And what does hypocrisy in politics have to do with changing the use of technical terms?
Out of sight, out of mind. The effects are the same as Codes of Conduct: instead of encouraging discussing problematic issues, they make it safer to not discuss them at all.
I'm starting to feel that you're not engaging this discussion with good intent. who could honestly believe that changing the use of words in a technical context is about removing any and all discussion on real slavery?
Not "about": the inevitable consequence, because the same has happened time and time again.
There is not a single case where banning a term has helped. All it does is soothe egos and uncontrolled emotions.
Prove right now that changing the use of master and slave in a technical context will actually stop anyone from talking about actual modern slavery. Causal links right through from A to B, please.
All I can do is describe what has happened before when this has been done, and that does not seem to suffice as proof to you.
In the USA, regions where public talk of "sex" is seen as offensive, have the highest teen pregnancy and abortion rates.
Changing the term for dark-skinned humans from negroes to blacks to colored people to people of color has improved nothing. At worst, it has taught others that these people are so sensitive that it is better to not engage them at all if possible.
Forcing people to use neopronouns has not made life any easier for actual trans people. Ordinary people outside the Twatter/Fecalbook social media circle jerk only see the trouble stirred up (what with people losing their jobs), and only learn to avoid them altogether if possible, because people do not want trouble. They are not antagonistic toward the people, just see that interacting with them and making an innocent error may cost one their job, so it is better to not interact at all.
"Master" and "slave" are technical terms that describe a relationship. They are not intrinsic to human slavery,
duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuude.
What? My emphasis was on human. Perhaps I could have stated it better, maybe "Not all slaves are human"?
With respect to animals, we often call it "parasitism" instead of slavery. For example, a cuckoo exploits the biological imperatives of other birds, laying its egg in their nest, so that when the cuckoo hatches, it'll push out the original eggs before they hatch, and exploit the parents' biological need to feed the chick even if it looks different. A fungus, ophiocordyceps unilateralis, takes over the higher functions of ants, so that it can spreads its spores much futher. Toxoplasma gondii in rats and mice eradicates their fear of predators, ensuring the lifecycle of the parasite.
In many European countries, we have acknowledged the "personhood" and basic rights of nonhuman species, like certain whales, dolphins, gorillas, chimpanzees, elephants, and so on. If you take an elephant as a calf, isolate it from its family, and force it to work for you by carrying tourists, it is slavery.
So, slavery and the terms "master" and "slave" are not intrinsically tied to humans. They are terms that describe an unilateral relationship, subjucation. People who object these terms do not understand that it is not the words themselves that are offensive, they just find their own emotional reaction to them displeasing.
Subjucation or master/slave relationship with respect to inanimate objects and mechanisms not involving living beings, is perfectly ethical. There is nothing inherently negative or offensive in the terms themselves. The offensive bit is enslaving a living being, or a self-conscious being; and we all already agree that we should do more to stop that. Some of us object to banning the use of those terms in unrelated fields, because it moves the focus away from the true issues.
As an example, none of the people who have been freed from slavery find the terms offensive. Quite the opposite: the ones I've heard of have publically expressed appreciation for acknowledging that we are not yet free of slavery, and that these actual slaves are not
forgotten. So, exactly
what is it in "master" and "slave" in a technical context that is offensive? An argument that someone else might feel bad by being reminded that some of their ancestors were once slaves is not sane; such a person needs therapy, not everyone else in the world to change what words they use.
but surely thou realise'st they don't HAVE to be going forward.
Of course. I have no objection to new terms, as long as they occur naturally.
It is the process of demanding others change, while completely ignoring the underlying matter – or have you seen a single one of these technical term objectionists talk about efforts to end modern day slavery? I haven't, besides yourself, after I first brought it up –, that I object to.
It is exactly the same thing as changing "colored people" to "people of color" and getting people fired if they use the former instead of the latter. It is not progress, it is arbitrary control of speech, and has never ever resulted in anything positive. It just emphasises the differences between people.
As I mentioned
earlier, Anthony Greenwald, one of the leading experts in implicit bias research, basically states that for everyone to have equal opportunity, we should ignore their particular personal characteristics like race and gender, and instead look at their output and interactions with others only.
If you disagree, you need to consider why. Greenwald has done a lot of research on this, and has come to that conclusion based on that. What basis do you have for your opinion?
I personally do not have any emotional connection to any words in English, because it is not my native language. The way Finnish works, people often invent new terms (by combining existing words and onomatopoeia) that are immediately obvious to others. According to what I know about history and similar efforts before, forced change never leads to positive results. It is a wasted effort, that only leads to emphasizing the differences between people, driving them apart.
I have already had to give up answering questions at StackOverflow/StackExchange, because I am unable to comply with their forced neopronoun policy. (It is because Finnish has no gendered pronouns or grammatical gender at all, and I still get even him/her wrong occasionally. I love to use 'they', just because it's so much
easier for me. The grammatical gender in Swedish and German drove me crazy; my brain just didn't grasp the distinction, and had to learn them by rote.)
I would be completely at ease going with the flow if people started using "käskijä" instead of "master", and "käskytetty" instead of "slave". They're clunky, sure, but anything new tends to feel odd at first. It is not the change I object. It is the completely illogical reasoning behind the demand for change – or more like banning, since there are no good replacement terms suggested yet that would be as intuitively understandable in a technical context as "master" and "slave" are right now –, and the fact that the results from the demanded change have thus far always been negative, and therefore the demand makes no sense,
and is in itself detrimental to everybody.