That could be fairly liberating. With a broad plateau, you don’t have to be too careful about avoiding sliding down the slopes at the sides. You are free to be yourself, without great consequences.
Plus a social mechanism that turns follow-your-dreams versus be-sensible into a hard choice that doesn’t much matter.
Also, we can look at the mechanism and see that it affects some people more than others. If you have a common dream, such as being a poet or a novelist, the mechanism is hard at work, flattening the plateau. An example of an uncommon dream is harder to come by.
Once upon a time (1960?) the electric guitar was new. If you formed a band playing electric guitars you would encounter two kinds of opposition. One is “don’t be a musician, too many people want to be musicians.” The other is “learn violin or trumpet, not something faddy like electric guitar, electric guitar isn’t going to last.” But some players turned into rock stars and soon every-one wanted to play electric guitar, turning it into a common dream and spoiling it as an example of an uncommon dream.
I think there is a similar tale to tell about computer games. Once upon a time (1980?) computer games were new. If you wanted to be a computer game programmer, it was an uncommon dream and you could succeed. Now it is a common motivation for young people studying computer science and the job niche is over-subscribed.
Yes. That’s a particular case of Harder Choices Matter Less.
Plus a social mechanism that turns follow-your-dreams versus be-sensible into a hard choice that doesn’t much matter.
Also, we can look at the mechanism and see that it affects some people more than others. If you have a common dream, such as being a poet or a novelist, the mechanism is hard at work, flattening the plateau. An example of an uncommon dream is harder to come by.
Once upon a time (1960?) the electric guitar was new. If you formed a band playing electric guitars you would encounter two kinds of opposition. One is “don’t be a musician, too many people want to be musicians.” The other is “learn violin or trumpet, not something faddy like electric guitar, electric guitar isn’t going to last.” But some players turned into rock stars and soon every-one wanted to play electric guitar, turning it into a common dream and spoiling it as an example of an uncommon dream.
I think there is a similar tale to tell about computer games. Once upon a time (1980?) computer games were new. If you wanted to be a computer game programmer, it was an uncommon dream and you could succeed. Now it is a common motivation for young people studying computer science and the job niche is over-subscribed.
Thanks for that link, it’s a sequence post that I somehow missed. I don’t think it’s completely correct though, just wrote a comment there.