A lot of scientific pioneers in the 19th century were rich men who could afford the equipment to conduct their experiments.
They made their money from exploiting others in different fields.
Submitted 1 year ago by Timely_Jellyfish_2077@programming.dev to showerthoughts@lemmy.world
A lot of scientific pioneers in the 19th century were rich men who could afford the equipment to conduct their experiments.
They made their money from exploiting others in different fields.
Literally fields
Not to take away from your shower thought OP, but more to soften the blow (because yeah, we for sure are worshipping billionaire fucksticks like Elon Musk as a society), we are still awarding the Nobel Prize to people who make strides in scientific areas that benefit humanity.
The people who discovered mRNA technology and prepped it for clinical use were just given the Nobel prize this week: npr.org/…/nobel-prize-goes-to-scientists-who-made…
The reward for a Nobel prize is about 900k€, shared between the winner of a given prize. The last ceo of the cac40 in France makes 1400k€/year. The average for the cac40 is 4500k€/year. That’s a salary btw, there probably are other revenues with that.
Oh no!!! I didn’t know it was split between all 3 of them! I thought each were given around $1M. That is still not enough for their contributions to society (especially in lieu of billionaires who do nothing), but it’s especially obscene that they all get closer to $300K instead.
What about the 19th century tycoons who paid to manufacture their own veneration through philanthropy fueled by the wealth they unjustly amassed?
Atleast we don’t celebrate royalty anymore. Right? Right???
Oi, mate. I know you were watching Doctor Who, however i’ve decided to hold up all TV broadcasts here for the next few days to inform you that the queen has died.
Also you’re now the subject of that old berk, who you always thought was kind of a ponce, as they’re now the ruler of the land by divine mandate. Waheyyyyyy…
How many people actually celebrate them, though? Like, percentage wise? The media maybe, out of a perverse sense of tradition, but the people?
Most people seem to range from festering hatred of the institution to indifference. Maybe enjoyment of the spectacle, or a dated reverence for an office that has long lost any true meaning, but actually celebrating them? Feels like that’s something you don’t find too much.
If you want to know what a society celebrates all you need do is look at the pictures of who and what they put on their money.
US: war generals, capitalists, banks, bankers, federalists, slave owners.
Other countries: flora, fauna, suffragettes, scientists, influential women, explorers, birds, fish.
Meanwhile in Denmark: BRIDGES!!!
Okay, that’s actually awesome.
Now we actually demonize scientists and science in general, right from the pinnacle of science, the mobile phone. Humanity is a joke
Octopi have it figured out.
Swim around, punch fish, fuck out some kids and then die.
It all goes back to the “American (lie) dream”. The idea that with enough hard work you will become rich and better than your parents. The CEOs have to make their succes fit the narrative so they pretend to be scientists who worked hard.
Tesla ticks both these boxes.
shame your an idiot op
Shit
Bassman1805@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Edison, Vanderbilt, Carnegie, Rockerfeller…
Same shit back then. Careful of the rose colored glasses.
ChaoticEntropy@feddit.uk 1 year ago
Yeah… a lot of people are venerated posthumously, whereas others can afford to pay to be venerated in their own time.
postmateDumbass@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Tbf there has been a shift from manufacturing industry to financial industry.
deweydecibel@lemmy.world 1 year ago
And that financial industry bled into the other industries, and started stealing the credit.
Musk is a good example. The perfect one, really. True engineers and scientists could be the figureheads of those companies, but when you think Space X, you think of that wart of a human being.