wedrifid comments on Welcome to Less Wrong! (2012) - Less Wrong

25 Post author: orthonormal 26 December 2011 10:57PM

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Comment author: wedrifid 01 January 2012 08:07:29AM *  6 points [-]

Infanticide of one's own children should be legal (if done for some reason other than sadism) for up to ten months after birth. Reason: extremely young babies aren't yet people.

They're just p-zombies pretending to be people. They only get their soul at 10 months and thereafter are able to detect qualia.

I would vote against this law. I'd vote with guns if necessary. Reason: I like babies. Tiny humans are cute and haven't even done anything to deserve death yet (or indicate that they aren't valuable instances of human). I'd prefer you went around murdering adults (adults being the group with the economic, physical and political power to organize defense.)

Comment author: Solvent 02 January 2012 03:16:20AM 5 points [-]

What do you think of abortion?

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 09:53:43AM *  9 points [-]

Once we get artificial uteri I think it should be illegal except in cases of rape, but it should be legal to renounce all responsibility for it and put it up for adoption or let the other biological parent finance the babies coming to term. This has the neat and desirable effect of equalizing the position of the biological father and the biological mother.

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 09:59:15AM *  2 points [-]

uterus's

Uteri?

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 10:00:25AM 3 points [-]

Not a native speaker. And uterus is a surprisingly sparingly used word.

Uterus. Uterus. Uterus.

Thanks for the correction! :)

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 10:01:55AM *  7 points [-]

Any time ;)

Just remember that if it ends with -us, it probably pluralizes to -i. That's only for latin-based words. Greek-based words, like octopus, can either be pluralized to octopuses or octopodes (pronounced Ahk-top-o-dees). And sometimes you have a new or technical latin-based word like "virus" which just pluralizes to "viruses." It's perfectly fine to pluralize uterus to uteruses, too, since it's so uncommon. English is a bitch.

[Edited to give a longer explanation]

Comment author: gwern 02 January 2012 04:06:42AM 5 points [-]

I have to say, http://lesswrong.com/lw/47k/an_abortion_dialogue/ seems relevant to this entire comment tree.

Comment author: TimS 02 January 2012 04:09:02AM 1 point [-]

Your link (in the Discussion post) is broken.

Comment author: gwern 02 January 2012 04:33:41AM 0 points [-]

! I didn't realize I'd broke all the old .html links - turned out that when I thought I was removing the gzip encoding, I also removed the Apache rewrite rules. I've fixed that and also pointed the Discussion at the most current URL, just in case.

Comment author: Solvent 02 January 2012 04:22:50AM 0 points [-]
Comment author: wedrifid 02 January 2012 07:23:17AM *  1 point [-]

Better late than never?

(From the looks of gwern's link I'm more interested in homophones.)

Comment author: Bakkot 01 January 2012 08:21:45AM *  9 points [-]

If they're p-zombies, they're doing a terrible job of it. Extremely young children are lacking basically all of the traits I'd want a "person" to have.

Tiny kittens are also cute and haven't even done anything to death yet. But if you accidentally lock one in a car and it suffocates, that's merely unfortunate, and should probably not be a crime. The same is true for infants and all other non-person life. If you kill a kitten for some reason other than sadism, well, it's unfortunate that you felt that was necessary, but again, they're not people.

Would you really prefer it to be illegal to murder adults than to murder ten-month-old children? Ten-month-old children can be replaced in a mere twenty months. It takes forty one years to make a new forty-year-old.

Comment author: wedrifid 01 January 2012 10:04:13AM *  1 point [-]

Tiny kittens are also cute and haven't even done anything to death yet. But if you accidentally lock one in a car and it suffocates, that's merely unfortunate, and should probably not be a crime. The same is true for infants and all other non-person life. If you kill a kitten for some reason other than sadism, well, it's unfortunate that you felt that was necessary, but again, they're not people.

