In You Provably Can't Trust Yourself, Eliezer tried to figured out why his audience didn't understand his meta-ethics sequence even after they had followed him through philosophy of language and quantum physics. Meta-ethics is my specialty, and I can't figure out what Eliezer's meta-ethical position is. And at least at this point, professionals like Robin Hanson and Toby Ord couldn't figure it out, either.
Part of the problem is that because Eliezer has gotten little value from professional philosophy, he writes about morality in a highly idiosyncratic way, using terms that would require reading hundreds of posts to understand. I might understand Eliezer's meta-ethics better if he would just cough up his positions on standard meta-ethical debates like cognitivism, motivation, the sources of normativity, moral epistemology, and so on. Nick Beckstead recently told me he thinks Eliezer's meta-ethical views are similar to those of Michael Smith, but I'm not seeing it.
If you think you can help me (and others) understand Eliezer's meta-ethical theory, please leave a comment!
Update: This comment by Richard Chappell made sense of Eliezer's meta-ethics for me.
Eliezer's metaethics might be clarified in terms of the distinctions between sense, reference, and reference-fixing descriptions. I take it that Eliezer wants to use 'right' as a rigid designator to denote some particular set of terminal values, but this reference fact is fixed by means of a seemingly 'relative' procedure (namely, whatever terminal values the speaker happens to hold, on some appropriate [if somewhat mysterious] idealization). Confusions arise when people mistakenly read this metasemantic subjectivism into the first-order semantics or meaning of 'right'.
In summary:
(i) 'Right' means, roughly, 'promotes external goods X, Y and Z'
(ii) claim i above is true because I desire X, Y, and Z.
Note that Speakers Use Their Actual Language, so murder would still be wrong even if I had the desires of a serial killer. But if I had those violent terminal values, I would speak a slightly different language than I do right now, so that when KillerRichard asserts "Murder is right!" what he says is true. We don't really disagree, but are instead merely talking past each other.
Virtues of the theory:
(a) By rigidifying on our actual, current desires (or idealizations thereupon), it avoids Inducing Desire Satisfactions.
(b) Shifting the subjectivity out to the metasemantic level leaves us with a first-order semantic proposal that at least does a better job than simple subjectivism at 'saving the phenomena'. (It has echoes of Mark Schroeder's desire-based view of reasons, according to which the facts that give us reasons are the propositional contents of our desires, rather than the desires themselves. Or something like that.)
(c) It's naturalistic, if you find moral non-naturalism 'spooky'. (Though I'd sooner recommend Mackie-style error theory for naturalists, since I don't think (b) above is enough to save the phenomena.)
Objections
(1) It's incompatible with the datum that substantive, fundamental normative disagreement is in fact possible. People may share the concept of a normative reason, even if they fundamentally disagree about which features of actions are the ones that give us reasons.
(2) The semantic tricks merely shift the lump under the rug, they don't get rid of it. Standard worries about relativism re-emerge, e.g. an agent can know a priori that their own fundamental values are right, given how the meaning of the word 'right' is determined. This kind of (even merely 'fundamental') infallibility seems implausible.
(3) Just as simple subjectivism is an implausible theory of what 'right' means, so Eliezer's meta-semantic subjectivism is an implausible theory of why 'right' means promoting external goods X, Y, Z. An adequately objective metaethics shouldn't even give preferences a reference-fixing role.
What is objection (1) saying? That asserting there are moral facts is incompatible with the fact that people disagree about what they are? Specifically, when people agree that there is such a thing as a reason that applies to both of them, they disagree about how the reason is caused by reality?
Do we not then say they are both wrong about there being one "reason"?
I speak English(LD). You speak English(RC). The difference between our languages is of the same character as that between a speaker of Spanish and a speaker of French. I say "I"... (read more)