I too, have seen it used too early or in contexts where it probably shouldn’t have been used. As long as people don’t use it so much as an explanation for something, but rather as a description or judgement, its use as a curiosity stopper is avoidable.
So I suppose there is a difference between saying “bad thing x happens because of civilisational incompetence”, and “bad thing x happens, which is evidence that there is civilisational incompetence.”
Separate to this concern is that it also has a slight Lesswrong-exceptionalism ‘peering at the world from above the sanity waterline’ vibe to it as well. But that’s no biggie.
I too, have seen it used too early or in contexts where it probably shouldn’t have been used. As long as people don’t use it so much as an explanation for something, but rather as a description or judgement, its use as a curiosity stopper is avoidable.
So I suppose there is a difference between saying “bad thing x happens because of civilisational incompetence”, and “bad thing x happens, which is evidence that there is civilisational incompetence.”
Separate to this concern is that it also has a slight Lesswrong-exceptionalism ‘peering at the world from above the sanity waterline’ vibe to it as well. But that’s no biggie.