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From an individual's perspective, I'd emphatically agree. Traveling, vibing, or intellectual masturbation full time is sad and a waste of talent. Amazing food may as well be paste, great novels be paper, and 'experiences' be clicker games if you don't build off of them into a career or purpose, try complex things that might fail, play a part in the patchwork that is society. Selfishly or altruistically, the depth in the latter - building or fighting for something that, even if only to a small extent, is your own and depends on your skill - outstrips whatever the former has to offer. Not that the former is bad, it's important and has its place, but to only do that is, in essence, having great sex but no children. (I expect disagreement here, and it's for a given level of talent - traveling is experientially better than sorting packages at a warehouse, but warehouse workers don't have this option)
But from a collective perspective, this isn't a pressing problem. Even among the very competent or smart, for everyone who's never worked all their life due to family wealth, there are 5 people who worked some of their life and retired early (both new and old rich), and for every one of those there are 10 people with standard careers. (That's just off intuition, I couldn't find easily accessible data). There just aren't that many people who full-time travel and aren't employed from 20-55. So radical wealth redistribution might get these people back in the workforce, but nobody would notice the increased productivity. But even in each individual case, 'society' isn't really worse off - just by econ 101, when the trust fund kid's grandpa got rich on printers, the transaction between him and society of money for goods/services was mutually beneficial! Every individual deemed it in their personal interest to give the grandpa a claim on a specific amount of future labor in exchange for the printer. This remains mutually beneficial even if the kid, not the grandpa, spend the future labor credits. This still could be rent-seeking, maybe it's only barely beneficial for the consumer - but, in practice, most of the surplus goes to the consumer, not to the capitalist. Imagine how much of your income you'd pay for a laptop and the internet if your only alternative was no electronics at all. When Big Tech and you divide up that economic surplus, you get that, and they get a few grand.
Also, I think toplevel posts like this are perfectly fine. This isn't the best example of the class but they're interesting, they start discussion, I'd rather see another one of these than another news cycle post, so I'd encourage people to post more like this. Probably with more characterization/details though, a few paragraphs (or more) telling a story about some of these people would be great.
Not for nothing, I would bet there's a HUGE crossover in the types who want to accumulate a ton of wealth as fast as possible then coast off the interest and those who declare they want to live childfree. Both kind of speak to the same sort of core mentality "life is for me to live, and any constraints that require me to do things at the behest of other people (a boss, or a child) is unacceptable."
Also, as I've gotten older I've REALLY soured on the idea of 'traveling' in the abstract as a hobby. Because I've begun to notice that most locales that are 'worth visiting' start optimizing into tourist traps, well designed to extract as much money from the average person as they can while returning minimal/ephemeral value.
Like the OP is pointing out, owning an asset that benefits from heavy tourism means you can coast off other people's labor. Owning the asset makes you money. Visiting and spending money there makes you a bit of a sucker, therefore.
As you say, if I could instead spend that time, effort, and money building something, I think the fulfillment will greatly outweigh that of being the billionth person to, e.g. photograph the Grand Canyon or hike Mount Fuji.
That said, for purposes of human happiness, some environments are definitely more conducive to comfort and pleasant feelings than others. Places that are beautiful and comfortable in the summer can become frozen wastelands in winter, and the there's a similar issue with places that are pleasant in Winter.
And moving yourself around to exploit the benefits of different locales is sensible from a purely Hedonic perspective.
The Grand Canyon is awesome, in the true meaning of the word. Seeing it at least once definitely beats working all the time, even if you are building something.
Not sure. Seeing it one time would surely be awe-inspiring.
I've been to Montana and seen much of Yellowstone, similar kind of feeling of reverence for the sheer majesty of nature.
But once you've done it... what are you left with?
What legacy does it leave of your existence?
Ashes to ashes; dust to dust; most of us will be utterly forgotten within a generation or two, no matter what we do. Spending all our energy trying to avoid that fate is futile, it's not unreasonable to spend time living in the present.
I just categorically disagree that this logic holds as a means to not care about the future.
I can say, that if the records existed, I, personally would like to search my genetic ancestry back 1000 years (at least!) and learn a bit about every single human being whose genes ended up in my genome.
And, we pretty much have the necessary technology such that, in 1000 years, someone in the future could look up information about YOU and thereby 'remember' your existence well beyond 2 generations out.
And there are certainly things you can do now to bump up the odds that someone will remember you further out.
Yes, that doesn't 'matter' to you once you're dead, but taking this nihilist position doesn't give you any reason to prefer any outcome over any other!
So hey, I won't try and convince you that one outcome matters over the other. I'll continue working to marginally increase the chances that the outcomes I prefer come about. From your logic, it's no more a waste of time to do that than to live for the present.
In short, accepting that life is ephemeral is one thing, but choosing to live as though the future won't exist is, if you believe what I do, a COPE.
Anyhow, I leave you with some distilled Hopium: Isaac Asimov's 'The Last Question.'
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Is leaving a legacy of your existence your ultimate goal in life? Can you give me some reason why it should be mine? After all, I certainly won't be here to know about it.
To the extent there is any coherent goal that one can pursue, leaving behind some legacy of your own to influence future generations is pretty much the only thing any organism can do that matters.
That is how 'life' sustains itself. It's pretty much the only reason anything you like about your life even exists. So however you choose to live your life (unless it is constant agony, I suppose), be thankful that there were people before you who cared about what happened in the future.
No!
But if you pursue goals that do not leave legacies, and I pursue goals that DO leave legacies, only one of our value systems/biological heritage is likely to propogate into the future and have impact on how that future unfolds.
Which is to say, your kind get out-competed in the natural selection race, and so its going to be a future dominated by legacy-leavers who will be very thankful that all their ancestors were legacy-leavers.
I'm thankful my ancestors were legacy-leavers, so it isn't particularly strange to me that I should want to leave a legacy.
If that isn't enough of a reason, I won't attempt any further to change your mind, and we have no quarrel anyway. Just don't interfere with other people who want to leave legacies!
Your argument is circular: you've decided that propagation of genes matters so by your definition it's "the only thing that matters".
That's not quite what I'm saying.
Propagation of genes matters if there is to be any future where intelligent life exists at all.
I don't begrudge the nihilists who don't think there's anything 'special' about intelligent life or humans in particular, and who think that the universe is utterly apathetic to our continued existence.
However, I doubt that they can have any real certainty in that regard.
I think it is preferable to have someone (intelligent and conscious) around to experience the future and see where it's going, than to not have anyone around at all. So in order to ensure that there is someone around, I can either figure out how to live forever, or do things that will help ensure that intelligent life exists in the future.
One of the most succinct explanations for why you might want to keep plugging along in spite of it all, was delivered by Lex Fucking Luthor in the Justice League Animated Series.
"Objectively speaking, nothing matters! So go forth and do stuff that matters... to you."
My other favored response to people who say "why bother" is Asimov's The Last Question.
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