Yeah, I get it, you don't consider babies people and I do. So pretty much we just throw down (ie. trying to reason each other into having the same values as ourselves would be pointless). You vote for baby killing, I vote against it. If there is a war of annihilation and I'm forced to choose sides between the baby killers and the non-baby killers and they seem evenly matched then I choose the non-baby killers side and go kill all the baby killers. If I somehow have the option to exclude all consideration of your preferences from the optimisation function of an FAI then I take it. Just a plain ol' conflict of terminal values.

Comment author: Bakkot 01 January 2012 07:03:42PM 6 points [-]

I'm curious now, though. What do you think defines an agent as a person, for the moral calculus? How is it that ten-month-old babies meet this definition? Do, say, pigs also meet this definition?

Comment author: wedrifid 01 January 2012 07:52:41PM 1 point [-]

Do, say, pigs also meet this definition?

If babies were made of bacon then I'd have to rerun the moral calculus all over again! ;)

Comment author: TheOtherDave 01 January 2012 08:04:08PM 4 points [-]

Well, they are made of eggs. Actual eggs and counterfactual bacon are an important part of this nutritious breakfast.

Comment author: wedrifid 01 January 2012 10:17:53AM *  0 points [-]

Oh, and to clarify the extent of my disagreement: When I say "You vote for baby killing, I vote against it" that assumes I don't live in some backwards country without compulsory voting. If voting is optional then I'm staying home. Other people killing babies is not my problem - because I don't have the power to stop a mob of humans from killing babies and I'm not interested in making the token gesture.

Comment author: nshepperd 02 January 2012 01:21:24PM 0 points [-]

trying to reason each other into having the same values as ourselves would be pointless

How do you know?

Comment author: wedrifid 02 January 2012 01:45:29PM 3 points [-]

How do you know?

It is a core belief of Bakkot's - nothing is going to change that. His thinking on the matter is also self consistent. Only strong social or personal influence has a chance of making a difference (for example, if he has children, all his friends have children and he becomes embedded in a tribe where non-baby-killing is a core belief). For my part I understand Bakkot's reasoning but do not share his preference based premises. As such changing my mind regarding the conclusion would make no sense.

More succinctly I don't expect reasoning with each other to change our minds because neither of us is wrong (in the intellectual sense). We shouldn't change our minds based on intellectual arguments - if we do then we are making a mistake.

Comment author: nshepperd 02 January 2012 02:33:41PM 0 points [-]

It is a core belief of Bakkot's - nothing is going to change that.

Yes, and my question is how do you know? Admittedly I haven't read the entire thread from the beginning, but in the large part I have, I see nothing to suggest that there is anything particularly immutable about either of your positions such that neither of you could possibly change your mind based on normal moral-philosophical arguments. What makes you so quick to dismiss your interlocutor as a babyeating alien?

Comment author: wedrifid 02 January 2012 05:41:54PM 5 points [-]

Yes, and my question is how do you know?

I trust his word.

What makes you so quick to dismiss your interlocutor

You're spinning this into a dismissal, disrespect of Bakkot's intellectual capability or ability to reason. Yet disagreement does not equal disrespect when it is a matter of different preferences. It is only when I think an 'interlocutor' is incapable of understanding evidence and reasoning coherently (due to, say, biases or ego) that observing that reason cannot persuade each other is a criticism.

as a babyeating alien?

He is a [babykilling advocate]. He says he is a babykilling advocate. He says why. That I acknowledge that he is an advocate of infanticide rights is not, I would hope, offensive to him.

I note that while Bakkot's self expression is novel, engaging and coherent (albeit contrary to my values), your own criticism is not coherent. You asked "how do you know?" and I gave you a straight answer. Continued objection makes no sense.

Comment author: nshepperd 03 January 2012 12:44:17AM -1 points [-]

I trust his word.

He said his mind could never be changed on this?

You're spinning this into a dismissal, disrespect of Bakkot's intellectual capability or ability to reason. Yet disagreement does not equal disrespect when it is a matter of different preferences.

