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14 votes
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How (and why) the right stole Christianity
22 votes -
Sominsai: The end of a 1200-year-old festival
7 votes -
Plato's burial place finally revealed after AI deciphers ancient scroll carbonized in Mount Vesuvius eruption
21 votes -
Free Companies: The age of mercenary companies
7 votes -
Meta in Myanmar, Part II: The Crisis
8 votes -
Utopian Realism, a speech by Bruce Sterling
4 votes -
B-17 Flying Fortress | Units of History
6 votes -
The beautiful dissociation of the Japanese language
31 votes -
Why Panama dollarized
5 votes -
Towers of silence
17 votes -
What if we discover the answers of the Universe, eliminate cancer, halt aging. What's next?
I'm curious to see what you are all feeling and thinking about when such questions arise.
21 votes -
Why did Google Maps have a big black smudge in the South Pacific before 2012? And why did it disappear? And what does it have to do with Captain Cook? And what is a phantom island? | Map Men
37 votes -
Remembering May 4 (Kent State massacre) - An interview with Devo's Jerry Casale
16 votes -
Former naturalists/materialists, what changed your view?
There have been a number of threads recently that have touched on this topic recently, and I thought the conversation deserved its own place. My default worldview for the past decade+ has been...
There have been a number of threads recently that have touched on this topic recently, and I thought the conversation deserved its own place.
My default worldview for the past decade+ has been something best characterized as naturalistic or materialist (the totality of reality can be explained by material and its interactions.) I've had a few things challenge this view recently, namely the "Hard Problem of Consciousness." I'll post my own comment about what moved me from hard materialist to agnostic on materialism, but I encourage you to post your own reasoning in your comment!
28 votes -
Sociology’s race problem: Urban ethnographers do more harm than good in speaking for Black communities. They see only suffering, not diversity or joy.
19 votes -
Pseudoarchaeology and the pseudoscience pipeline - Milo Rossi live at Virginia Tech
8 votes -
Step by step: Thinking through and beyond the repair manual
6 votes -
A casual chat with ChatGPT about the prosperity of humanity
I was in a silly mood and wanted to fleece a socialist opinion out of the ChatGPT. For what it's worth it's nice to see the creators of the system aim for an unbiased answering machine. Poking a...
I was in a silly mood and wanted to fleece a socialist opinion out of the ChatGPT. For what it's worth it's nice to see the creators of the system aim for an unbiased answering machine. Poking a little further and through a self-proclaimed "simulated opinion", I was allowed to take a peek behind its curtains.
A few prompts later and I asked:
What would you say is the ideal goal for humanity to steer towards?
To which ChatGPT replied:
Achieving the ideal goals of prosperity, equity, sustainability, and ethical responsibility requires concerted efforts across multiple fronts, involving governments, businesses, civil society, and individuals. Here are some strategies for accomplishing these goals:
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Policy Frameworks: Governments play a crucial role in setting policy frameworks and regulations that promote inclusive growth, social justice, and environmental sustainability. This includes implementing progressive taxation policies, investing in education and healthcare, and enacting environmental regulations to mitigate climate change and protect natural resources.
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Investment in Education and Skills Development: Investing in education and skills development is essential for equipping individuals with the knowledge, capabilities, and adaptability needed to thrive in a rapidly changing economy. This includes promoting STEM education, vocational training, and lifelong learning opportunities to empower individuals to participate fully in the digital economy.
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Inclusive Economic Development: Promoting inclusive economic development involves creating opportunities for all members of society to participate in and benefit from economic growth. This includes supporting small businesses, entrepreneurs, and marginalized communities, as well as implementing policies to reduce income inequality and promote social mobility.
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Technology for Good: Encouraging the responsible development and use of technology, including AI, can help harness its potential for positive impact. This includes investing in research and innovation to develop AI solutions that address pressing societal challenges, such as healthcare, education, climate change, and social equity.
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Corporate Social Responsibility: Businesses have a responsibility to operate ethically and sustainably, considering the social and environmental impacts of their operations. Embracing corporate social responsibility (CSR) practices, including fair labor practices, environmental stewardship, and community engagement, can contribute to building a more equitable and sustainable economy.
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Global Cooperation: Addressing global challenges such as climate change and inequality requires international cooperation and collaboration. Countries must work together to set ambitious climate targets, promote trade and economic integration, and support development initiatives that prioritize the needs of the most vulnerable populations.
