Against Excellence
The joy of life comes not from absolute achievement, but simple living in a community where every person participates communally in functions which are open to all and to which all are welcomed and appreciated for their particular qualities.
Instituting a competitive metric by which the art of any particular thing is steadily improved, so that the people of the community become specialized to particular ends destroys this sense of communal participation. The people come to expect more and better forms of performance and entertainment, so that only the specialist or the highly trained person can meet these demands. The people each lose their own self-sufficiency as well as the capacity to help or benefit each other, undermining the interdependence which constituted the community itself and destroying the basis of friendship.
The act of being trained brings a person to stop appreciating simple efforts and to only view others as having skill if they are similarly trained. For instance, a person untrained in singing, who has never heard an excellent singer, will be content to listen to even a bad singer. Thus, this person, and his friends, all equally ignorant, will happily sing to each other. But if a person trained in singing arrives and begins sharing his ideas on what constitutes proper singing, all these untrained singers will feel shame at having ever raised their voices, and the village will fall silent.
What really matters is not whether these people are singing well together, but whether they are having fun. When we run about, demanding excellence from one another constantly, we do nothing but destroy the possibility of genuine and authentic fun. Ultimately, we look at ourselves in the mirror and see a lonely failure. Then our only hope for entertainment becomes vicarious, so we turn on the television to watch the real experts.
Can we not say the same thing about philosophy?
By demanding and pursuing some perfect and excellent way of understanding the world, we really do nothing but discourage our ignorant friends from participating. In the end, truth, justice, and all of those things don't really matter if you have nobody to talk to about them. What is important is that we have fun with each other while having our discussion. In my experience, the discussion is a lot more fun when we all don't know what we are talking about and make many unfounded assertions.
We should be wrong all the time. It's boring to be correct; nobody has anything to say about a sound argument.
Should we even do philosophy at all? In nature, the animal that stops to contemplate the meaning of the universe is quickly eaten by a bigger animal. Or its mate is buggered by a rival and that's the end.
Instituting a competitive metric by which the art of any particular thing is steadily improved, so that the people of the community become specialized to particular ends destroys this sense of communal participation. The people come to expect more and better forms of performance and entertainment, so that only the specialist or the highly trained person can meet these demands. The people each lose their own self-sufficiency as well as the capacity to help or benefit each other, undermining the interdependence which constituted the community itself and destroying the basis of friendship.
The act of being trained brings a person to stop appreciating simple efforts and to only view others as having skill if they are similarly trained. For instance, a person untrained in singing, who has never heard an excellent singer, will be content to listen to even a bad singer. Thus, this person, and his friends, all equally ignorant, will happily sing to each other. But if a person trained in singing arrives and begins sharing his ideas on what constitutes proper singing, all these untrained singers will feel shame at having ever raised their voices, and the village will fall silent.
What really matters is not whether these people are singing well together, but whether they are having fun. When we run about, demanding excellence from one another constantly, we do nothing but destroy the possibility of genuine and authentic fun. Ultimately, we look at ourselves in the mirror and see a lonely failure. Then our only hope for entertainment becomes vicarious, so we turn on the television to watch the real experts.
Can we not say the same thing about philosophy?
By demanding and pursuing some perfect and excellent way of understanding the world, we really do nothing but discourage our ignorant friends from participating. In the end, truth, justice, and all of those things don't really matter if you have nobody to talk to about them. What is important is that we have fun with each other while having our discussion. In my experience, the discussion is a lot more fun when we all don't know what we are talking about and make many unfounded assertions.
We should be wrong all the time. It's boring to be correct; nobody has anything to say about a sound argument.
Should we even do philosophy at all? In nature, the animal that stops to contemplate the meaning of the universe is quickly eaten by a bigger animal. Or its mate is buggered by a rival and that's the end.
Comments (46)
The obvious counter-argument would be, no not at all. Simply the 'specialist' or 'highly trained' becomes more successful in their ways and means to help said people, provided they choose to of course. Take "Diddy" as a recent example.
Quoting Garth
Not always. The master conservationist no longer spends an extended period of time admiring a single rose, not because he lost appreciation for it, simply because he knows his time is better spent protecting the garden so that others in the future may enjoy the gaze at the lone rose that perhaps first inspired him. Nothing more. And nothing less.
