But what about the truth of what is right?
And why is the best world thought to be the most efficient and least flexible? This notion is
fundamentally destructive. When speaking to things, yes, it is good. But what we end up doing is treating human beings like a chorus of exchangeable parts on the factory line, often in the name of "fairness." Equivalence is, as I have said, not equality. But this idea is the root of so much pain in the world, so many "isms," that we all end up running our self-optimization projects rather than paying attention to who
we really are.
You don't get double-blind objective scientific laboratory trials when it comes to knowing yourself. You get one chance, and every moment--every
subjective moment--you live is another moment in which you can grow to see yourself better. Who you are, what you need, what you should become.
Or, rather: why should the collective statistical information of a bunch of people who have never known you tell you what your
telos is?
The experience of sitting in a chair isn't scientific. Sure, you can write down all the force diagrams, and draw pictures of your spine doing x or y, or get a bunch of volunteers to write out what it's like, rate the experience from 1 to 10, etc. And you can make a big fancy report of all this, and issue it to people right before they're going to sit in a chair for the very first time. You can write down all sorts of things in this report--where the materials come from, who made that particular chair, diagrams of the factory, history of the chair in human society, every single piece of scientific information we could possibly manage.
But would you know the chair better from all that objective information, or from how it feels to sit for the first time?