I find it funny how in fiction hubris is a high-brow way of saying “you scienced way too hard and now the universe is going to punish you for Defying The Natural Order™” with the implication that hubris is some kind of character flaw: the character flaw of trying to make things better with science
but in actual Greek myths hubris basically just means “you proved you were better than a god at something and all of the gods are massive raging narcissists so now they’re going to curse you about it”
except where’s the Greek myth about someone committing hubris by inventing agriculture and mortally wounding the god of starvation? or the Greek myth where someone commits hubris by inventing the bifurcated needle and killing the god of smallpox?
it was hubris to invent vaccines. it was hubris to discover how to safely transfuse blood. oral rehydration therapy, germ theory, chlorinated water, synthetic fertilizers. all of these things Go Against The Natural Order and have saved millions to billions of lives, because guess what? the natural order is a fucking atrocity of unimaginable scale. and we are actively stopping it every single day we learn something new about the universe. I think “hubris” is an inherently reactionary concept and it can go straight to hell, which we’re going to destroy someday with science
@kasdeya
do you have any recommends for strongly pro-hubris fiction?
@redrozalia hmm that’s a really good question! I’m sorry to say that I don’t because I’m very sensitive and don’t read a lot of fiction. I think Greg Egan’s Amalgam-Aloof universe could be considered that, because it’s a world where basically every problem that isn’t existential in nature has been solved with technology, but the stories generally aren’t about that. but if you’re interested in that kind of thing, then I’d also highly recommend Diaspora by Greg Egan too (just be warned that there’s a lot of extremely technical infodumping about math stuff too lol. Greg Egan loves that type of thing)
a lot of rationalist fiction tends to be extremely pro-science and pro-hubris, of course, but I haven’t read too much of that - I could only recommend the obvious ones lol
honestly now I’m really curious if anyone else has any good recommendations because I’d love to read something like that
Succubard's Library
@redrozalia @kasdeya I wonder if Humanity Fuck Yeah style fiction sort of fits the bill? 
@OctaviaConAmore @redrozalia ooh that’s a good point! Wearing Power Armor to a Magic School might actually be a great example, now that I think about it
CW: the bad guys in this world are extremely powerful and tyrannical and regressive and emotionally abusive and horrible and the omnipresence of their abuse was kinda suffocating for me personally but I’m very sensitive. I absolutely loved it otherwise though
@kasdeya fair point, but one could also list off the all the things that are useless or actively destructive to humans or the environment, we’re all waiting for big thump from the god of sea level temperatures
@kasdeya Teflon was hubris that killed the god of not-polluting-the-entire-planet-with-forever-chemicals 
well fuck
@kasdeya maybe the post-Hegel, post-Neitzsche Geist of Greek hubris is you or I might call virtue in the polis. Maybe it's either that, or we are all virtueless Uber mensches through our collective volition. Either Or. 👀
@kasdeya you might enjoy "a visitor to the future" by chronohawk.
Not sure, but you might. I can instead link a relevant hugely-deep-into-the-story spoiler chapter. Its a chapter more brazenly science hubris than the rest imo.
@kasdeya we always thought that the type of hubris in sci-fi was like . . . an oddly specific archetype of one way hubris could occur
like we thought hubris was (more broadly) just extreme overconfidence. like it's not necessarily challenging the gods, or the order of things, but like also day to day things like "oh hey i'm so good at driving in the snow i don't need to slow down" leading to predictably sliding off the road
if hubris is just "challenging gods and nature bad" then yeah it should be forgotten as a moral, but if it's also the more broad idea of overconfidence . . . we say maybe keep it around? in a world of "vibe coding" and "well chatgpt told me this" it seems like a useful trait to talk about if nothing else