Quoting Garth
Others are content with what is, solely thanks to those who strove beyond what is in order to protect it. There is no wrong path, provided neither are foolishly chastised or become out of proportion. Which is what typically happens when individuals are allowed to fall into complacency.
Quoting Garth
It seems to me, generally, that people have come to expect less in terms of performance and entertainment, or given up expecting it. It’s probably true that more people are able to take part in things that only specialists or the talented once did, which is probably a good thing. Except that ideas of excellence have come under question through the non-competitive ideology that there are no winners and losers, that everyone’s a winner. Which probably makes people feel good but does nothing towards improving our world. People still flock to the Olympics or football games. Which means they like to see people excel in what they do.
Quoting Garth
I don’t think that’s true. I understand where you’re coming from but I think it does us no good to think in that way. Participation is important for the reasons you state, but the quest for excellence seems to be something important to us, maybe essential.
Ultimately it leads to this.
Quoting Garth
Clearly you are not speaking of the social environment here at TPF. :wink:
Well this is a refreshing attitude I must say. And, as well, I propose, not without philosophical relevance. (I take some liberty in the exact wording of the quotes, but I believe the spirit is the same.)
Quoting Garth
What jumped out at me is the "demanding" a "perfect" "understanding [of] the world". Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Nietzsche (among others) all warn that the desire for certainty, universality, predetermination, predictability, pre-judgement, etc., occludes our ability to see the meaningfulness of our ordinary, differing criteria for the varying concepts we have in the contexts in which, and when, they are expressed. The harder we squeeze the less we grasp, Emerson and Heidegger say. Witt would say we sublime (universalize) our language's logic, strip from its context and ordinary criteria, beginning with the example that we might think all language works as naming--a word for an object. PI #38. A logic that "seeks to see to the bottom of things" and not "concern itself whether what actually happens is this or that." #89. To purify (#94) communication is, as @Garth says, to "discourage" the "participation" by humans--fallible, partial, unsure, etc.--in their friendship.
Quoting Garth
J.L. Austin decried the "profundity" of philosophy--for him, the desire for the descriptive fallacy--the difference between fervent ideological belief/theory and a real investigation of our concepts (which is quite fun in his case). Also, an important part of Emerson's work is its constant optimism (in the face of conformity and skepticism). Wittgenstein's interlocutor in the Philosophical Investigations is very adamant and certain--and Witt is constantly leaving them flustered with almost a mocking enigmatic humor. Nietzsche also found joy, courage, and a sense of humor was necessary for philosophy; even to title a book The Gay Science. This is not a trivial, tangential topic--the more certain and strict and strident we are, the less we see of the awe and fullness and fun of the world.
I would say though that, having let go of only being satisfied with a perfect solution, we are still (then) able to perfect our existing human world. Foregoing righteous justice, we can strive for a more just "good-enough" justice (from Stanley Cavell's discussion of Rawls). A new yet unapproachable America, Emerson says.
The last chapter of Rorty's Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature sort of says what I am saying here. He seems to be saying we should conduct philosophical discussions without any methodology or criteria.
Quoting Brett
There's a trade-off. Like, we need to be able to defend ourselves, but if we build too many weapons and research too much technology, we are more likely to invade other people. We are the monkeys and rather that pretending we won't launch the missiles, we shouldn't build missiles for monkeys in the first place.
Once fewer people die of disease than in war, we should ban the development of new technologies. We would be far past that point if not for World War II.
Quoting Outlander
I think there's a distinction to be made here. Doing something clever because you're lazy is OK. But building a fancy rose garden because you want to outdo your neighbor is not OK.
Quoting Garth
We do both here.
We don't live in hunter-gatherer groups so I'm not sure how well we can argue for such egalitarianism now, other than to say that, whatever kind of social group we find ourselves in, that characteristic is still part of us, specifically it's part of our moral biology, manifest in disgust toward the boastful and a sense of injustice at preferential treatment. That is, elitism is bad because morality is biology and our biology says it's bad.
Another argument for egalitarianism is the illusion of expertise as described by Daniel Kahneman during his study of iirc stock brokers. The prevailing culture is that one stock broker can be said to be better than another based on a good win. In his study, Kahneman found that none of the so-called experts demonstrated above-average performance outside of that one big win. It was just luck, nothing more. In addition, none of the brokers were any better than a rational amateur: the entire industry persists simply because most people are irrational and make systematic errors. I mention it because it seems like a prime example of where 'excellence' is so unjustly rewarded.
