wnoise comments on Undiscriminating Skepticism - Less Wrong

97 Post author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 14 March 2010 11:23PM

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Comment author: Morendil 15 March 2010 04:03:51PM *  5 points [-]

Therefore, anyone who says that such a position (for instance, being open to polyamory) indicates rationality, is merely stating their tribal affiliation.

I wouldn't suppose that "being open to polyamory" per se indicates rationality. But I would consider someone rational who, having thought about the matter, and concluded on the basis of sound reasoning that there is no valid reason to condemn polyamory, decided to adopt that lifestyle even in the face of some cultural opposition.

And I would consider someone irrational who, having no sound reasoning behind that position, would act in such a way as to deny others the enjoyment of a non-straight-monogamous lifestyle.

Controversies involving third parties are a valid matter of debate, for instance, I'd concede that there is some grounds to ask whether gay couples should adopt. But to assert, without argument, an interest in what consenting adults do behind closed doors, and that doesn't cause anyone lasting harm, just because it concerns sex - that does strike me as irrational.

Comment author: wnoise 15 March 2010 04:41:55PM *  2 points [-]

This all presupposes a consequentialist and libertarian ethic: that morality is about harm.

Comment author: Morendil 15 March 2010 05:14:38PM 5 points [-]

This all presupposes a consequentialist and libertarian ethic: that morality is about harm.

Not necessarily - I don't think of myself as a consequentialist but as a contractarian. Although I'm less than firm in my metaethical convictions.

Still, I have the clear intuition that someone who would assert a claim against me, based on who I chose to spend time in bed with, isn't all right in the head. They wouldn't deny me the right to have dinner with whomever I choose, and (within some reasonable bounds on consent, privacy, and promises made to other people) I see no sound basis to distinguish sex from another sensual experience like dinner.

At the moment I am straight, monogamous, and in fact legally married (for fiscal reasons mostly), but I see no reason to elevate my personal choices and inclinations to the status of universal moral law.

Comment author: wnoise 15 March 2010 05:32:28PM 4 points [-]

There really do exist those who consider who you're having dinner with, and what you're eating to be valid regulatory targets.

Comment author: CronoDAS 15 March 2010 08:37:47PM 4 points [-]

Consuming human meat is generally disapproved of...

Comment author: sketerpot 15 March 2010 09:43:45PM 9 points [-]

Hey, good idea. New question for getting evidence of rationality: "How do you feel about cannibalism? Not killing people, just the act of eating human meat. Imagine that the meat was vat-grown, or you're a starving survivor of a plane crash, or something."

Comment author: ata 15 March 2010 10:04:57PM *  10 points [-]

I remember once reading Richard Stallman saying that when he dies, if his body cannot be used for medical research, he would want it to be used for cannibalism or necrophilia.

A rather weird thing to say, but on reflection, not quite as weird as people's usual thoughts on death — "I want my body to be put into the ground so it can decompose" or "I want my body to be burned so it can be of no use to anybody" — right?

Comment author: gregconen 15 March 2010 11:28:32PM *  20 points [-]

Well, along with medical research, organ donation and cryonics also probably exceed the expected utility of cannibalism or necrophilia.

That said, I'm not sure they would be mutually exclusive. My head for my future self, my innards for the sick, my penis and anus for lovers, and my arms and legs for the hungry.

Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 15 March 2010 11:30:32PM 20 points [-]

My head for my future self, my innards for the sick, my penis and anus for lovers, and my arms and legs for the hungry.

NEW UTILITARIAN LITMUS TEST

Comment author: dclayh 16 March 2010 07:31:56PM 3 points [-]

Perhaps a slightly more poetic phrasing like "My head for myself, my organs for the sick, my crotch for the horny, and my limbs for the hungry."

(Of course the most tasty meat is on the torso, at least in cows...)

