But that's ridiculous. I would gladly exchange being tortured for a few seconds - say, waterboarding, like Christopher Hitchens suffered - for, say, an end to starvation worldwide!
More to the point, deleting infinities from your equations works sometimes - I've heard of it being done in quantum mechanics - but doing so with the noisy filter of your personal ignorance, or even the less-noisy filter of theoretical detectability, leaves wide open the possibility of inconsistencies in your system. It's just not what a consistent moral framework looks like.
I agree about the torture for a few seconds.
A utility function is just a way of describing the ranking of desirability of scenarios. I'm not convinced that singularities on the left can't be a part of that description.
In line with my fine tradition of beating old horses, in this post I'll try to summarize some arguments that people proposed in the ancient puzzle of Torture vs. Dust Specks and add some of my own. Not intended as an endorsement of either side. (I do have a preferred side, but don't know exactly why.)
Oh what a tangle. I guess Eliezer is too altruistic to give up torture no matter what we throw at him; others will adopt excuses to choose specks; still others will stay gut-convinced but logically puzzled, like me. The right answer, or the right theory to guide you to the answer, no longer seems so inevitable and mathematically certain.
Edit: I submitted this post to LW by mistake, then deleted it which turned out to be the real mistake. Seeing the folks merrily discussing away in the comments long after the deletion, I tried to undelete the post somehow, but nothing worked. All right; let this be a sekrit area. A shame, really, because I just thought of a scenario that might have given even Eliezer cause for self-doubt: