• WatDabney@fedia.io
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    29 days ago

    That series of steps, common or not, is bludgeoningly irrational, and for multiple reasons.

    In fact, the introductory part of the comic, showing her rejecting the entirely rational option of working half as long to produce the same amount clearly communicates the point that it’s irrational, as does the last frame, illustrating the consequences of her self-evidently irrational choice.

    • AVincentInSpace@pawb.social
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      29 days ago

      She is, however, acting in her own rational self-interest by keeping all the value of the new machine for herself and not passing it on to her workers. If she were acting in the group’s rational self-interest, she would allow them to work half as long. Since she is acting in her own rational self-interest, she threatens to fire her workers if they do not work the same hours as before and pass the value on to her. From her perspective, it makes perfect sense: all she has to do is install the new machine and make no other changes, and she and begins earning twice as much income from the factory she owns, without having to lift a finger. Any purely rational person (as opposed, mind you, to an empathetic one) would take the option to do that.

      • WatDabney@fedia.io
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        29 days ago

        She is, however, acting in her own rational self-interest by keeping all the value of the new machine for herself and not passing it on to her workers.

        No, she rather obviously is not, as vividly illustrated by the fact that she caused so much hostility that she ends up going to the guillotine.

        She is very clearly acting in her irrational self- interest.

        If she were acting in the group’s rational self-interest, she would allow them to work half as long.

        And if she were acting in her own rational self-interest, she would do the same, since her well-being (and in fact, as neatly illustrated in the comic, her very life) depends on the well-being of the group.

        Since she is acting in her own rational self-interest, she threatens to fire her workers if they do not work the same hours as before and pass the value on to her.

        No. Again, she is rather obviously acting in her own irrational self-interest, as vividly illustrated in the last panel.

        Any purely rational person (as opposed, mind you, to an empathetic one) would take the option to do that.

        What on earth leads you to believe that rationality and empathy are mutually exclusive?

        As social animals, empathy is eminently rational, and in fact I would argue that rationality is impossible without it.

        • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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          29 days ago

          And if she were acting in her own rational self-interest, she would do the same, since her well-being (and in fact, as neatly illustrated in the comic, her very life) depends on the well-being of the group.

          This assumes perfect foresight. As can be seen from the history of robber barons and the legacy they left, it generally did work out for most of them, so they were correct in their choices focusing on self-interest. Not since the French revolution has any significant number of rich assholes faced significant consequences for their choices in placing their personal welfare above the group.

        • AVincentInSpace@pawb.social
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          28 days ago

          This comic makes the presupposition that the workers have a guillotine to use on her. In the comic, she was unaware that they did, and in the real world, they very much do not. If you instead gave the lines she says in the comic to the real-world Jeff Bezos, they would be perfectly rational.

    • snooggums@lemmy.world
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      29 days ago

      It is rational self interest, not rational group interest. Hence why she doesn’t act in a way that would benefit others, because they can now do twice the output in the same amount of time because of the machine!

      ‘Rational self interest’ is just being selfish.

      • WatDabney@fedia.io
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        29 days ago

        Rational group interest IS rational self-interest.

        As social animals living in communities and as part of any number of groups, we must, if we’re rational, be mindful of the well-being of groups, because our own well-being depends on it.

        ‘Rational self interest’ is just being selfish.

        No it in fact is not. Selfishness causes any number of negative consequences - suffering, hostility, crime, conflict, rebellion, war, death… So it’s bludgeoningly obviously irrational, and therefore cannot be rational self interest.

        • TheFogan@programming.dev
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          28 days ago

          No it in fact is not. Selfishness causes any number of negative consequences - suffering, hostility, crime, conflict, rebellion, war, death… So it’s bludgeoningly obviously irrational, and therefore cannot be rational self interest.

          for 99% of people yes. but if you happen to be at the very top of the ladder and if things are broken enough you can be self interested into destroying the world. Fact is the guillotines aren’t being rolled out. The protests that happen are pretty consistently swatted with barely a weeks hindrance to the years between them. We all suffer the consiquences of the olligarchy, the ones making the laws and decisions are largely above those hardships.

      • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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        29 days ago

        ‘Rational self interest’ is just being selfish.

        *Irrational self interest. Rational self interest would still involve improving the worker’s lives due to the support structure that a community brings

        • hark@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          To sum up, “rational self interest” is screwing others over for your own benefit as long as you make the calculation that it won’t come back to bite you. It works for you until you make a miscalculation and the likelihood of a miscalculation increases as you screw more people over. A greedy person benefiting from the support structure will not properly factor in that benefit and will assume they can go without, hence the widening gap between the rich and the poor. They’re essentially living in another world and cannot see reality for what it is.