Comment author: Liron 16 March 2010 03:29:10AM *  4 points [-]

Cryonics and organ donation is really a winning combination. It solves the organ donor's worry that doctors might not take long shots at saving your life if they can harvest your organs instead.

Comment author: MBlume 25 December 2010 08:03:53AM 1 point [-]

As I understand, current cryo practices use your circulatory system to get cryopreservant into your brain, and this leaves your organs useless.

Is this wrong?

Comment author: Kevin 15 March 2010 10:17:39PM *  1 point [-]

I tried searching to find a citation for this and the most obvious keywords just take me here. 50 karma to anyone who has enough Google-fu to find me a citation.

Comment author: ata 15 March 2010 10:26:44PM 3 points [-]

I was thinking of the fourth post on this page. Looks like I misremembered, he didn't mention cannibalism, but given the rest of that post, I'd bet money that he'd be fine with it (perhaps as a third choice).

Comment author: Jack 15 March 2010 10:25:13PM 1 point [-]

Here.

Command-F "corpse".

Comment author: thomblake 15 March 2010 11:01:38PM 3 points [-]

Command-F "corpse".

In context and reading quickly, I thought you were suggesting a macro in Emacs.

Comment author: FAWS 15 March 2010 09:48:26PM 1 point [-]

I think disgust is the normal reaction and doesn't tell anything about rationality so you'd need to ask about the ethics of eating human meat.

Comment author: ata 15 March 2010 09:58:02PM *  0 points [-]

It could be a good test of feeling rational, if the premises were defined clearly enough. Presumably, most of us would not object morally to the idea of eating human meat if we were certain that it had been vat-grown, and would not object practically if we were reasonably sure that it is safe, but I'd guess that many of us would have a cached disgust response anyway, which, under these circumstances, would not be rational (because the disgust emotion would be stopping us from doing something that does not oppose our goals or values). I have to admit I'd probably fall into that group, those people who would not morally object but would feel disgusted anyway (especially as I'm used to feeling disgusted by all meat).

Comment author: FAWS 16 March 2010 09:43:36PM *  2 points [-]

ISTM that the most likely evolutionary origin of disgust is a warning sign of a high risk of infection or poisoning, which would be present in the plane crash scenario so I wouldn't even necessarily call it an irrational feeling.

Moreover not being content with someone merely acting rationally when being confronted with a powerful impulse towards a certain reaction that in this particular situation happens to be irrational, but going so far as requiring that they not even feel this impulse in that situation seems to be asking a bit much. One might say that displaying this attitude towards humans is rather irrational.

Comment author: [deleted] 16 March 2012 12:58:25PM 0 points [-]

"How do you feel about cannibalism? Not killing people, just the act of eating human meat. Imagine that the meat was vat-grown, or you're a starving survivor of a plane crash, or something."

Dunno, I've never tasted it.

Comment author: sketerpot 16 March 2012 08:57:27PM 2 points [-]

If your main decision criterion is the taste of the meat, then you have already given your answer.

(I hear it tastes more or less like pork, in case you were wondering.)

Comment author: Document 17 March 2010 06:43:21AM 0 points [-]

Hey, good idea. New question for getting evidence of rationality: "How do you feel about cannibalism? Not killing people, just the act of eating human meat. Imagine that the meat was vat-grown, or you're a starving survivor of a plane crash, or something."

Vat-grown meat could still be a problem if it provided the real (killer) cannibals with camouflage.

Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 15 March 2010 09:49:43PM 10 points [-]

If you uploaded, would you be willing to let someone else eat your body if they were, y'know, into that sort of thing?

Comment author: Jordan 17 March 2010 03:03:38AM 12 points [-]

If you wanted to kill yourself you could satisfy the desires of quite a few fringe people at once: have a psychopath kill you, a necrophiliac rape you, and a cannibal eat you. Hell, if done under the right medical supervision it might even be possible to save the organs too (of course, if I were a cannibal I'd probably be bummed out if I didn't get any liver).

