What is outrage culture?

in #steemit7 years ago (edited)

Introduction

Tapping into emotions is the secret to taking content viral. Anger has been shown to be the emotion which spreads fastest and goes viral easiest. Why is that? This post addresses the topic of "outrage culture" which is an important topic because it seems to be the driving force behind the growth of social media and content providers. Outrage producers would therefore have a financial incentive to stimulate outrage in their audience to get clicks, views, and as a result profit. Steemit itself is just as susceptible to this as any other social media so it's worth having the discussion.

What is outrage culture?

The phrase "outrage porn" was coined in 2009 and was originally popularized by Ryan Holiday. Websites can take advantage of many different potential powder keg situations to generate outrage. For example the racial tensions provide a backdrop for generation of "outrage porn" to get clicks and views and it doesn't matter which race you are. If you're black then you might see a lot of clickbait about police brutality where white cops are killing unarmed black suspects and if you're white you might see lots of clickbait about blacks killing innocent white people or jews taking over the world scamming people.

The truth of the matter is that outrage generates more money than positivity on the Internet. Disgust and anger are two of the most universal human emotions while sympathy, empathy, and other more complicated emotions aren't shared by all. Some humans for example don't feel these emotions because they are psychopaths incapable of experiencing it and some humans might feel it but it could be on a spectrum. Of course disgust and anger aren't the only emotions which get taken advantage of and abused by "troll armies" and "outrage brigades", because jealousy is another popular emotion which generates interest.

The rise of virtue signals or is it something else?

Around the same time as the growth of outrage culture we are also seeing the rise of what some call "virtue signaling". It is debatable whether or not virtue signals are a real thing but it's vital to the discussion that we mention it.

The rise of outrage culture seems to be fueling the growth of a values war. Different sides have different values and virtue signals allow people to signal to their own side that they share similar values.

Within evolutionary biology, signalling theory is a body of theoretical work examining communication between organisms. It is concerned with honest signals. For example, a peacock's tail is an honest signal of his fitness, since a less fit peacock would only be able to produce a less spectacular tail.

Similarly, signalling is considered within economics. A bank's impressive architecture may serve as a signal of its financial soundness, since a less well-endowed bank can afford less impressive buildings. Qualifications can signal a person's ability to an employer, even when those qualifications are not strictly necessary, since a less able job applicant will not be able to achieve the same level of qualification.[5]

Unless signalling is considered, costly religious rituals such as circumcision, fasting, and snake handling look paradoxical in both evolutionary and economic terms. Religion may have arisen to increase and maintain intragroup cooperation.[6] All religions may involve costly rituals, performed publicly, as a hard-to-fake sign of commitment.[7] Such behavior is sometimes described as "virtue signalling".[1]

There is at least a popular conception that to be beautiful requires showing moral aptitude. This moral aptitude is shown through signaling just as birds do or peacocks do. The idea that there is a such thing as moral beauty is related to the concept of a "good person". The concept of a "good person" is abstract just as "bad person" is abstract, and highly subjective. The point is that a typical person may be motivated to want to at least give the impression that they are a "good person" to their moral tribe.

What are moral tribes?

Joshua Greene used the term "moral tribes" to describe the divide in moral thinking between groups of people. This is best explained by Joshua Green himself in the video below:

Us and them

Us and Them refers to the very tribal nature of humanity. There are moral and political tribes. The Democrats and Republicans for example are political tribes. Moral tribes could include the religious thinkers (people of the book) and consequentialists. The people of the book who rely on commandments have a view of morality which relies on prescribed solutions from a holy book similar to have a parent might utilize a medical book to treat a sick child. The problem with this is that not every possible condition or ethical problem will be in the book. That said, Joshua Greene goes into details about the difference between point and shoot morality which is an automatic kind of morality and the manual mode which requires deep contemplation. Consequentialists must rely on cost to benefit analysis for all important decisions without being able to rely on any book or their emotional response (consequentialists spend much more time in manual mode).