Spinning? I'm not trying to spin anything into anything. You said this was a matter of different preferences before, and I understood the first time. You don't need to repeat it. My criticism is about why you think this a difference in values rather than a mere confusion of them. (Also, "dismissal" has connotations, but I can't think of a better word to capture "throwing up your hands and going to war with them")

He is a [babykilling advocate]. He says he is a babykilling advocate. He says why. That I acknowledge that he is an advocate of infanticide rights is not, I would hope, offensive to him.

Emphasis was meant to be on alien. Aliens are distinguished by, among other things, not living in our moral reference frame.

Comment author: wedrifid 03 January 2012 12:53:22AM -1 points [-]

You don't need to repeat it. My criticism is about why you think this a difference in values rather than a mere confusion of them.

I answered your question. And I will not repeat it again.

Comment author: Multiheaded 02 January 2012 02:10:10PM *  1 point [-]

Akon was resting his head in his hands. "You know," Akon said, "I thought about composing a message like this to the Babyeaters. It was a stupid thought, but I kept turning it over in my mind. Trying to think about how I might persuade them that eating babies was... not a good thing."

The Xenopsychologist grimaced. "The aliens seem to be even more given to rationalization than we are - which is maybe why their society isn't so rigid as to actually fall apart - but I don't think you could twist them far enough around to believe that eating babies was not a babyeating thing."

"And by the same token," Akon said, "I don't think they're particularly likely to persuade us that eating babies is good." He sighed. "Should we just mark the message as spam?"

Comment author: nshepperd 02 January 2012 02:44:07PM 2 points [-]

The question was "how do you know?", not "what do you mean?". Aliens are almost certain to fundamentally disagree with humans in a variety of important matters, by simple virtue of not being genetically related to us. Bakkot is a human. Different priors are called for.

Comment author: wedrifid 01 January 2012 10:03:16AM *  1 point [-]

Extremely young children are lacking basically all of the traits I'd want a "person" to have.

Most adults don't have traits I'd want a "person" to have. At least with babies there is a chance they'll turn out as worthwhile people.

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 11:34:04AM 3 points [-]

Most adults don't have traits I'd want a "person" to have. At least with babies there is a chance they'll turn out as worthwhile people.

Adults have a small chance of acquiring those traits too. Due to selection effects adults that don't have traits have a much lower probability than a fresh new baby of turning out this way.

In a few decades genetic technology and better psychology and sociology may let us make decent probabilistic predictions about how they will turn out as adults. Are you ok with babies with very low probabilities of getting such traits being killed?

Comment author: wedrifid 02 January 2012 01:56:18PM *  4 points [-]

Adults have a small chance of acquiring those traits too. Due to selection effects adults that don't have traits have a much lower probability than a fresh new baby of turning out this way.

As well as, of course, as having far less malleable minds that have yet to crystallize the habits their upbringing gives them.

Are you ok with babies with very low probabilities of getting such traits being killed?

Far less averse, particularly in an environment where negative externalities cannot be easily prevented. Mind you I would still oppose legalization of killing people (whether babies or adults) just because they are Jerks. Not because of the value of the Jerks themselves (which is offset by their effects on others) but because it isn't just Jerks that would be killed. I don't want other people to have the right to choose who lives and who dies and I'm willing to waive that right myself by way of cooperation in order to see it happen.

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 11:35:55AM *  1 point [-]

I'm not sure why this is getting down voted. "Person" is basically LW speak for "particular kind of machine that has value to me in of itself". I don't see any good reason why I personally should value all people equally. I can see some instrumental value in living in a society that makes rules that operate on this principle.

But generally I do not love my enemies and neighbours like myself. I'm sorry, I guess that's not very Christian of me. ;)

Comment author: wedrifid 01 January 2012 08:46:42AM *  1 point [-]

Would you really prefer it to be legal to murder adults than to murder ten-month-old children?

Yes. The explanation given was significant.