Comment author: RobinZ 17 March 2010 01:21:55PM 4 points [-]

Wait, is it rape if you give pre-mortem consent?

Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 17 March 2010 08:02:28AM 9 points [-]

I am constantly amazed by the number of people who commit suicide without getting on the evening news.

Comment author: Strange7 18 April 2011 03:59:36PM 4 points [-]

I've heard that many deaths ruled suicide might be better classified as signaling botches. That is, the individual in question was doing something with the lowest available probability of actually killing them, which would still be recognized as a suicide attempt and thereby provoke reassurances. A multifetish scenario would be far enough outside societal norms to be unlikely to attract support, and virtually impossible to survive.

In other cases, it's a matter of extreme altruism, not wanting to be a burden on others. That's more compatible with the psychopath/necrophile/cannibal option, but, statistically speaking, so few people empathize with any of those demographics (let alone all three) that they aren't common targets for even minor altruism, let alone literal self-sacrifice.

Comment author: wnoise 17 March 2010 05:54:11AM 1 point [-]

Liver grows back far more readily than any other organ. It might be possible to give the cannibal a slice and still use the rest. Of course, given the shortages of livers, it would probably be better to split it and graft into multiple people.

Comment author: Kevin 15 March 2010 10:28:57PM 1 point [-]

Depends on my current state of wealth and the current meaning of "wealth" in the universe. I think if I uploaded I'd still prefer to be frozen/vitrified (or whatever the current state of the art with regards to that is), just in case I ever changed my mind. Also, I hold a bit of sentimental value towards my body, and if I could afford to keep it well preserved for an extremely long time, why not?

If, say, I could only afford to upload if I let someone eat my body and that paid better than medical research or donating my organs, sure, a cannibalism fetishist or super-hardcore foodie could eat my body.

Comment author: FAWS 15 March 2010 09:54:00PM 1 point [-]

Eat your simulated body while you are in it (presumably with pain turned off or at least down?) or your original body (which you don't have any use for anymore in the scenario?)?

Comment author: Strange7 15 March 2010 10:16:03PM 0 points [-]

Are you talking about vore in general, or snuffie?

Comment author: thomblake 15 March 2010 05:21:29PM 1 point [-]

I see no sound basis to distinguish sex from another sensual experience like dinner.

I'm not the first to point this out, but by that reasoning, rape is no worse than forcing someone to eat broccoli.

Comment author: Morendil 15 March 2010 05:32:10PM 8 points [-]

I'd appreciate if you would read my parenthetical qualifications before making misleading comments about my "reasoning".

I disapprove of coercion in general, but it seems clear that people in general experience sex as a much more significant experience than eating, to the extent that rape can make for life-threatening emotional trauma. Given these (possibly local) facts of human nature, we would clearly not agree to a social contract that provided no protection from rape.

Comment author: jimmy 16 March 2010 04:36:39AM 3 points [-]

What about forcing 3^^^3 people to eat broccoli?

Comment author: Jack 15 March 2010 10:08:34PM -1 points [-]

At the moment I am straight, monogamous, and in fact legally married (for fiscal reasons mostly), but I see no reason to elevate my personal choices and inclinations to the status of universal moral law.

I don't see any reason to either. The problem is I'm not sure I see a reason not to. Rationality governs our degrees of belief and how we incorporate new evidence into our degrees of belief. I don't see how rationality can govern our terminal values. You're right that there is no sound basis to distinguish sex from dinner, but there is also no sound basis to distinguish sex from murder. To say otherwise requires a pretty untenable kind of moral naturalism. Moral acts and immoral acts aren't natural kinds. PhilGoetz's original point is fully generalizable to all claims about terminal values. Policy positions are indicative of irrationality only when they are inconsistent with the subscriber's own values.

Thus, in my comment elsewhere on this post, I hedged when it came using support for immigration as an indicator of rationality among conservatives because opposition to immigration may well be the right position to hold if you don't value the welfare of immigrants or value cultural homogeneity.

