yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

What Would Plato Think of Crowdsourcing? | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 4, 2024

If Plato were to come back today, I think he would have a lot to say about so many things, but crowdsourcing would be of great interest to him. I take Plato to the Googleplex, and he's very, very interested in our technology. And that would appeal to him very much.

But he gets into a conversation at the Googleplex with a software engineer on crowdsourcing and could crowdsourcing answer the kind of ethical questions that he first raised. And he is, he's quite interested in this idea, but he's very down on it. He's very much against it because, you know, he doesn't -- he didn't have much faith in the ethical opinions of the masses. He thought that ethics was a kind of knowledge that is extremely hard to attain.

He's right. I mean, that's one of the reasons we've left him so far behind. Slowly, slowly we make progress -- ethical progress. But he thought, you know, it was a kind of knowledge, and it takes a trained mind and, you know, it's harder than mathematics. Mathematics is a preparation for this kind of knowledge that you need, that kind of dispassion and distance from your own life to be able to access ethical knowledge.

So he would not have been very interested in crowdsourcing and what is the opinion of the masses of people. And he also would say, I think, well then how do we ever make any ethical progress? How do we ever learn anything new to challenge our intuitions if, in fact, it's just being crowdsourced?

I do have Plato getting quite addicted to the Internet and looking up things on the Internet and Wikipedia constantly. I mean, that was partly -- I needed a quick way to bring him up to speed, and he is -- so he carries -- while he's at the Googleplex, he gets a Chromebook. They give him a Chromebook, and he carries it with him everywhere. I mean he's constantly consulting it.

But again he is -- he believed in the expert. He believed, you know, in expertise. He -- Aristotle, his student, actually says some things that are much more continent or favorable toward crowdsourcing. You know, he says that if you go to a meal, if it's just cooked by one person you may not like it, but if it's a feast with many people bringing their dishes, you'll find something to like, Aristotle says.

And he really has an idea there of crowdsourcing. Let's try to get as many points of view as possible. Plato is very dubious of this. He believes that it's extremely difficult to know anything. It takes a tremendous amount of training -- years and years of training. He has the rulers of his state studying advanced mathematics for ten years before they can even think about political philosophy. That's how hard he thinks these things are.

More Articles

View All
Warren Buffett's BIG Warning for Investors (2021)
I would like to, uh, just go over two items that I would like particularly new entrants to the stock market to, uh, ponder just a bit before they try and do 30 or 40 trades a day, uh, in order to profit from what looks like a very, uh, easy game. So, uh, …
Jim Crow part 3 | The Gilded Age (1865-1898) | US History | Khan Academy
In the last video, we were talking about the era of Reconstruction and how after the Civil War, when the 13th Amendment to the Constitution outlawed slavery, many Southern states enacted laws known as Black Codes. These codes, in many cases, were really j…
Native American societies before contact | Period 1: 1491-1607 | AP US History | Khan Academy
Often when we think about the beginning of American history, we think 1776 with the Declaration of Independence or maybe 1492 when Columbus arrived in the Americas. But the history of America really begins about 15,000 years ago when people first arrived …
How The Internet Changed Everything
[Music] In August 1962, JCR Licklider proposed a new but monumental idea: computers that could talk to one another. A simple idea, but one whose implications resulted in a world-changing network. The first message sent over the Internet, which at this tim…
Worked example: Motion problems with derivatives | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
A particle moves along the x-axis. The function x of t gives the particle’s position at any time t is greater than or equal to zero, and they give us x of t right over here. What is the particle’s velocity v of t at t is equal to 2? So, pause this video,…
Storytelling on Steroids: Quick Cuts and Relentless Editing #Shorts
Videos feature nauseatingly quick cuts and rapid-fire text, and they’re always trying to hook you with forced uncertainties, making you wonder what will happen next or how something will play out. Most media works this way, but this is storytelling on ste…