Objectivist Essays
Does anyone know if there is still publications like the objectives essays that were captured in books like Capitalism the unknown ideal?
I would love (and pay well) for some research about why Worldcom and Enron failed and why the laws that were put in place to "stop" it from happening again wont work. Or what ahppened with the suit against boing to keep them from moving. Or what Core education guidlines are likely to miss educate our kids on... point is there is a lot out there and little scientific and well researched data to combat it with. Such essays would be very useful knowledge to have at hand when talking with a person who is not yet brain dead, but headed that way in favor of larger government. It would provide very useful talking points backed with good data. Such articles are in dire need of being researched and written. I know of no such publication but would love to buy it if one exists.
I would love (and pay well) for some research about why Worldcom and Enron failed and why the laws that were put in place to "stop" it from happening again wont work. Or what ahppened with the suit against boing to keep them from moving. Or what Core education guidlines are likely to miss educate our kids on... point is there is a lot out there and little scientific and well researched data to combat it with. Such essays would be very useful knowledge to have at hand when talking with a person who is not yet brain dead, but headed that way in favor of larger government. It would provide very useful talking points backed with good data. Such articles are in dire need of being researched and written. I know of no such publication but would love to buy it if one exists.
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There's a new support manager, btw (thanks for the opportunity to bring this up). She keeps calling me "John"... I'm guessing it's because on the 30th and 31st I wore my "John Galt" name badge (along with my 20th century motor corp hat). I haven't corrected her yet.
But, yes, make eye contact with a Walmart customer who's looking for something and they will glom onto you like a drowning man grabbing a rubber raft...
I called and left a message with I think a nephew with my number.
There are some examples of better support out there. Zippo lighters has the highest Net Promoter Score in its sector. They use no scripts, they empower people by telling them to use their brain, come up with solutions and make the customer happy. They have much lower turn over rate than the others and pay 50 cents an hour on average lower than there competitors. People want to go home feeling like they have done a job, not read scripts all day. Customers want to call a place where people are doing a job rather than the job being to read scrips all day. Both are more satisfied when the support rep is allowed to use there mind, then when everything is scripted.
In my view if your getting calls that can be easily scripted you have one more more the following problems:
1. Product is not intuitive in its use.
2. Documentation is poorly done. Either not concise and simple so that it gets used, or simply does not cover it.
3. Your online knowledge-base and community is poorly done.
4. You are helping customers without using the KB articles from #3 above as a guide. Show customers the answers are there and easy to find and follow and they will go get them.
Scripted calls are simply something that should not be done in a call. I want my support reps (in my career usually very technical support engineers) to handle real problems that we have not seen and do not know the answers to.
Anything we have seen three times with the same solution to the problem better be well documents on our KB for the short term, and have a plan from either software or documentation changes to make it go away in the long term.
You do not control costs by pushing customers off from the people who can solve the problems you control costs by working in a way that allows the efforts of 1 engineer to reach multiple customers and feeding information back to development and product management that will allow for the issues to be addressed so that you no longer get calls on them.
that is it in a nutshell.
I wanted to thank you for this post. Particularly it gave me a few people i have not read that I can not look up some books from and read.
I just finished Capitalism, the unknown Ideal for the second time. Incidentally that is what made me post this thread. I craved more essays like those in that book.
I attempt to educate my kids well here at my house. I think its a parents responsibility not a teachers. I want teachers to present material to my kids from all walks of life, governments philosophies.... and them, sometimes on there own and sometimes with my help, to determine which they like, do not like, believe and do not believe.
My oldest son is a senior in high school. His AP US history teacher has been being schooled by him quite often. Thus far this year he had corrected the teacher (according to him) 217 times, and the first 20 or so come to me asking where X is in a book or reference, put together a small essay and taken it back to prove he was right. I think the teacher stopped asking for evidence. I brought this up only because one of those early points he brought in to me to get evidence was the federal reserve not being a government agency. This is the advanced placement US history teacher. His 8th grade US history teacher was much better.
Very good! I hope to read more of your thoughts.
Regards,
O.A.
I am smart enough to know that not everyone interprets every philosopher exactly the same, nor should I expect it.As Sartre wrote, it is the writer's responsibility to write but not overwrite, and the reader then has a responsibility of interpretation. I make value judgements based on what philosophers offers in creating the world in which I want to live.I find both the early writings of Sartre and then Rand fill those requirements, although someone else might reach the same goal via some other philosophers. Also, the writings of John Stuart Mill and Bastiat say what needs to be said to enlighten people to the path of freedom.. For me, philosophy has to be useable, something that the common man can grasp and use daily, Some of the darker writings are great for considering on the side.There are a few areas of writing that say all that needs to be said to keep the engines running and Atlas from Shrugging. Does the philosopher's writing tell man he has always a choice?. Second does it inform him he is responsible for those choices? Does it teach him that socialism and altruism are not compatible with freedom and capitalism. Does the system of philosophy (or education theory) teach that there are no free lunches (yeah some economist got it right too), and that there must be equal trade? People have enough trouble grasping things this simple, albeit difficult to live by. They do not have time, nor usually understanding, to go through the philosophers who base their theories on math, or go so deep and dark that people never come back into the light of trying to live by a philosophy.
Sadly, even Sartre gave up the hard existential dogma and fell into Marxism, but, given more time, would he have come back - one can only speculate. Nietzsche went mad from a brain tumor, so one cannot be sure where his thought would have gone if he had not suffered so .Teachers love to try to apply Maslow, and tinker with his group therapy - yet not one I have met knew that as he watched his system in place, he renounced group therapy in any but the licensed professional's office. Still, teachers are applying it, poorly trained as they are, right in public grade school classrooms. Yet Maslow called such practice "dangerous" - poor students.
Rand made her writing clear and fairly direct."Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal" makes you crave real capitalism, not the sad remnants under which we now live. Kid's should read Rand in school, instead of the nonsense they now assign. By high school, the world I envision (yes, naively) would graduate students who were able to read "Atlas Shrugged" and understand it. They should think, I am, therefore I think - good motto to live by.
I detect that you have an issue with Objectivism. In what way? What is the world you envision? Are you satisfied with broken systems that do not work, and are not meant to work? We live in a dumbed down world where most teachers asked a year ago, did not know the Federal Reserve was not a government agency. Practically no one knew about the bankers' meeting in Basil, Switzerland back when the Fanny Mae scandal hit - yet if lowed interest rates on all our IRAs and pensions. People think the Federal government has a "stash" as one person put it, to get them what they want. No clue it was the tax dollars paid by less than half the population now. Is this good enough to keep Atlas from Shrugging, do you think?. Should we not want better, if only for our own good?
To which God might reply, "It's not My fault you're blind to what's right in front of you."
People ask me for directions too. They shouldn't do that...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nm6DO_7px...
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