-- Leo's gemini proxy

-- Connecting to yujiri.xyz:1965...

-- Connected

-- Sending request

-- Meta line: 20 text/gemini; lang=en

yujiri.xyz

Argument

Punishment and reward are not alternatives


You can find a lot of dissertations pretending to compare punishment for undesired behavior with reward for desired behavior to determine which is more effective as a motivator.

Exhibit A

Exhibit B

Exhibit C

The insightful one

But this whole framing is wrong, because punishment and reward are not alternatives.


Punishment as a motivator applies when the subject does what you don't want. Reward applies when they do what you *do* want. And the only difference between a punishment and the loss of a reward or between a reward and the escape of a punishment is the default state - if a slave is regularly beaten by their master, it functions as a reward when they don't get beaten. If a child is regularly given presents, it's a punishment when they don't get a present. In other words, the actual choice is not "to punish bad behavior or to reward good behavior", but "how generous to be in the first place". So it's not about which is more effective. It's about how generous you're going to be.

-- Response ended

-- Page fetched on Mon May 20 14:19:19 2024