How technology changes our sense of right and wrong | Juan Enriquez

114,604 views ・ 2021-02-24

TED


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In an era of extreme polarization,
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it's really dangerous to talk about right and wrong.
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You can be targeted, judged for something you said 10 years ago, 10 months ago,
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10 hours ago, 10 seconds ago.
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And that means that those who think you're wrong
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may burn you at the stake
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or those who are on your side
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that think you're not sufficiently orthodox
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may try and cancel you.
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As you're thinking about right and wrong, I want you to consider three ideas.
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What if right and wrong is something that changes over time.
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What if right and wrong is something that can change because of technology.
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What if technology is moving exponentially?
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So as you're thinking about this concept,
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remember human sacrifice used to be normal and natural.
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It was a way of appeasing the gods.
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Otherwise the rain wouldn't come,
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the sun wouldn't shine.
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Public executions.
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They were common, normal, legal.
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You used to take your kids to watch beheadings in the streets of Paris.
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One of the greatest wrongs, slavery,
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indentured servitude,
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that was something that was practiced for millennia.
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It was practiced across the Incas, the Mayas, the Chinese,
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the Indians in North and South America.
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And as you're thinking about this,
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one question is why did something so wrong last for so long?
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And a second question is: why did it go away?
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And why did it go away in a few short decades in legal terms?
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Certainly there was a work
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by extraordinary abolitionists who risked their lives,
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but there may be something else happening alongside these brave abolitionists.
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Consider energy and the industrial revolution.
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A single barrel of oil contains the energy equivalent
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of the work of five to 10 people.
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Add that to machines,
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and suddenly you've got millions of people's equivalent labor
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at your disposal.
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You can quit oppressing people and have a doubling in lifespan
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after a flattened lifespan for millennia.
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The world economy, which had been flat for millennia,
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all of a sudden explodes.
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And you get enormous amounts of wealth and food and other things
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produced by far fewer hands.
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Technology changes the way we interact with each other in fundamental ways.
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New technologies like the machine gun
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completely changed the nature of warfare in World War I.
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It drove people into trenches.
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You were in the British trench, or you were in the German trench.
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Anything in between was no man's land.
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You entered no man's land.
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You were shot. You were killed.
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You tried to leave the trench in the other direction.
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Then your own side would shoot you
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because you were a deserter.
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In a weird way, today's machine guns are narrowcast social media.
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We're shooting at each other.
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We're shooting at those we think are wrong
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with posts, with tweets, with photographs, with accusations, with comments.
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And what it's done is it's created these two trenches
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where you have to be either in this trench or that trench.
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And there's almost no middle ground to meet each other,
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to try and find some sort of a discussion between right and wrong.
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As you drive around the United States, you see signs on lawns.
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Some say, "Black Lives Matter."
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Others say, "We support the police."
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You very rarely see both signs on the same lawn.
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And yet if you ask people,
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most people would probably support Black Lives Matter
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and they would also support their police.
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So as you think of these polarized times,
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as you think of right and wrong,
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you have to understand that right and wrong changes
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and is now changing in exponential ways.
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Take the issue of gay marriage.
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In 1996, two-thirds of the US population was against gay marriage.
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Today two-thirds is for.
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It's almost 180-degree shift in the opinion.
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In part, this is because of protests,
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because people came out of the closet,
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because of AIDS,
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but a great deal of it has to do with social media.
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A great deal of it has to do with people out in our homes,
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in our living rooms, through television, through film, through posts,
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through people being comfortable enough,
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our friends, our neighbors, our family,
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to say, "I'm gay."
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And this has shifted opinion
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even in some of the most conservative of places.
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Take the Pope.
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As Cardinal in 2010,
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he was completely against gay marriage.
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He becomes Pope.
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And three years after the last sentence
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he comes out with "Who am I to judge?"
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And then today, he's in favor of civil unions.
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As you're thinking about technology changing ethics,
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you also have to consider that technology is now moving exponentially.
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As right and wrong changes,
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if you take the position, "I know right.
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And if you completely disagree with me, if you partially disagree with me,
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if you even quibble with me, then you're wrong,"
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then there's no discussion,
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no tolerance, no evolution, and certainly no learning.
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Most of us are not vegetarians yet.
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Then again, we haven't had
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a whole lot of faster, better, cheaper alternatives to meat.
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But now that we're getting synthetic meats,
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as the price drops from 380,000 dollars in 2013
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to 9 dollars today,
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a great big chunk of people
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are going to start becoming vegetarian or quasi-vegetarian.
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And then in retrospect, these pictures
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of walking into the fanciest, most expensive restaurants in town
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and walking past racks of bloody steaks
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is going to look very different in 10 years, in 20 years and 30 years.
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In these polarized times,
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I'd like to revive two words you rarely hear today:
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humility and forgiveness.
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When you judge the past, your ancestors, your forefathers,
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do so with a little bit more humility,
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because perhaps if you'd been educated in that time,
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if you'd lived in that time,
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you would've done a lot of things wrong.
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Not because they're right.
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Not because we don't see they're wrong today,
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but simply because our notions,
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our understanding of right and wrong change across time.
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The second word, forgiveness.
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Forgiveness is incredibly important these days.
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You cannot cancel somebody for saying the wrong word,
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for having done something 10 years ago,
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for having triggered you and not being a hundred percent right.
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To build a community, you have to build it and talk to people
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and learn from people
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who may have very different points of view from yours.
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You have to allow them a space
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instead of creating a no man's land.
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A middle ground, a ??? and a space of empathy.
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This is a time to build community.
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This is not a time to continue ripping nations apart.
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Thank you very much.
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