|
Today I was playing some brain game at work. It showed me a list of 5 5-digit numbers, and asked which one does not belong logically. I came up with a list of criteria, some simple some mathematically complex, and reduced it down to 4 separate ones, each of which ruled out a different number. I clicked on the answer, and found one of my four criteria was the "correct" one, though not the one I guessed. The game claimed you smart if you got it right, but getting it right meant 'thinking like the person who designed the game', nothing more. The individual who designed the puzzle was unable to think deep enough to see that his rule was one of many different valid mathematical rules that could be applied, in fact part of an infinite set. His thought was unbalanced, considering one thing while excluding the other possibilities. It lacked holistic qualities.
I relate this anecdote because it is paradigmatic of our society at large: We are expected to read all the fine print, we are expected to know the totality of the tax code and to make decisions that optimize our benefit, we are expected to know the complete law.(ignorance of the law is not excuse) But all these things take large amounts of time, and the people who make the world go around are busy doing other things, so those who benefit are those who either have nothing but time on their hands, or can hire others (like you) to do it.
Its not the fact that its unjust that really bothers me, its the fact that the injustice is obscured by the shape of our reasoning. We are expected to take "personal responsibility" for knowing these things, when it is virtually a mathematical certainty that nobody doing anything of value other than studying it will ever have the time. We are blind to the relationship between time and knowledge. How many bytes IS the law? How many bytes does the average person read in his or her life?
I admire your willingness to sacrifice your livelihood. I feel we are all edging closer the same feeling, in realizing that there MUST be a better way...
Peace
|