Ten-month-old children can be replaced in a mere twenty months. It takes forty one years to make a new forty-year-old.

It takes a 110 years to make a 110 year old . In most cases I'd prefer to keep a 30 year old than either of them. More to the point I don't intrinsically value creating more humans. The replacement cost of a dead human isn't anything to do with the moral aversion I have to murder.

Comment author: Bakkot 01 January 2012 09:09:07AM 6 points [-]

Yes. The explanation given was significant.

I read your explanation. I'm just somewhat incredulous that this could be your actual belief. Roosters are a lot better prepared to defend themselves than, say, pigs. Is this a good reason to prefer it to be legal to kill roosters than pigs? Not in light of the fact that pigs are vastly more intelligent, capable of abstract reasoning and personality, etc.

The replacement cost of a dead human isn't anything to do with the moral aversion I have to murder.

The moral aversion I have to murder is twofold, roughly: harm to a person, and harm to society. Babies aren't people by any measure I can see, so the first doesn't apply. The second is where replacement cost comes in.

Comment author: Estarlio 01 January 2012 01:16:39PM 1 point [-]

Babies aren't people by any measure I can see

Do you really think it's wise to have a precedent that allows agents of Type X to go around killing off all of the !X group ? Doesn't bode well if people end up with a really sharp intelligence gradient.

Comment author: Bakkot 01 January 2012 07:01:39PM *  8 points [-]

We already have a bunch of those precedents, depending on how you look at it. You're more than free to go around killing ants. No one is going to care. You can even, depending on zoning laws, raise pigs and then slaughter them for their meat. The reason that this is just not a problem in the eyes of the law is that pigs aren't people.

If you look at it another way, we have exactly one precedent: It's generally morally OK to kill members of the !X group if and only if that group consists of agents which are not people.

ETA: I hate that I have to say this, but can people respond instead of just downvoting? I'm honestly curious as to why this particular post is controversial - or have I missed something?

Comment author: TheOtherDave 02 January 2012 05:02:02AM 6 points [-]

I haven't seen anyone respond to your request for feedback about votes, so let me do so, despite not being one of the downvoters.

By my lights, at least, your posts have been fine. Obviously, I can't speak for the site as a whole... then again, neither can anyone else.

Basically, it's complicated, because the site isn't homogenous. Expressing conventionally "bad" moral views will usually earn some downvotes from people who don't want such views expressed; expressing them clearly and coherently and engaging thoughtfully with the responses will usually net you upvotes.

Comment author: wedrifid 02 January 2012 07:34:24AM *  4 points [-]

ETA: I hate that I have to say this, but can people respond instead of just downvoting? I'm honestly curious as to why this particular post is controversial - or have I missed something?

I haven't downvoted, for what it is worth. Sure, you may be an evil baby killing advocate but it's not like l care!

Comment author: Solvent 02 January 2012 07:44:33AM 4 points [-]

but it's not I care!

I think you accidentally a word.

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 06:56:10PM 1 point [-]

ETA: I hate that I have to say this, but can people respond instead of just downvoting? I'm honestly curious as to why this particular post is controversial - or have I missed something?

I often "claim" my downvotes (aka I will post "downvoted" and then give reason.) However, I know that when I do this, I will be downvoted myself. So that is probably one big deterrent to others doing the same.

For one thing, the person you are downvoting will generally retaliate by downvoting you (or so it seems to me, since I tend to get an instant -1 on downvoting comments), and people who disagree with your reason for downvoting will also downvote you.

Also, many people on this site are just a-holes. Sorry.

Comment author: Nornagest 02 January 2012 10:13:55PM 6 points [-]

If I downvote with comment, it's usually for a fairly specific problem, and usually one that I expect can be addressed if it's pointed out; some very clear logical problem that I can throw a link at, for example, or an isolated offensive statement. I may also comment if the post is problematic for a complicated reason that the poster can't reasonably be expected to figure out, or if its problems are clearly due to ignorance.

