Hypothetical experiment
Posted by Wonky 11 years, 6 months ago to Philosophy
I created this hypothetical experiment to help me sort out my friends on Facebook. The Facebook post reads:
"Take four young monkeys and put two of each into two cages. Place a banana dispenser which dispenses two bananas at the meager cost of a small electric shock into each of the two cages.
"In cage 1, there is no intervention whatsoever. In cage 2, each time the food dispenser is activated, the researcher enters the cage and takes one of the bananas from the monkey that activated the dispenser and gives it to the other monkey.
"Next, begin to amplify the shock until it is very close to lethal.
"In which cage do you suspect that one of the monkeys will kill the other (or the researcher) first?"
"Take four young monkeys and put two of each into two cages. Place a banana dispenser which dispenses two bananas at the meager cost of a small electric shock into each of the two cages.
"In cage 1, there is no intervention whatsoever. In cage 2, each time the food dispenser is activated, the researcher enters the cage and takes one of the bananas from the monkey that activated the dispenser and gives it to the other monkey.
"Next, begin to amplify the shock until it is very close to lethal.
"In which cage do you suspect that one of the monkeys will kill the other (or the researcher) first?"
In cage 2: the more dominant monkey(or both monkeys) will likely attack the researcher for the banana.
also, I think cage 1 does not act as the best "control"
The premise that I want to test is, in fact, that involuntary socialism stunts both intellectual and emotional maturity, and as a result violence is more likely to erupt within the socialist cage.
How would you alter the experiment if you wanted evidence for or against that premise?
I am assuming that the monkey that loses one banana, is experiencing Socialism. And that the "researcher" is the government.
Then: the question is how long will the button pushing monkey tolerate giving up half of his earnings, for the sake of getting a banana?
And...if he accepts the loss of half of his earnings until the shock increases, will he just get rid of his 'homeless' cage inhabitant, hoping to either get all of the reward, or less of the shock?
Pointless...since it could very well be that the button pushing monkey is 'cool' with one of the bananas, and not give it any further thought.
The "researcher" may not really have a role....
In cage 1, each monkey will press the button when the value of the bananas exceeds the pain of the shock. The other monkey is unaffected.
In cage 2, there will be a sort of reverse prisoner's dilemma (Can I outlast the other monkey, and thereby get a banana without a shock?) There is a strong disincentive to push the button, but the same benefit (a banana) is given to both so long as the button is pushed.
But, I could!
dancin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_PCb4U05i...
He was too cerebral for everyone else...!
Load more comments...