Posted March 30, 2019
rjbuffchix: Wow, I have kind of trained myself over the years to stop mentioning the phrase "logical fallacy" in people's comments because usually it just annoys them and shuts down their desire to discuss more, haha. Kudos to you. You are correct also that I cannot see the future...my guess is that it will be a "choice" between ownership in the extreme far margins, difficult to even get or considered "overpriced" to many people, and non-ownership available everywhere and marketed non-stop, including word of mouth. I don't think they can both co-exist in the market as viable options, but more sadly I don't think we will be given the chance to know. The powers-that-be (corporations, governments, others in power) have a vested stake in the "non-ownership" side of things.
There is not a great way for me to make the following argument, as any time I do it comes off as snide or elitist. But I'll try. Many people are very intertwined with the idea of "following what everyone else is doing". I observe that marketing and trends cause an avalanche of support from people, to the point they support products, goals (like higher education degrees), even life-changing decisions (like marriage and children), without really thinking about the alternatives or what they themselves really want. As a brief aside on this, it is really funny to me how so much is taught to people to avoid "peer pressure" when it turns out society is drunk on it 24/7, 365. And please do not think I am immune...I freely admit various trend-chasing, including some in the present day...but I try to be aware of it.
I know that humans are social creatures. But, I also think the thing that most separates humans from animals is the capacity to reason. It is deeply saddening to me when people give in to the "lizard brain" as it were, instead of embracing their capacity to reason. Take that for what you will, but I mean no disrespect to people by it. Like I said I have lapses, we all do, it's not a competition to see who is the most like Spock or anything. On that note, I will admit most attempts to say "what if streaming does win out and take over?" are also fallacious and not really different logically speaking than something like Pascal's Wager. But to look at it all from a "process" standpoint (since we can't know the "result" of the future yet), I think it's worthwhile to advocate certain practices over others, after thoughtful consideration of course.
haha, sorry about that, I didn't mean any disrespect calling out fallacy. It's just that lately I tend to look for them as I find myself questioning wether my statements and train of thought are mudding the debate rather than enhancing it. There is not a great way for me to make the following argument, as any time I do it comes off as snide or elitist. But I'll try. Many people are very intertwined with the idea of "following what everyone else is doing". I observe that marketing and trends cause an avalanche of support from people, to the point they support products, goals (like higher education degrees), even life-changing decisions (like marriage and children), without really thinking about the alternatives or what they themselves really want. As a brief aside on this, it is really funny to me how so much is taught to people to avoid "peer pressure" when it turns out society is drunk on it 24/7, 365. And please do not think I am immune...I freely admit various trend-chasing, including some in the present day...but I try to be aware of it.
I know that humans are social creatures. But, I also think the thing that most separates humans from animals is the capacity to reason. It is deeply saddening to me when people give in to the "lizard brain" as it were, instead of embracing their capacity to reason. Take that for what you will, but I mean no disrespect to people by it. Like I said I have lapses, we all do, it's not a competition to see who is the most like Spock or anything. On that note, I will admit most attempts to say "what if streaming does win out and take over?" are also fallacious and not really different logically speaking than something like Pascal's Wager. But to look at it all from a "process" standpoint (since we can't know the "result" of the future yet), I think it's worthwhile to advocate certain practices over others, after thoughtful consideration of course.
You may be right about the corporate push for rental services over ownership and the difficulty of both models coexisting. I honestly have no idea how it will turn out, and although I can understand what you mean by people following a trend that could lead to that scenario, for me, the fact that a platform like Itch.io exists proves that we aren't doomed (yet) and that there're still platforms out there which (albeit marginalised), successfully respond to a certain audience no matter how niche it can be.
I understand were you're coming from with the "following what everyone else is doing" statement but I don't necessarily view it as a negative thing, rather, I believe it's an aspect of our nature (being a trend follower to a certain degree, that is) and the understandable ignorance or lack of knowledge over other available options. Once we understand this (that most of us are ignorant rather than morons) we can create a nice place from which to debate different points of view in an enriching manner; if not, we may be obfuscating our ability to discern the forest for the trees and getting dangerously close to that which we criticise, in this case, a follow-the-pack mentality even if our pack is the smallest of them all.
Talking specifically about Google's Stadia, it's great to see so many expanding the debate beyond "it's bad for everyone because my internet connection isn't good enough" and raising awareness over what they consider isn't right. Personally, the thing I care about the most is knowing the environmental footprint of Stadia vs consoles/pc, but even if someone else's conclusions or priorities are not the same as mine, I'm honestly really glad we're having the debate nonetheless.
By the way, animals are more than capable of reasoning. Birds for example, are notoriously intelligent creatures which can make decisions extremely quickly based on multiple factors amongst which is predicting several possible outcomes to their actions. They're also capable of cultural transmission, reciprocity, understanding inequality, delay gratification, transitive inference, vocal learning (which no primates other than humans are capable of), stealing, understanding they're being observed and "act as if" to deceive their observes, possessing a sense of aesthetics, keeping grudges, solving problems quicker than human kids, etc.