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A Rider's Moral Relationship With A 1930s

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“scientific management” was people fixed their own things without taking them to the shop or paying someone to come fix it. A rider’s “moral” relationship with a 1930s motorcycle is that old bikes don't flatter you, they educate you. His or hers relationship with a new mercedes would be different because of the electronic equipment and the facts of physics operate on such a scale that they do not present themselves to immediate experience for the user. The “moral significance” of the change as society as a whole has moved from vehicles like a 1930s motorcycle to those like a new mercedes because it's something that is hard and unyielding. Everyone wants to have the nicest things in their vehicles.
Philosopher Albert Borgmann makes a distinction

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