• disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    You’re absolutely correct from an “best practice” standpoint, but only the standards make it into records. That’s the source of our admiration of “old-fashioned know-how.”

    Real life experience can’t be catalogued. The index doesn’t have dirt under its nails. Sure, I’d be obsolete and out of place in the day-to-day, but I’d always be ready to coyboy up in a crisis.

    In the meantime, I could probably make a decent living creating one-of-a-kind newly handcrafted antiques for the neo-hipsters.

    I think I’d really enjoy our movie, btw.

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      16 days ago

      Real life experience can’t be catalogued

      In ye olde days it couldn’t. But, what if the current database of YouTube videos survives? You’d get every non-expert trying everything in any way possible. If books and podcasts survive, you’d have every discussion on why things are done a certain way and not another way. Assuming it all survives, there’d be so much more information to future archaeologists and anthropologists than today. Right now we just dig up a shard of pottery and try to figure things out from whatever we can glean from that pottery.

      It would make for a cool movie. The only problem is trying to imagine a really distant future that makes the present look barbaric.

      They had fun with that in Demolition Man with the three shells. Star Trek TNG did it in The Neutral Zone where they had a bunch of people from the 20th century including a financier who couldn’t accept the lack of money in the future. But it’s really hard to make a future that’s believable and makes the present look barbaric.