Great points on lobbying. I believe there’s an economics paper on the effects of lobbying out there, so it might be of interest to you. Sadly I don’t know it’s name :/.
By the way, If the issue is with my tone or perceived attitude, please note that this is my question- what precisely is the path to success?
I don’t get the issue with the term rational, I mean it in the same way you define it.
Locally solutions may not result in a global solution to the climate problem (because of externalities). What the issue with rational in this case ?
Neither your tone or attitude were an issue. I just wanted to note that the idea that there is absolutely no way out of this mess is too negative a view, in my opinion. Until we reach the point of no return, people need to keep engaging in discourse.
The path to success is simply education. It is not a sexy suggestion by any means, but I would point to how successful bad education is at stopping progress as evidence that it is the determinant factor. It is not a quick or a guaranteed solution. But by staying informed and engaging in conversation with people, this can have a knock-on effects on others. Further, key moments in contemporary human history show that shifts can occur seemingly out of nowhere. Will it be enough? Who knows? Realistically, this is our only play left and to squander it to apathy is not acceptable.
Re: rational. I guess this becomes a semantic issue, which means it is a non-issue to begin with as we are in agreement. I personally just feel that the word doesn't add much to the discussion as it is implicitly understood that economic actors will be driven to certain decisions by their own self-serving motivations. Using the word rational, while I agree that if we were to take your definition would be absolutely correct, connotes the notion that they are acting in absolute self interest, which is not the case in this example as that would mean individual actors would find a way to cooperate given that the existence of humanity is at stake. So, despite the fact that there is nothing wrong with the word, I avoid using it as I find it to be quite confusing.
My opinion on the matter probably reflects quite well on why I switched out of an economics degree :)
So this entire thread has been execution of an argument I’ve been working on.
I suppose it’s a rhetorical construct I’m working on to effectively move the needle forward.
Unfortunately, my current iteration requires the negative attitude variant to move other people into the correct line of questioning. There’s other issues with it Too, I’m sure.
A major problem with discussing issues today, is getting people up to speed on the problem and having a shared language and idea base which is both accurate, flexible and easy to share and reuse to create new insight and tools to deal with the problem.
It takes a lot of work to unravel the various issues, without getting bogged down with minutiae- or just championing unworkable ideas (lets all stop showering; the world should go vegetarian)
As such this thread did well in serving as a test run.
In essence the term I’m trialing is “Homo economicus is hacking Homo sapiens”, and building from there into showing collective action problems
I really didn’t have a solution for the larger systemic issue, and recently the only one I’ve come up with is the gandhian idea of re-awakening people as moral actors.
The larger system is amoral, as you well know having done Econ. This is by design and not a flaw.
Morality is only exercisesble by Homo sapiens. Homo economicus is not designed to have that capacity, it is an assumed constant, imposed by “policy” or by “consumer choice”.
Since policy and consumer choice are pre reqs to targeting externalities, we need people to feel that they are moral agents who can impose rules upon the working of society.
anyway the goal of this statement was to get the bleak but correct picture forward. We can’t sit on the sidelines anymore.
By the way, If the issue is with my tone or perceived attitude, please note that this is my question- what precisely is the path to success?
I don’t get the issue with the term rational, I mean it in the same way you define it.
Locally solutions may not result in a global solution to the climate problem (because of externalities). What the issue with rational in this case ?