Naturally some people are talented and many endeavours have little to do with increasing one's (or one's group's) standard of living. Not everyone can be a neurosurgeon and I would like very much, should I ever need a neurosurgeon, to have the best. I would hate to find out that mine was a hobbyist who, despite no particular talent, thought he would just 'have a go'. Likewise my field, physics, is not for amateurs: the field progresses through excellence (or niche, well-trained mediocrity) outdoing excellence. Not being more wrong than one's predecessors is an existential matter.
Physics is a branch of philosophy -- empiricism -- that adheres to a specific methodology. But while the means differ, the aim is much the same: discover truth by finding fault in the existing theories and addressing and improving on them in your own. This cannot be a democratic or egalitarian process. Illogical theories should not be seen as the equal of logical ones nor ill-grounded propositions the equal of well-grounded ones. If they were, you'd just end up with an infinite number of monkeys crapping on an infinite number of typewriters, which is far from profound.
On which, a sound argument can be extremely profound. Natural selection was a sound argument and people haven't stopped talking about it yet. Then again, unsound arguments, such as creationism, have generated even more discussion. I'm not sure the soundness of an argument is particularly correlated to its public interest.
Competitive metrics are not fundamentally instituted but exist through a pre-existing hierarchical mode of evaluation. Singing didn't become competitive due to our advanced understanding of how to sing properly, it was always competitive and it was always true that some were better than others at it. That being said, your entire argument is demonstrably incorrect, we actually live in a world where you have easy access to people who are better than you at each thing you might do. Did people stop playing sport because they know they can't compete with the best in the world? Do people no longer play chess because they're aware a grandmaster would disagree with their play? Do people feel ashamed to dance because they've seen dancing competitions on television? Of course not, doesn't all evidence goes against your claim?
Quoting Garth
We should be wrong all the time? Really, what are you talking about? Thinking and talking about your thoughts isn't a purely recreational activity...
Quoting Garth
What animal stops to contemplate the meaning of the universe besides us? How do you come to this conclusion?
Overall, I am at least impressed that you seem to practice what you preach but I can't say I agree with what you're preaching.
So I think that if we are going to have things like television, we also need compensatory institutions which help us to overcome these feelings and set more realistic goals so that we can stay motivated.
Quoting Judaka
This just proves we are defective, like E.O. Wilson's slave-making ants, doomed to an evolutionary dead end. Either we will evolve to no longer be able to think about these things or we will go extinct.
All the evidence goes against you, who would argue that Michael Jordon made basketball less popular? Or that Michael Jackson made people had the effect of making people NOT want to dance like him? Figures who demonstrate their exceptional qualities inspire others, they have the opposite effect of causing people to lose hope.
Quoting Garth
Yeah, it certainly proves that something is defective, I'm going to say it was your original point, which was demonstrably absurd. Agree to disagree I guess.
The joy and suffering that comes from the pursuit of achievement is not a zero sum game. It appears as a means to get better. But who is the tutor after a certain point?
Skill comes from having to do things without the proper preparation. One has to make mistakes to start paying attention. No skill appears unless somebody went through the trouble of acquiring it.
From that point of view, the question of why labor got specialized comes more from the deals we have made between ourselves than any preponderance for suffering we might display as a species.
I think you're using a more sophisticated theory of consumption than me. I am treating goods like "watching basketball on TV" and "going out and playing basketball" as substitutes. You are arguing that they are complementary. Ultimately we are dealing with an empirical question of statistical economics. But if seeing all of these people doing sports and dancing on TV really makes us want to go do these things, why would 73% of Americans be overweight? Are we not watching enough television to become sufficiently inspired?
Quoting Valentinus
I think I'm talking about more than just skills. I mean that the act of setting standards and training regimens has a real harm for us. We tend to think that if kids didn't go to school they'd just remain fantastically ignorant. But there is a problem with such comparisons, because the imposition of compulsory education displaces and permanently destroys previous cultural systems for raising and educating children. Yes, certainly, making the kids work in the mine or watch the animals might not be as helpful for them to get the high test scores, but it might do more to develop their character. Just joking about that last part. I mean, more specifically that it destroys aspects of traditional family and community culture.