Comment author: Morendil 15 March 2010 10:33:28PM 3 points [-]

but there is also no sound basis to distinguish sex from murder

There clearly is, at least on my contractarian view. You would not consent to a social contract that left you vulnerable to murder, if it could be avoided.

Comment author: Jack 15 March 2010 10:47:43PM 0 points [-]

I'm not sure this works (Why would a strict social conservative consent to a contract that allowed me to have sex with multiple partners at the same time?). But no matter: If the distinction is only non-arbitrary given your normative ethics then you need to give non-arbitrary reasons why we should all be contractarians. Otherwise you've just pushed the conversation back a step.

Comment author: Morendil 16 March 2010 07:10:05AM 2 points [-]

The contract view appeals to me because it takes as a starting point the fact of our living in large groups; that much is non-arbitrary. In this context, some sort of basis for adjudicating our claims against each other is a requirement, just as food or shelter are a requirement. On this view, the features of social contracts that would make for more general agreement - such as protection from murder - can be treated differently from features of these contracts that would make for narrower (temporally and geographically local) agreement. One way to formalize this intuition is Rawls' veil of ignorance.

Comment author: Jack 16 March 2010 09:30:50AM *  0 points [-]

The contract view appeals to me because it takes as a starting point the fact of our living in large groups; that much is non-arbitrary.

I suppose this is a nifty feature for a normative theory to have but there doesn't seem to be a reason why my values must proceed from this fact. I have a theory where an old book tells me what I should value. What argument is there to dissuade me? Moreover, contractarianism is hardly the only normative theory which uses this fact as a starting point. Indeed, the other theory I have in mind, communitarianism, is often sympathetic to certain kinds of social conservative positions!

On this view, the features of social contracts that would make for more general agreement - such as protection from murder - can be treated differently from features of these contracts that would make for narrower (temporally and geographically local) agreement.

True, you can treat them differently. But the social conservative wants to treat them the same.

One way to formalize this intuition is Rawls' veil of ignorance.

Rawls is formalizing our intuitions about justice in a liberal society. But it is exactly that-- a popular intuition. I share this intuition. But there is nothing in rationality (as we mean the term, here) that compels that intuition if you don't already hold it. If you believe in liberal justice it is indeed irrational to oppose polyamory. The point is, lots of people aren't Rawlsian liberals!

Comment author: Morendil 16 March 2010 09:56:48AM 6 points [-]

Looping back to the starting point of this discussion, from which we are in danger of drifting too far, what I wanted to say is that people who take an intolerant position on the subject of (say) homosexuality do not seem to do so after having held up their own ethical intuitions to anything like the kind of scrutiny you and others here are clearly capable of.

Rather, they seem to rationalize an immediate "eww" reaction and look for any ammunition they can find supporting their intution that "people shouldn't do that". That strikes me as irrational. This comment seemed to be saying much the same thing.

My stance, I guess, could be summarized as "Show me someone who has rational reasons to oppose homosexuality, or polyamory." That is, consistent reasons, stable under reflection.

Comment author: mattnewport 16 March 2010 04:25:30PM 8 points [-]

The best general argument for conservativism I've encountered is that we should pay attention to established social customs and innate moral intuitions because the world is a complex place and practices that persist over time probably exist for a good reason. The fact that we don't fully understand the reason for a practice is not enough to discard it, we should exercise caution when messing with established customs because we don't fully understand what customs are key to society achieving whatever level of success it has so far achieved.

I don't fully buy this argument but I think it has some merit. Thus it is not necessarily irrational to see an intuitive "eww" reaction as a reason to think that we should exercise caution when liberalizing attitudes towards the provoking practice. I think the generous interpretation of the social conservative attitude to homosexuality is that the "eww" reaction probably exists for some 'good' reason and should not be totally ignored. Generating hypotheses to explain why the "eww" is beneficial is not necessarily an irrational first step to understanding what's really going on.

