Convenient belief for Western society is that our ethical beliefs are correlated with making us powerful.
For example, democracy leads to good governance; free expression leads to a strong research culture which delivers military and economic-technological superiority. US-led victory in WWII and Cold War as expressions of this.
But is this necessarily true or is just a historical coincidence that may not remain true in future? What happens when a society’s ethical values make it uncompetitive with other societies that do not hold those values?
China’s market authoritarianism also appears capable of delivering a strong economy that underpins large military investment; unclear that research enterprise is necessarily fatally hindered by non-free expression.
Transition from hunter-gatherer societies to agricultural societies left most people worse off, but hunter-gatherer societies could not choose to remain as they were because agricultural societies grew faster and overpowered them.
Also true at more personal levels where even though some behaviour may be undesirable to individuals, it may be impossible for them to compete if that behaviour becomes widespread in a larger peer group or society.
Parents—sometimes reluctantly, but feeling that they have no alternative—sign their children up for an education dominated not by experiments and play but by the accumulation of the training and skills, or human capital, needed to be admitted to an elite college and, eventually, to secure an elite job.
Meritocracy Harms Everyone (Markovits)
How to resist these changes?
See also
Meditations On Moloch | Slate Star Codex
A basic principle unites all of the multipolar traps above. In some competition optimizing for X, the opportunity arises to throw some other value under the bus for improved X. Those who take it prosper. Those who don’t take it die out.
In a sufficiently intense competition (1-10), everyone who doesn’t throw all their values under the bus dies out – think of the poor rats who wouldn’t stop making art.
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