To have this attitude, you need a strong presumption of your own superiority. Instead of engaging them in a conversation where you can both better discover the truth, with you also remaining open to info they may offer, you decide this is war and "all is fair in love and war." You know what is true and what is good for the world and you've decided it is important enough to the world for them to believe your truth that you will force it upon them in any way you can. No doubt this is a possible situation, and there is possible evidence that could reasonably convince you that this is your situation. But do pause and consider whether your confidence might be overconfidence, biased by arrogance, and also consider the consequences of their hearing that this is in fact your attitude toward them.
I'd like to hear some justification - some extensive justification, at least a sequence's worth - explaining how building a Friendly AI, with the already-expressed intent of beating all other AIs to the punch and then using your position of power to suppress or destroy construction of any other AIs at any cost, and to make yours a singleton designed in such a way that the values you programmed it with can never be altered -
-- can amount to anything other than what Robin just described.
(Elaborating after a day with no responses)
I realize that the first answ...
The product of Less Wrong is truth. However, there seems to be a reluctance of the personality types here - myself included - to sell that product. Here's my evidence:
We actually label many highly effective persuasive strategies that can be used to market our true ideas as "dark arts". What's the justification for this negative branding? A necessary evil is not evil. Even if - and this is a huge if - our future utopia is free of dark arts, that's not the world we live in today. Choosing not to use them is analogous to a peacenik wanting to rid the world of violence by suggesting that police not use weapons.
We treat our dislike of dark arts as if it's a simple corollary of the axiom of the virtue of truth. Does this mean we assume the ends (more people believe the truth) doesn't justify the means (persuasion to the truth via exploiting cognitive biases)? Or are we just worried about being hypocrites? Whatever the reason, such an impactful assumption deserves an explanation. Speaking practically, the successful practice of dark arts requires the psychological skill of switching hats, to use Edward de Bono's terminology. While posting on Less Wrong, we can avoid and are in fact praised for avoiding dark arts, but we need to switch up in other environments, and that's difficult. Frankly, we're not great at it, and it's very tempting to externalize the problem and say "the art is bad" rather than "we're bad at the art".
Our distaste for rhetorical tactics, both aesthetically and morally, profoundly affects the way we communicate. That distaste is tightly coupled with the mental habit of always interpreting the value of what is said purely for its informational content, logical consistency, and insight. I'm basing the following question on my own introspection, but I wonder if this almost religiously entrenched mental habit could make us blind to the value of the art of persuasion? Let's imagine for a moment, the most convincing paragraph ever written. It was truly a world-wonder of persuasion - it converted fundamentalist Christians into atheists, suicide bombers into diplomats, and Ann Coulter-4-President supporters into Less Wrong sycophants. What would your reaction to the paragraph be? Would you "up-vote" this work of genius? No way. We'd be competing to tell the fundamentalist Christian that there were at least three argument fallacies in the first sentence, we'd explain to the suicide bomber that the rhetoric could be used equally well to justify blowing us all up right now, and for completeness we'd give the Ann Coulter supporter a brief overview of Bayesianism.