People do not tend to get together and do things without a reason. Traditional culture creates these reasons. But the purpose of traditional culture is to help everyone in the community provide for each other. If we turn everything into competition and put it on the market, economies of scale will dominate and most of us will no long even have a reason to be excellent. We won't need culture anymore, and so we won't have any reason to get together and do things. Thus we won't make friends anymore and we will lead miserable lives while paradoxically drowning in material abundance.
Excellence, therefore, has its limit. Beyond this limit it turns around and devours itself.
Traditional Culture also has its cruelty. The fun time can't-we-just-all-get-along-vibe works to keep the peace while excluding others from that benefit. Your idea of competition is far removed from where it is happening.
Quoting Garth
Having put it that way I do think you have a point. But I’m not sure if competition is behind it. I mean if the number of people sitting around watching tv as much as you suggest, which I don’t doubt, gaining weight, barely using their minds, then I don’t see competition as the cause. Unless you feel they have actually been defeated by the competitive world, which is possible. I agree that our traditional culture has been damaged. And it wouldn’t matter what that culture is, all cultures have been damaged. I said in another post that we have become the economy. That means, as individuals, we can never stop. If we do we sink. That changes priorities.
Quoting Garth
Not a valid argument. Not only is it possible to play sports or dance and still be overweight but inactivity is not the cause of American obesity, so there's really nothing here for you at all.
I can take any example I want really but here's a recent one:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/23/arts/television/chess-set-board-sales.html
The main character in this show is a genius, what she does cannot be replicated by nearly anyone but guess what, she makes people think chess is cool.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kurtbadenhausen/2020/05/03/michael-jordans-1-billion-nike-endorsement-is-the-biggest-bargain-in-sports/?sh=927301261363
Businesses are paying stars like Michael Jordan millions because they know he'll inspire people to buy what he uses because they want to be like him. Not because he's driving them to despair how they'll never be as good as he is.
When you form your opinions based on theories, rather than looking at facts, you can make up almost anything. I don't really want to hear what else you can makeup, you need to be fact-checking yourself instead of just believing whatever is convenient for you.
Quoting Judaka
I think it’s very unlikely that someone could be overweight and play sport or dance. Of course it’s possible but not long enough to count as anything. Inactivity would be a large contributor to obesity. Activity would certainly change it.
Edit: Quoting Judaka
Without actually doing anything except buying a pair of shoes made in a sweat box in a third world country.
Quoting Brett
All you have to do is open up a calorie calculator to realise that even doing a large amount of exercise does not burn enough calories to make that much of a difference. The typical American diet is filled with sugar and processed carbohydrates (sugar), which causes weight gain and insulin resistance, this is what is causing the obesity epidemic, mostly that at least. You can be very lean and not exercise at all but you cannot eat and drink sugar and process carbohydrates all day and be lean just because you do some sport or dancing. What you're saying is akin to saying you can eat whatever you want provided you're physically active and that's just not true.
If you just go out and do some social sport or dancing, your "unlikely" will become a "certainly" at least anecdotally. It's only when you get into a more competitive environment that you'll stop seeing overweight people participating. Also, overweight is NOT the same as obese, I am saying overweight as in 25-30 BMI or something.
This is hilarious. One of the reasons I enjoy this forum. :cool:
I'm not an empiricist. Consequently, I don't need to base my arguments on facts.
Quoting Judaka
That is not what I’m saying. This is what I said.
Quoting Brett
Quoting Judaka
I used obesity because you had used it. So I don’t know what we’re talking about now.
Quoting Judaka
That’s a bit rich using anecdotal evidence when you condemn @Garth, saying “ I don't really want to hear what else you can makeup, you need to be fact-checking yourself instead of just believing whatever is convenient for you.
You used to be better than this.
What? You believe it is rational to believe something to be true when it's demonstrably untrue because...? Your logic? Or what? You also don't care about rationality?
Quoting Brett
Quoting Brett
This is what I was responding to but if when you said "overweight" you meant "obese" then I would agree with you. If that is just the misunderstanding then that's fine, I do not use these terms interchangeably but I can see how you thought I might be.
Quoting Brett
I complimented my fact-based argument with anecdotes, there's nothing wrong with that.
Quoting Judaka
I don’t know what this refers to.
Quoting Judaka
Quoting Judaka
Your anecdotal evidence wasn’t related to any fact- based argument but to the idea that “If you just go out and do some social sport or dancing, your "unlikely" will become a "certainly" ...” There’s nothing factually reliable about that whole sentence.
