Will_Sawin comments on Rationality Quotes: June 2011 - Less Wrong

4 Post author: Oscar_Cunningham 01 June 2011 08:17AM

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Comment author: Peterdjones 22 June 2011 04:15:29PM 0 points [-]

And if i can show that consequentialism needs to be combined with rules (or something else), does that prove consequentialism is really deontology (or something else)? It is rather easy to show that any one-legged approach is flawed, but if end up with a mixed theory we should not label it as a one-legged theory.

Comment author: Will_Sawin 22 June 2011 04:45:49PM 1 point [-]

Then you should end up violating one of the axioms and getting a not-consequentialism.

All consequentialist theories produce a set of rules.

The right way to define "deontology", then, is a theory that is a set of rules that couldn't be consequentialist.

if you mix consequentialism and deontology, you get deontology.

Comment author: Alicorn 22 June 2011 04:48:48PM 3 points [-]

If you mix consequentialism and deontology you get Nozickian side-constraints consequentialism.

Comment author: Peterdjones 22 June 2011 04:58:42PM 1 point [-]

Good example. You could have consequnentialism about what you should do, and deontology about what you should refrain from.

Comment author: Will_Sawin 22 June 2011 05:12:58PM 1 point [-]

Considering that: this whole discussion was about how Robert Nozick isn't (wasn't?) a consequentialist, I think for these purposes we should classify his views as not consequentialism.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 23 June 2011 04:48:17AM 1 point [-]

Would you count Timeless Decision Theory as deontological since it isn't pure consequentialism?

Comment author: Will_Sawin 23 June 2011 02:16:23PM 1 point [-]

No, it's a decision theory, not an ethical theory.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 24 June 2011 03:30:51AM 1 point [-]

I don't understand the distinction you're making.

Comment author: Will_Sawin 24 June 2011 03:32:48AM 1 point [-]

Decision theories tell you what options you have: Pairs of actions and results.

Ethical theories tells you which options are superior.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 24 June 2011 04:11:34AM *  2 points [-]

Perhaps an example of what I mean will be helpful.

Suppose your friend is kidnapped and being held for ransom. Naive consequentialism says you should pay because you value his life more then the money. TDT says you shouldn't pay because paying counterfactually causes him to be kidnapped.

Note how in the scenario the TDT argument sounds very deontological.

Comment author: Will_Sawin 24 June 2011 04:22:17AM 1 point [-]

It sounds deontological, but it isn't. It's consequentialist. It evaluates options according to their consequences.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 24 June 2011 04:35:05AM 3 points [-]

"Consequences" only in a counterfactual world. I don't see how you can call this consequentialist without streching the term to the point that it could include nearly any morality system. In particular by your definition Kant's categorical imperative is consequentialist since it involves looking at the consequences of your actions in the hypothetical world where everyone performs them.

Comment author: SilasBarta 24 June 2011 04:48:51PM 1 point [-]

Yes, in that TDT-like decision/ethical theories are basically "consequentialism in which you must consider 'acausal consequences'".

While it may seem strange to regard ethical theories that apply Kant's CI as "consequentialist", it's even stranger to call them deontological, because there is no deontic-like "rule set" they can be said to following; it's all simple maximization, albeit with a different definition of what you count as a benefit. TDT, for example, considers not only what your action causes (in the technical sense of future results), but the implications of the decision theory you instantiate having a particular output.

(I know there are a lot of comments I need to reply to, I will get to them, be patient.)

Comment author: benelliott 24 June 2011 03:32:41PM *  0 points [-]

Both CDT and TDT compare counter-factuals, they just take their counter-factual from different points in the causal graph.

In both cases, while computing them you never assume anything which you know to be false, whereas Kant is not like that. (Just realised, I'm not sure this is right).

Comment author: Will_Sawin 24 June 2011 04:46:04AM -1 points [-]

Yes. However that decision theory is wrong and dumb so we can ignore it. In particular, it never produces factuals, only counterfactuals.

Comment author: wedrifid 24 June 2011 03:51:15AM 1 point [-]

Decision theories tell you what options you have: Pairs of actions and results.

You don't need decision theories for that. You can get that far with physics and undirected imagination.

Comment author: Normal_Anomaly 24 June 2011 03:25:48PM 0 points [-]

How about this:

Physics tells you pairs of actions and results.

Ethical theories tell you what results to aim for.

Decision theories combine the two.

Comment author: Will_Sawin 24 June 2011 04:20:42AM 0 points [-]

That's only true if you're a human being.

Comment author: wedrifid 24 June 2011 05:42:35AM *  1 point [-]

That's only true if you're a human being.

That is not my understanding. The only necessary addition to physics is "any possible mechanism of varying any element in your model of the universe". ie. You need physics and a tiny amount of closely related mathematics. That will give you a function that gives you every possible action -> result pair.

I believe this only serves to strengthen your main point about the possibility of separating epistemic investigation from ethics entirely.

Comment author: Will_Sawin 24 June 2011 03:07:04PM 0 points [-]

"any possible mechanism of varying any element in your model of the universe".

That's a decision theory. For instance, if you perform causal surgery, that's CDT. If you change all computationally identical elements, that's TDT. And so on.