Monday, January 13, 2014

Utility

I'm trying to figure out utility. So far I guess utility primarily signifies the quality of being useful, although it is somewhat more abstract than the traditional definition of usefulness or use. Utility is often employed to denote adaptation to produce a valuable result, while usefulness denotes the actual production of such result, perhaps some tangible thing. I've tried comparing and contrasting beauty and utility, in that beautiful art can elicit utility. It can be said that an invention's utility is questionable even while it's usefulness has been proven by trial, even if only by a few individuals. Still utility and usefulness are interchanged as synonyms on occasion despite their differences.

Expediency refers primarily to escape from or avoidance of some difficulty or trouble; while either expediency or utility might be used to signify either profit or advantage as considered apart from rights or entitlement as the grounds for ethical or moral obligation, or of actions that have a moral character, expediency denoting immediate advantage on a contracted view. Especially with reference to avoiding danger, difficulty, or loss, while utility might be so broadened as to cover all existence through all time, as in the utilitarian theory of morals. Policy is often used in a kindred sense, more positive than expediency but narrower than utility, as in the proverb: 'honesty is the best policy' although policies are rarely directly honest. Utility is often partially synonymous with profit, the returns or receipts including all that is received from an outlay or investment. Avail stresses the idea of effectiveness and effectualness. Gain is what is secured beyond previous possession. Benefit is anything that provides or does good, but is not necessarily utility. Emolument is profit, return, or value accruing thru an official position. Expediency has respect to profit or advantage, real or supposed, considered apart from or perhaps in opposition to what is correct or proper action in terms if moral or ethical character. Utility is chiefly used in the sense of some immediate or personal usefulness, and some material good, as in product; although financial goods are immaterial. Advantage is that which provides one a vantage ground, either for coping with competitors or with difficulties, needs, demands, or perhaps to empower later utility. As in to possess the advantage of a good education. Profit is frequently used of what one has beyond another or secures at the expense of another if you believe in scarcity. As in to have the advantage of another in a argument, or take advantage of another in a bargain; although I hope that is not utility as itself. 
 

The Greek word for "kind" as in "Charity suffereth long, and is kind" has both the idea of goodness and usefulness. I think for something or some policy to be utilitarian in a true sense, it must be both good and useful. If not good it will soon cease to be useful; if not useful it can do no good. God is kind to men in both senses, and utility fulfills both senses.

Trying to avoid the dualistic psychological nature of utility although the semantic confusion between goodness and a good is an issue. The idea of psychological products recently expounded upon in the growth of the experience economy could be analogous to the feelings of righteousness sold by the church for centuries, implemented as the delight of discovery by science, or the excitement of epiphany could all be said to have utility by the individuals who do recall such memories, experience, or knowledge as positive. Spite, schadenfreude, and righteousness could be other psychological experiences perceived as possessing utility due to positive feelings although the utility, advantage, or usefulness is ripe for moral and/or ethical discourse due to the fact that it might not garner a net benefit. The enemy of charity is pride to define a simple dual relationship, or the opposition to kindness is spite; although the dynamics are really more geometric as charity could be in opposition to pride, greed, righteousness, sloth and any other number of co-occurring emotions, beliefs, or constructs. Which is why I wanted to avoid it. Even something as enjoyable as humor could be thought of as a zero sum game. A recent example from the 'news' might be fat shaming versus fat jokes, versus motivation or there might be a net benefit. It is hard to define en masse as the utility of each individual is exactly that, individual in the aggregate. It really comes down to outcomes, a priori, and a posteriori. Utility is observable in some behaviors, although the variables that affect, effect, and lead to those behaviors are cognitive, as are some forms of utility. Utility can be said to be received from both vice and virtue, and either to excess is the other.

There is something about statistics that separates us from each other, dehumanizing a group, and portending marginalization. Stereotypes do exist for a reason but they are measurable with statistics. Individuals need not embrace stereotypes, however doings so does elicit utility for the in-group through shared experience, belonging and doing do does elicit utility for the out-group through identification of the in-group, righteousness of knowledge; but not of understanding or discernment. Stereotypes can serve to reinforce a group which can provide utility to that group, such as nationalism in terms of integration, or the individuality of sub culture differentiation. I have some ideas concerning chaos, synchronization, and game theories that progress in that order, but I prefer to be able to test them first, I appreciate utility in that.