It was directed at me, and I deserve it. I'm actually starting to regret making this thread now. I'm definitely saying a lot of ridiculous things at this point.
Well rewrite it without what you think is ridiculous, if you feel they are?
Quoting Brett
You did not clarify whether you are using obesity and overweight interchangeably.
I said enough, that neither being overweight or obese necessarily means that there's no physical activity. At 25-30 BMI, which is considered overweight, there is no reason that someone could not play casual sports or go dancing. I personally know or have seen many people who are overweight who play sports regularly. There is no reason to think that someone who played sports actively could not be overweight nor that someone who was overweight could not play sports actively. I don't know about any statistics showing how physically active overweight people are but it shouldn't be necessary because you've got nothing to back up your claims and really, it's in plain sight, now, that's if you are talking about the 25-30 BMI range, not obese.
I said enough, why should I have to write an essay to a comment of yours which was literally "I think" without any argument, statistics, quotes or anything of anything? The point I'm making isn't even relevant to the OP in the first place. Your criticism of me is invalid, there's nothing to argue about.
Quoting Garth
I'm not saying these things just to try to make you look silly, if you admit that you were being ridiculous then I'm happy to agree with you and leave it at that. Acknowledging and learning from our mistakes is much more impressive than pretending we never make any.
Quoting Judaka
Yes, very true. No sarcasm intended.
Quoting Garth
An interesting statement. OPs where posters agree die very quickly. But that could be the nature of people the forum attracts. Very few people think anyone else is correct.
“Nobody has anything to say about a sound argument”. Yes, why is that, because there’s no friction?
If that's true, then wouldn't that make you the bad singer who should just relax and keep singing?
I think your thread raises all kinds of interesting questions, and thus is not at all ridiculous on a philosophy forum.
This does seem a very important aspect of specialist culture. Specialist culture brings great new powers, some of which present grave new threats, and should those threats manifest themselves very few of us know how to feed ourselves. Social chaos would erupt at the moment when the average person concludes they will not be able to replenish their meager food supplies by legal means.
It's true that some people just aren't cut out for abstract ideas. This is typically addressed by the group consensus telling we philosophers that we are hogging the conversation if we dare shift the focus away from wandering idle chit chat for more than one minute. :-)
I might rephrase your statement this way. By demanding and pursuing some perfect and excellent way of understanding the world we are shifting our focus away from reality itself to our thoughts about reality. That is, we are choosing a diluted 2nd hand experience of reality over the real thing.
It's not just boring. When it comes the largest of questions which appeal to we philosophically minded folks, being correct is also largely a fantasy.
We should, because that's what people like you and I were born to do, and respect for that genetic inheritance is warranted.
But we should do so in a manner which imitates the reality we are trying to understand. The overwhelming vast majority of that reality consists of what we typically refer to as nothing, with tiny little bits of something sprinkled throughout. So if our philosophical experience is mostly silence, with little gems of wisdom contained within that vast space, we're probably on the right track.
It's perhaps interesting to recall that for those engaged in sports their muscles grow not when they are using them, but when they are at rest. Might be true for mental exercise as well.
Amen brother. A philosopher interested in nuclear weapons! It's a miracle, a sign from God!!! :-)
Yes, we are surfacing on another thread and I am in agreement against nuclear weapons. Perhaps more miracles are what we need on this site.
Been writing along those lines too, for example, see here.
As I currently see it, reason alone is nowhere near close to sufficient for making such huge changes to the group consensus. Human beings mostly learn by pain, so that is what will be required, lots of pain.
The question I see is, will the necessary pain come in the right dose? Will it be big enough to inspire a true rethinking of the status quo, while being small enough not to destroy everything?
I have no idea of course, but I do have a secret plan for defending myself against the wave of pain that is surely coming. I'm getting old, and am gonna die soon. Get out of jail free card! Woo Hoo!!! :-)
Our understanding of the world is only thoughts. There are no forces or atoms or whatever in the world. All of those are simply what we think about the world. Reality itself is a mental construct.
Quoting Garth
That may be so but it’s the one we live in.
I’m confused by that post and what it’s referring to.
Quoting Garth
Is this a quote from @Hippyhead?
Edit: oh yeah, I see. You should include the poster’s name if you quote them.
Sorry, I should have read more carefully. But yes, I agree with you - to a degree.
