in reply to Re^3: Canonization Without Representation
in thread Canonization Without Representation

Hi Marto, this is great question, made me think long time. I took this for granted! Aristotle forgive me! Is it not? I think in a more broad sense, it was to reward morally superior behavior and punish morally inferior behavior, but I don't think it accomplishes that. Your questions are good but what it used to accomplish should not be what we should focus on now but what is it 1. de facto accomplishing (systemic discrimination) 2. GOING to accomplish in the future 3. what it COULD accomplish if it was improved.
  • Comment on Re^4: Canonization Without Representation

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Re^5: Canonization Without Representation
by marto (Cardinal) on Mar 18, 2017 at 07:50 UTC

    I suggest you read and understand the wiki entry for gamification. The facts reported by Your_Mother show that people who have been here much less than you (in one example 4 months) have more XP than you, which proves your argument of discrimination to be false. If people expend more effort in something they tend to reap the 'rewards'. XP has no tangible rewards, consider it a fairly meaningless virtual badge of honour. Few privileges are gained after the very early levels. Acquisition of XP is a by product of helping people and making a positive contribution. If this is your goal consider spending your time in a manner that will gain you some.

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