In terms of political tribes there are different kinds of values fueling different parties. The Democrats tend to be more paternal, more focused on the needs of women, of immigrants, and of the "underdog". The Republicans seem to have their values more focused on the needs of businesses, of natives.

Of course I could be wrong on this and these are only my interpretations of these two tribes based on my own probably flawed assumptions but I'm using it for sake of argument that because the two tribes don't share the same values they will be in constant competition. In this constant competition, the members of each of these groups will want to signal to the wider group that they share values, that they live according to the virtues of the group they claim.

Conclusion

Disclosure, I am a consequence based thinker. Based on what I'm seeing from the growth of social media, of outrage culture, of what I will call "persecution culture" which includes both cyberbullying and excessive frivolous lawsuits, all of this is creating what I call "mob conflicts". These "mob conflicts" will only continue to get worse because for the most part the mob is a blind mob, an ignorant mob, following gut emotions, controlled by algorithms, and these algorithms have access to big data. The behavior of these blind yet furious cause mobs are directed for profit in some cases.

In Morals and Dogma there is a vital quote which stuck in my memory. Morals and Dogma is a book written by Albert Pike:

FORCE, unregulated or ill-regulated, is not only wasted in the void, like that of gunpowder burned in the open air, and steam unconfined by science; but, striking in the dark, and its blows meeting only the air, they recoil and bruise itself. It is destruction and ruin. It is the volcano, the earthquake, the cyclone;--not growth and progress. It is Polyphemus blinded, striking at random, and falling headlong among the sharp rocks by the impetus of his own blows.

The blind Force of the people is a Force that must be economized, and also managed, as the blind Force of steam, lifting the ponderous iron arms and turning the large wheels, is made to bore and rifle the cannon and to weave the most delicate lace. It must be regulated by Intellect. Intellect is to the people and the people's Force, what the slender needle of the compass is to the ship--its soul, always counselling the huge mass of wood and iron, and always pointing to the north. To attack the citadels built up on all sides against the human race by superstitions, despotisms, and prejudices, the Force must have a brain and a law. Then its deeds of daring produce permanent results, and there is real progress.

That quote is vital to understanding just how important concepts such as "rule of law" and "regulation" are. It's also critical that there is a brain or "intelligence" so that the force can be properly directed according to truth. It's very easy for a blind mob to chase boogeymen, to persecute based on lies, to lynch completely innocent people. In fact we have seen these persecutions in history, looking at for example the murder of Emmett Till. It's not enough just to be decentralized, it's not enough just to promote liberty, it's absolutely critical to promote ethics and wisdom. Ethics and wisdom require knowledge, and only by having the accurate (truthful) information can people develop knowledge in the first place to have the wisdom and or ethics. This wisdom and ethics are what can guide the people to generate progress which is the point of all technological development including Steemit.

References

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtue_signalling
  2. http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/what-emotion-goes-viral-fastest-180950182/
  3. http://observer.com/2014/02/outrage-porn-how-the-need-for-perpetual-indignation-manufactures-phony-offense/
  4. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/jan/17/moral-tribes-joshua-greene-review
  5. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmett_Till
  6. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disinformation
  7. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_propaganda
  8. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyberbullying
  9. https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2013/11/deep-pragmatism-as-a-moral-engine/
  10. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consequentialism
  11. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deontological_ethics
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"These "mob conflicts" will only continue to get worse because for the most part the mob is a blind mob, an ignorant mob, following gut emotions, "

I think you correctly highlighted a big part of the problem. We have seen a shift from respect for facts and logic (at least to a greater degree) to a "whatever we feel is right" situation. People are becoming more and more set in their ideologies.

I don't know what we can do about it except continue to point it out.

Great overview of an important topic - I'm very concerned, as many people are, about the trend lately for intense anger that gets stoked up on the internet, a digital mob with metaphorical torches and pitchforks - all it takes is an accusation to create chaos.

It seems online that "innocent before proven guilty" does not apply... well, I sure wish it would.

This isn't new. It was previously called a "lynch mob". Digital lynch mobs form now and if anything social media helps facilitate the formation. AI of course is now used to present "fake facts" and to promote "constructed world views" via "fake news" and even if the news is real the news could be a hoax, a scheme, etc.