Relatively few social conservatives can articulate this argument but some can and I don't think it is fair to dismiss them as irrational. Indeed the more thoughtful conservatives tend to think that most people are not capable of thinking rationally about the costs and benefits of certain behaviours and so social customs must do the work of preserving the 'good' society.

Comment author: Jack 16 March 2010 04:48:07PM 2 points [-]

My stance, I guess, could be summarized as "Show me someone who has rational reasons to oppose homosexuality, or polyamory." That is, consistent reasons, stable under reflection.

I suggest looking up the views of communitarians on these topics. Some names: David Popenoe, Amitai Etzioni. See this book, and especially this part from Popenoe. tl;dr: The won't go as far as the most bigoted but they're also not cool with just affirming homosexuality and out of wedlock promiscuity. Communitarianism isn't my bag of tea but it has pretty firm theoretical foundations and the research that suggests marriage's importance isn't obviously bunk.

As for those who are just rationalizing an "eww" reaction, their mistake isn't basing their terminal values on disgust, their mistake is trying to justify those values in terms liberals, who don't share their intuition, can understand. "Polyamory should be prohibited because polyamory is immoral" is a consistent position. See Jonathan Haidt's page on the foundations of morality. Most people who object to polyamory and homosexuality are coming from the purity/sanctity foundation (i.e. "ewww!"). But there is nothing rationalist or not rationalist about these intuitions. They're just intuitions like all moral reasons. You and I might have more complicated intuitions that can be formalized in interesting ways and employ philosophers-- But I'm with Hume here, you can't reason your way to morality.

Comment author: SilasBarta 16 March 2010 06:09:06PM 0 points [-]

I believe my comment here addresses your concern.

Comment author: simplicio 16 March 2010 08:16:21AM *  1 point [-]

I concur with Morendil that Rawls' "Veil of Ignorance" is a rather elegant way of showing morality to be conditionally objective.

Why would a strict social conservative consent to a contract that allowed me to have sex with multiple partners at the same time?

I think you may be overestimating the consistency of the social conservative viewpoint. If you were to tell them about how, when, where & why they could have sex, they would be outraged - even if you couched it in, say, biblical terms. I don't think many social conservatives really believe that sex is a community matter. They're just applying a good old fashioned double standard. Call them on their own sexual behaviour and they'll rush back to consensual ethics ("none of your business!") so fast you'll see Lorentz contraction.

Comment author: Jack 16 March 2010 09:38:25AM *  1 point [-]

I concur with Morendil that Rawls' "Veil of Ignorance" is a rather elegant way of showing morality to be conditionally objective.

I don't know what work "conditionally" is doing here. But I'm pretty sure Rawls himself doesn't take his theory to justice to show that morality is objective. In fact, in A Restatement he explicitly disclaims that he has demonstrated morality is objective. What he is doing is trying to formalize Western/liberal intuitions about justice.

(EDIT: Just checked. The correct interpretation of the initial publication of A Theory of Justice is that Rawls is trying to demonstrate the objective truth of liberalism, but in later publications he changes his mind in response to criticisms and agrees that he is really just formalizing this intuition of justice as fairness)

I think you may be overestimating the consistency of the social conservative viewpoint. If you were to tell them about how, when, where & why they could have sex, they would be outraged - even if you couched it in, say, biblical terms.

I'm certain there are non-hypocritical social conservatives somewhere. I don't think prohibiting polyamory while also allowing measures of sexual privacy are necessarily inconsistent. Holding that some aspect of sexual behavior should be community matters does not require holding that all aspects of sexual behavior must be community matters.

Comment author: wnoise 16 March 2010 08:23:20AM 0 points [-]

Lorentz contraction. (Oddly enough, I made the opposite correction a week ago for the Lorenz attractor.)

Comment author: simplicio 16 March 2010 08:25:16AM 0 points [-]

Yikes, thanks!