Hello, my friends! This is my first post and I am happy to join your noble community! I will be happy if I can somehow improve you, myself or this world.
I’m in urge to share with you an idea whitch can improve humanity’s ability to make sensible decisions in big groups. I’m sure it would have been better written if I had first carefully studied the principles of the forum and looked for statements similar or canceling my idea, but I’m afraid to get bogged down in procrastination and time is valuable. So I’ll post the idea first, and then I’ll figure out how it all works and delete / correct the post if it seems appropriate. So I ask you to have a little patience with this, as well as with my English.
Briefly the essence of the idea: For the sake of effective collaboration, we should post information about our ordinary life on social media. To do this, I propose to use the analogue of experience sampling method.
Now expanded: 1. What problem prevents the mutual understanding between humans: The media and the current way of doing social networks are widening the gap between people. Looking at posts on Instagram, the average user gets the impression that other people are much more different from him than they really are. And the whole point is that a concentrated essence of exceptions from everyday life falls into the field of view of the observer: both traditional media and active users first of all put on public display the outstanding aspects of life, and we have no other connection with the rest of humanity. As a result, atomization occurs.
2. What I suggest to solve this problem: I believe that if we fill the network with things that are common to us, others will be able to feel how little we differ from them, to be imbued with trust.
I found out for myself that I didn’t even know my closest friends very well when I accidentally asked them to describe their typical day. This experience was nothing compared to what I saw in their Instagram posts! As a result, I realized that they do not live their lives as one continuous entertainment, and that they are just as lonely and confused people as I am. And I began to empathize with them more and it brought us closer.
Thus, for mutual understanding and strengthening of ties, it would be great if we kept others informed about the real state of affairs in our lives. However, we can’t stream our lives 24⁄7 and no one will be able to watch it, so the most realistic way to achieve this is to use random distribution—in the long run this spans the whole day, but takes the viewer and the publisher a digestible amount of time .
3. What exactly should be the first steps:
In the near future, as an experiment, I will start using this method in my social network accounts. The principle is this:
Random Reminder App gives a reminder twice a day at a random time from 08:00 to 22:00.
I take a photo of what I was doing at the monent notification arrived, add a description and optionally my thoughts on the topic.
I add a disclaimer about what is’s all about and the corresponding hashtag and publish it on the network.
4. Concerns: The people with whom I shared this idea suggested that such content, even if it fulfills its purpose, will not be of interest to people: no one wants to see in their feed how bored you are sitting at the computer. I cannot (and see no point in trying to) confirm or refute these fears, let the experiment decide everything.
Conclusion: I hope my idea will help people get rid of the “broken phone” and begin to perceive themselves as a group of like-minded people—humanity that can make decisions on its own (without intermediaries in the form of politicians and the media) correctly (because there are really smart people among us) and quickly (because we have the Internet and this wonderful forum).
That’s all, thank you for your attention. As the experiment progresses, I will supplement this publication. And I’d love to hear your opinion, whatever it may be! Peace for everyone)
Telling each other about random samples of our daily lives (experiment)
Hello, my friends!
This is my first post and I am happy to join your noble community! I will be happy if I can somehow improve you, myself or this world.
I’m in urge to share with you an idea whitch can improve humanity’s ability to make sensible decisions in big groups. I’m sure it would have been better written if I had first carefully studied the principles of the forum and looked for statements similar or canceling my idea, but I’m afraid to get bogged down in procrastination and time is valuable. So I’ll post the idea first, and then I’ll figure out how it all works and delete / correct the post if it seems appropriate. So I ask you to have a little patience with this, as well as with my English.
Briefly the essence of the idea:
For the sake of effective collaboration, we should post information about our ordinary life on social media. To do this, I propose to use the analogue of experience sampling method.
Now expanded:
1. What problem prevents the mutual understanding between humans:
The media and the current way of doing social networks are widening the gap between people. Looking at posts on Instagram, the average user gets the impression that other people are much more different from him than they really are. And the whole point is that a concentrated essence of exceptions from everyday life falls into the field of view of the observer: both traditional media and active users first of all put on public display the outstanding aspects of life, and we have no other connection with the rest of humanity. As a result, atomization occurs.
2. What I suggest to solve this problem:
I believe that if we fill the network with things that are common to us, others will be able to feel how little we differ from them, to be imbued with trust.
I found out for myself that I didn’t even know my closest friends very well when I accidentally asked them to describe their typical day. This experience was nothing compared to what I saw in their Instagram posts! As a result, I realized that they do not live their lives as one continuous entertainment, and that they are just as lonely and confused people as I am. And I began to empathize with them more and it brought us closer.
Thus, for mutual understanding and strengthening of ties, it would be great if we kept others informed about the real state of affairs in our lives. However, we can’t stream our lives 24⁄7 and no one will be able to watch it, so the most realistic way to achieve this is to use random distribution—in the long run this spans the whole day, but takes the viewer and the publisher a digestible amount of time .
3. What exactly should be the first steps:
In the near future, as an experiment, I will start using this method in my social network accounts. The principle is this:
Random Reminder App gives a reminder twice a day at a random time from 08:00 to 22:00.
I take a photo of what I was doing at the monent notification arrived, add a description and optionally my thoughts on the topic.
I add a disclaimer about what is’s all about and the corresponding hashtag and publish it on the network.
4. Concerns:
The people with whom I shared this idea suggested that such content, even if it fulfills its purpose, will not be of interest to people: no one wants to see in their feed how bored you are sitting at the computer. I cannot (and see no point in trying to) confirm or refute these fears, let the experiment decide everything.
Conclusion:
I hope my idea will help people get rid of the “broken phone” and begin to perceive themselves as a group of like-minded people—humanity that can make decisions on its own (without intermediaries in the form of politicians and the media) correctly (because there are really smart people among us) and quickly (because we have the Internet and this wonderful forum).
That’s all, thank you for your attention. As the experiment progresses, I will supplement this publication. And I’d love to hear your opinion, whatever it may be!
Peace for everyone)
P.S. The original topic title “Humanity’s (in)ability to make sensble decisions in big groups”© - is a quote. I saw this expression on Twitter, it belongs to the pen of Jacob Eliosoff (@JaEsf) and I couldn’t say better.[1]
https://twitter.com/JaEsf/status/1538230637072613378?t=_Hd4VNR1eybUrctnzLy4Sw&s=19