The rules of the game are constantly changing in ways none of us fully understand. Be careful.

People building decentralized networks have to realize this is giving us great power. We also have great responsibility. It's not enough just to decentralize everything and let the chips fail. We have to make progress through technological means.

Newer networks for facilitation of ignorance and the spread of hate is not good for most of our futures in my opinion. I suppose we could have some who might benefit from a world of anger, fear and hate but those benefits produce costs on the rest.

Race baiting is dangerous. False accusations are dangerous.

I agree with you on most of what you have said here. The current culture saddens me and the divide is self feeding. The more angry the left gets, the more angry the right gets. Who then feed and keep growing their perception of the world without looking beyond their own life.

To many people thinking, "Out of sight, out of mind." I just wish people could ask why. Why do I think this way. Do I know the truth beyond my bias?

One of the dark dangers of out of control AI is the fact that it can generate world views which human beings might adopt via disinformation, propaganda, etc. Imagine if Hitler had AI bots generating fake news stories and stoking hatred on not a daily basis but an hourly basis?

Liberty is what sailors get when they dock. It usually involves boozing, fighting, and fucking. Freedom is what you were looking for I believe. As for the rule of law vs regulations, what's the difference? One is as illegitimate as the other when it comes to Free Men.

Moderation is necessary for a conversation involving many people. Regulation is necessary for markets involving many competing interests. Even in families, even in 1 on 1 relationships, there are rules. So there always are laws, guiidelines, rules, etc.

Having the rules in writing in my opinion is far superior than having then unwritten. Unwritten rules get enforced just as hard if not harder than the written rules. Unwritten laws also don't even give you the chance to learn what the rules are which you are being judged by. In essence you don't know the rules until you break it.

Considering that you cannot know how someone will react to something you say before you say it, if you have too few constraints on what you can say then your chance of upsetting a bunch of people rises. So how would you solve this without adding constraints and in effect reducing some liberty?

It's not ideal at all, but it's about maintaining harmony, quality of life, and preventing "mob justice" from being the ultimate arbitrator of disputes.

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Think about it also from a consequence based perspective? Whether you agree with the rules or not, if the following of whatever the rule is, is more conventionalist than breaking it?

It's a matter of doing the cost vs benefit analysis for you as a freeman. In an ideal world we can change the rules but in many cases we can't and merely have to adapt our behavior to conform to the rules in order to avoid the negative consequence. Now if it reaches a point where you have a high probability of success at being able to change the rules, or if breaking the rules is more convenient, then these become favorable options too.

What is your opinion on the impact of surveillance, AI, social media, etc? These social media platforms can reshape social norms, morality, and laws, by renegotiating how people communicate, how people form friendships, etc.

Think about it also from a consequence based perspective? Whether you agree with the rules or not, if the following of whatever the rule is, is more conventionalist than breaking it?

If I form a gang and make a set of rules and if you don't follow my rules my gang will steal your property, beat you up, kill your friends, kill you and rape your corpse in front of your family before they steal and kill them as well. Whether you agree or not, is it more conventionalist to break them?

It's a matter of doing the cost vs benefit analysis for you as a freeman.

The cost is your freedom, the benefit is slavery.

In an ideal world we can change the rules but in many cases we can't and merely have to adapt our behavior to conform to the rules in order to avoid the negative consequence.

Do you change the rules of the gang? If a gang is more lenient, do you change their rules? Do you have any say over the rules that people make? Can you change the rules of my house? What about your neighborhood, if enough of you gather, can you change the house of those that don't? What if their rules are to rape and kill you if you trespass against them like that by forcing them, who would be the Attacker and who would be the Defender? Who would justice punish and who would justice find JUST? Tired of all the hypotheticals pointing out that not only can you not change rules that you didn't make to being with, but just as you cannot tell people what rules they can and can't make people aren't any more justified in forcing you than you are in forcing them. If you consider people unable to be free, you must consider yourself a complete pathetic inexcusable slave, there is no in between, you are either Free, or you are a Subject, a Slave, you are either your Master or you follow another master, ultimately it's not a degree of freedom but only a binary, either you are free or either you are enslaved.

