So, what if, the more we understand something, the less we tend to anthropomorphize it, and the less we empathize/sympathize with it?
This is the substance of most hand-wringing about pop neuroscience.
In my reading, it is the substance of the pop neuroscience itself, with or without handwringing. Hardly a week seems to go by without New Scientist or Sci.Am. running an article on how Neuroscience Has Shown that we are mere automata, consciousness does not exist, subjective experience is an illusion (bit of a contradiction there, but this is pop science we're talking about), and there is no such thing as morality, agency, free will, empathy, or indeed any mental phenomenon at all. When these things are not being claimed to be non-existent, consciousness i...
steven0461 (comment under "Preference For (Many) Future Worlds"):
Yvain (Behaviorism: Beware Anthropomorphizing Humans):
Eliezer (Sympathetic Minds):
So, what if, the more we understand something, the less we tend to anthropomorphize it, and the less we empathize/sympathize with it? See this post for some possible examples of this. Or consider Yvain's blue-minimizing robot. At first we might empathize or even sympathize with its apparent goal of minimizing blue, at least until we understand that it's just a dumb program. We still sympathize with the predicament of the human-level side module inside that robot, but maybe only until we can understand it as something besides a "human level intelligence"? Should we keep carrying forward behaviorism's program of de-anthropomorphizing humans, knowing that it might (or probably will) reduce our level of empathy/sympathy towards others?