very much I would have been forced to learn it in school. And both of us wouldn't be having this pleasent conversation (nor the need of it, altogether). We've got a bunch of shared problems. But we can communicate. And I strongly suggest, the solution, if altruism is it, has to be implemented in a down to top manner.
@Kuechenmonk while English is the closest we've ever come to a global language, there's many people that don't speak it. These people often have entirely different perspectives and that makes them likely to be people most of the WEIRD (western, educated, industrial, rich, democratic) world would have issues with or vice versa. Communication is key and language is the strongest tool we have for that right now. What would a bottom up approach look like?

@0x3F Just to point that out, I'm a strong supporter of language diversity. And I am very much interested in foreign cultures. Nevertheless it is favourable to have a lingua franca, so that if people want to, they can gather around a table and talk to each other.

By bottom up I refer to the individual. Anybody has neighbours, needs and talents. If I walk through the streets, I can give the needy, if my neighbour rings at the door, I can lend him a hand ->

@Kuechenmonk I agree. Some form of communication is necessary, and since our best tool right now is language it might as well be a common language. AI still remains really bad at language processing unfortunately, so while it may be a potential solution in some cases, it's still a while off
@0x3F I think, it should remain up to humans to learn languages and communicate through them. Ais are a nice thing but I very much doubt they offer worthwhile benefits for humankind as a species, but for turning the wheel even faster, gaining more profit.
In short, I am quite pessimistic when it comes to AIs and transhumanism. I think, we lack the moral means to use it properly.
@Kuechenmonk while learning and utilizing languages will always be a human endeavor, i think there are use cases for on the fly translation that is accurate and trustworthy. But that is no easy bar to meet and verify.
You're right, we do currently lack the moral perspective on handling, living with and even just understanding our technology, but it doesn't apply only to AI. Science has made us demi gods, but we're still apes in regards to our understanding of being and virtue.

@0x3F I picture a mischievous toddler with a kalashnikov. He can destroy the world, but does he really understand what power he commands?

About languages and culture. Yes, on-spot translators would be marvelous. Going somewhere like Captain Picard and having the tools to understand other cultures. A pleasing thought. But I don't think it is that easy. ->