Now if it reaches a point where you have a high probability of success at being able to change the rules, or if breaking the rules is more convenient, then these become favorable options too.

If you break some made up rules by a gang, does that mean anything? If I make up rules and you break them, does that mean anything? Can I say "you broke these rules, like it or not, where you agreed to them or not, and you owe me or you must pay"? Yes I can but people will look at my like a lunatic and laugh at me. It's no different if a gang does it, no matter how big the gang.

What is your opinion on the impact of surveillance, AI, social media, etc? These social media platforms can reshape social norms, morality, and laws, by renegotiating how people communicate, how people form friendships, etc.

It's always the people and not the tools that are important. If we had nothing but censored facebook a whole language would form in the face of the tyrants and code would be imbued into every word, and I wouldn't fault facebook for censoring, but I would applaud the individuals who don't argue that it's a matter of cost vs benefit, but a matter of being free or not. Are you a Free Woman, or are you a Citizen, you cannot be both.

It's either LAWFUL, or JUST, or it's not. Law cannot compel performance, then it becomes slavery, there is no reason to limit what people can say, ever, words never hurt anyone, and there is no reason to tell people how to act, and neither you nor anyone is tasked with that kind of authority. Steer your own god damn ship and let everyone run amok on the rocks, they have free will and the sense of doing what they feel in their heart, and no Law will change that, such futility is embarrassingly stupid.

@dana-ewards The titles of your topics sound really good, inspiring and helpful for newbies:))

Upvoted and resteemed!

@steemit.global motive is encouraged to steemers from {Resteemed and Upvote}.

Weak minded people substitute feeling for thinking. This is reinforced in safe-space schools where everything is done to protect the precious snowflakes. In the real world these snowflakes have no idea how to think critically and fly off the handle with outrage whenever things don't go their way. Most of these people couldn't reason their way out of a wet paper bag.

Welcome to the post-modern libtard utopia.

Feeling is a form of thinking. Weak and strong minded depend on the context. I would say, not a good idea to judge those who think different.

Feeling is a reaction to a stimuli. There is no implication that thinking must be involved at all for feeling. This does not exclude the possibility that thinking could occur somewhere down the line. If you are shown a picture of dead child you will have an automatic reaction. If I switch to a picture of a kitten snuggling with a puppy, once again you will have an automatic reaction.

The problem is that most of the weak-minded, non-analytical types get to the "feeling" and progress no further. Lets take the famous example of Alan Kurdi, the Syrian boy dead on a beach whose photograph was flashed all around the world. The resulting "outrage" inspired hundreds of thousands or even millions of people to vent their "feelings" and "demand" that an unlimited amount of "refugees" (as they were called) be allowed to flood the shores of Europe. Here are the "facts" that were omitted from the story. The boy was not "fleeing war", he was living safely in Turkey for quite a while. His father was involved in people smuggling and was therefore responsible for his son's death. The father wanted to go for free dental treatment in Canada, not flee war.

Now what has happened? Just 1.4% of migrants arriving in Italy in 2017 are "Syrian Refugees" and the monster percentage are economic migrants. This is what happens when feelings trump facts. Outrage is directed in an erroneous way.

There are many other examples that I could have chosen. However, I will conclude with a refutation of your first sentence. Feeling is feeling. Critical thinking using evidence and facts is something else altogether.

The strongest emotions are negative. Many marketers, politicians use this fact.

"It's not enough just to be decentralized". I hope more and more Steemians will understand that. With more and more producers, attention war is already here.

Steemit as a blockchain based network is shielding users from many of "mind hijacking" strategies (Facebook, Youtube, LinkedIn etc.). It's enough to read Tristan Harris's "How Technology is Hijacking Your Mind " to appreciate Steemit.

But on Steemit I also noticed so far: bots, plagiarism, self-voting, up-voting just by reputation, new good writers invisibility etc. I guess we constantly need to assess those challenges (and new ones in the future) in order to make rational ethical judgments...

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