Quoting Garth
Yes. But please note the comment of mine you are quoting refers to experience, not understanding. Understanding is an experience of our thoughts about reality. Not an experience of reality itself. Thus, understanding is 2nd hand experience.
So can you explain how people who are hanging out together talking about philosophy can relate their experiences to each other directly without recourse to "2nd hand experience"? Because it seems your notion of 2nd hand experience is a little unclear.
Now you're referring to communication. Again, I was referencing experience.
Experiences do get translated in to abstractions for purposes of communication obviously. But what is then being transferred from one person to another is the abstraction, not the experience.
It's like the screen name Garth. That's a symbol which points to a real person. The symbol is useful, but it's not you.
I'm pointing out that you took my statement out of context in the first place. because I was talking about philosophical discussions in the first place.
It's all about beings striving for excellence in the thing they're striving for. Plants striving for excellence in photosynthesis, animals for hunting, pets for pet companionship, livestock for livestock, farmers for their farming, singers for their singing, illustrators for their illustrations, teachers for their teaching, friends for their friendship, construction workers for their construction work, engineers for their engineering, scientists for their scientific ventures, and you name it. This is a merely a simplification, but the point is excellence is accessible to everyone and everyone naturally strives for it.
What's most unnatural to me is when beings (humans in particular) give up this earthliness for mere ideals. People will choose to give up excellence in maybe a job or an art for the sake of complete, perpetual happiness but because this is an unnatural ideal, it always betrays whoever strives for it. It's like someone who believes that "sleep is for the weak," only to deteriorate his health and pass out after a week of nonsleep. But hey, that's also excellence in some way, right? Excellence in decadence. A fine oxymoron. Cheers to you.
I suppose an Art is something individually manicured and perfected for others to enjoy, rather than a participatory or playful thing. It's rather mechanic, mathematical, and has a particular goal in mind. (I haven't thought too much about the difference between an Art and art, but do with it what you will). Training to 'perfection' can often limit creativity, something that is vital to a community as new problems are always cropping up that rigid traditional solutions can not combat effectively. There can be a thousand carpenters trained to perfection on a traditional type of joint, on a particular type of wood, and they will all do it the exact same way. But what happens if something prevents them from using this particular wood, what if they have to build something that can not involve this particular type of joint? Will they even know what to do? Will they be too scared to try something else?
Creativity can be a skill in itself, and people are often very wary to step into it, to play even. For a lot of people who have not grown up with a creative background they have to learn to allow themselves to be creative, to think creatively. Often education breeds this out of us as children, even art lessons can be quite authoritarian in that you will be given a task such as "make an angel" with rigid steps and a particular colour. I've seen children shouted at or punished for allowing themselves to be creative outside of the restrictions set by the class. Creative thinking can not be taught by rigid lessons, or How To's, and often the teachers holding these lessons have only two ideas of what art is. It's usually Hyperrealism or Photorealism, renaissance painting... Or so called 'abstract'; Picasso or Van Gogh. So in a way 'Excellence' is a product of our very strange society, hell bent on production, worker mentality, and narcissistic individualism. We are given The Greats to look at, the perfectly skilled, but at the same time punished or shamed for not following the rules. There is more to say about this, which I will neglect for now.
Besides how are we to know what is 'correct' when it comes to creativity, this excellence or correctness is a contradiction when applied to creativity. To create one must expand or recycle, a creative mind constantly plays, mashing ideas together, twisting them into new forms, taking what is known and turning it on its head. There is no aim exactly to it, it is play and everyone can partake in play, and nothing is immune to it. Excellence is the opposite of this, it is about reducing and restricting, instead of recycling there is replicating. If everything can be replicated then it can be sold on mass, this is important to the kind of society with live in and not at all helpful.
About philosophy, I also agree. The nature of philosophy is to wonder, question, recycle, expand, it is truly a creative way of thinking. Children as young as five can do this, this us absolutely Not a criticism but a positive. A society that values philosophical thinking, values creativity, and encourages community and individuality entwined. Just as a choir around a campfire has many different voices, all come together for the same reason.
Sorry, Garth, but I noticed that quite frequently, when there's a social critique in the OP, the road always ends in this question. Heck it doesn't matter in what context (!)-- pin prick manufacturers haven't produced good pins lately, so how are people going to have great pricking these days!? .
But it's okay, we have enough talented posters who belong to this site (lol, I say "belong" as in not exclusively, of course) who are very capable of defending the establish.......the wisdom.