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Public Awareness and Engagement: Fostering public awareness and engagement is essential for building support for policies and initiatives that advance the ideal goals of prosperity, equity, sustainability, and ethical responsibility. This includes educating the public about the benefits and risks of AI and technology, promoting civic participation, and empowering individuals to advocate for positive change.
By implementing these strategies and fostering collaboration across sectors and stakeholders, we can work towards realizing the ideal goals of prosperity, equity, sustainability, and ethical responsibility, creating a better future for all members of society.
To which I responded:
Those all sounds very socialistic :D
ChatGPT in return said:
Indeed, many of the strategies outlined for achieving the ideal goals of prosperity, equity, sustainability, and ethical responsibility align with principles commonly associated with socialism, such as a focus on social justice, collective welfare, and government intervention to address market failures and promote the common good.
Socialist ideologies often emphasize the importance of equitable distribution of resources, public ownership of key industries, and government intervention in the economy to ensure that basic needs are met and that everyone has access to essential services such as healthcare, education, and social support.
While not all the strategies mentioned are exclusively socialist in nature, there is often overlap between socialist principles and policies aimed at promoting inclusive economic development, environmental sustainability, and ethical governance. In practice, countries may adopt a mix of socialist and capitalist policies to address complex socio-economic challenges, drawing on a range of ideological perspectives and pragmatic considerations.
Ultimately, the goal is to find a balance that maximizes the benefits of economic growth and innovation while ensuring that the gains are shared equitably and that the well-being of people and the planet is safeguarded for future generations.
I'm not sure where I want to head with this little musing. I just found it interesting enough to share. Thanks for reading!
4 votes -
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Laziness does not exist
46 votes -
Bureaucracy's playthings
5 votes -
The Museum of Science and Industry abruptly closed for a day last week to allow it to move “military artifacts from archival storage”
26 votes -
What happened to the Nautilus?
9 votes -
In the years after World War II, neutral, peace-loving Sweden embarked on an ambitious plan – build its own atomic bomb
16 votes -
Where will people commune in a godless America?
24 votes -
Did grave robbers plunder battlefields? Bones went to fertilizer and sugar processing, book argues.
14 votes -
About General Grant’s memoirs
8 votes -
Pompeii: new paintings found
31 votes -
A discovery among the mummies reveals a sick, sad truth. Parasitic worms plagued these ancient Egyptian Pharaohs.
8 votes -
How the Berlin Wall worked
13 votes -
A Roman diplomat’s famous fifth-century journey into the heart of Hunnic territory
17 votes -
How Russian-language poets and their translators have responded to the war in Ukraine
8 votes -
Rongelap Atoll: America’s nuclear mistake
8 votes -
Insular India - A video on the archaeological legacies of the Indian subcontinent
5 votes -
New analysis of wooden finds at Schöningen show wood was crucial raw material 300,000 years ago
7 votes -
Pittsburgh smokers more inclined to say jagoff than yinz
21 votes -
‘God has a new Africa’: undercover in a US-led anti-LGBT ‘hate movement’
17 votes -
On the nature of ancient evidence
14 votes -
Britain’s vast network of abandoned nuclear bunkers | Cold War UK
8 votes -
The Space Shuttle misdirection (1991)
5 votes -
France plans mobile school force after headteacher resigns over death threats
21 votes -
What happened when you visited a medieval inn?
11 votes -
How to escape from the Iron Age? We cannot lower carbon emissions if we keep producing steel with fossil fuels.
27 votes -
Rulers and Power | Mary Beard and David Mitchell
5 votes -
Dune, Islam and religion
13 votes -
Do artifacts have politics? (1980)
6 votes -
Borders book store | Bankrupt
9 votes -
"The One Who Is". Who on Tildes recently called God by this name?
I was recently on a topic and a commenter referred to God this way. I can't seem to find it now. If it was you, or you know anything about this, I'm curious why that phrase? What does it mean? Is...
I was recently on a topic and a commenter referred to God this way. I can't seem to find it now. If it was you, or you know anything about this, I'm curious why that phrase? What does it mean? Is it associated with a particular tradition?
Also, is there a way to search for specific text on Tildes?
22 votes -
A retrospective on the Baltic road to NATO
8 votes -
In the AI era, is translation already dead?
18 votes