Otherwise it's fairly rare for me to do so; I see downvotes as signaling that I don't want to read similar posts, and replying to such a post is likely to generate more posts I don't want to read. This goes double if I think the poster is actually trolling rather than just exhibiting some bias or patch of ignorance. Basically it's a cost-benefit analysis regarding further conversation; if continuing to reply would generate more heat than light, better to just downvote silently and drive on.

It's uncommon for me to receive retaliatory downvotes when I do comment, though.

Comment author: wedrifid 02 January 2012 09:08:12PM 6 points [-]

I often "claim" my downvotes (aka I will post "downvoted" and then give reason.) However, I know that when I do this, I will be downvoted myself. So that is probably one big deterrent to others doing the same.

On the other hand if people agree with your reasons they often upvote it (especially back up towards zero if it dropped negative).

For one thing, the person you are downvoting will generally retaliate by downvoting you (or so it seems to me, since I tend to get an instant -1 on downvoting comments)

I certainly hope so. I would expect that they disagree with your reasons for downvoting or else they would have not made their comment. It would take a particularly insightful explanation for your vote for them to believe that you influencing others toward thinking their contribution is negative is itself a valuable contribution.

Also, many people on this site are just a-holes. Sorry.

*arch*

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 09:17:54PM 5 points [-]

For one thing, the person you are downvoting will generally retaliate by downvoting you (or so it seems to me, since I tend to get an instant -1 on downvoting comments)

I certainly hope so. I would expect that they disagree with your reasons for downvoting or else they would have not made their comment. It would take a particularly insightful explanation for your vote for them to believe that you influencing others toward thinking their contribution is negative is itself a valuable contribution.

Do you think that's a good thing, or just a likely outcome?

Downvoting explanations of downvotes seems like a really bad idea, regardless how you feel about the downvote. It strongly incentives people to not explain themselves, not open themselves up for debates, but just vote and then remove themselves from the discussion.

I don't see how downvoting explanations and more explicit behavior is helpful for rational discourse in any way.

Comment author: MixedNuts 02 January 2012 09:53:48PM 3 points [-]

It strongly incentives people to not explain themselves, not open themselves up for debates, but just vote and then remove themselves from the discussion.

This is exactly the reaction I want to trolls, basic questions outside of dedicated posts, and stupid mistakes. Are downvotes of explanations in those cases also read as an incentive not to post explanations in general?

Comment author: wedrifid 02 January 2012 09:56:48PM *  1 point [-]

Do you think that's a good thing, or just a likely outcome?

Comments can serve as calls to action encouraging others to downvote or priming people with a negative or unintended interpretation of a comment - be it yours or that of someone else -that influence is something to be discouraged. This is not the case with all explanations of downvotes but it certainly describes the effect and often intent of the vast majority of "Downvoted because" declarations. Exceptions include explanations that are requested and occasionally reasons that are legitimately surprising or useful. Obviously also an exception is any time when you actually agree they have a point.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 02 January 2012 09:19:04PM 1 point [-]

I might well consider an explanation of a downvote on a comment of mine to be a valuable contribution, even if I continue to disagree with the thinking behind it. Actually, that's not uncommon.

Comment author: MixedNuts 02 January 2012 09:49:10PM 10 points [-]

Common reasons I downvote with no comment: I think the mistake is obvious to most readers (or already mentioned) and there's little to be gained from teaching the author. I think there's little insight and much noise - length, unpleasant style, politically disagreeable implications that would be tedious to pick apart (especially in tone rather than content). I judge that jerkishness is impairing comprehension; cutting out the courtesies and using strong words may be defensible, but using insults where explanations would do isn't.

On the "just a-holes" note (yes, I thought "Is this about me?"): It might be that your threshold for acceptable niceness is unusually high. We have traditions of bluntness and flaw-hunting (mostly from hackers, who correctly consider niceness noise when discussing bugs in X), so we ended up rather mean on average, and very tolerant of meanness. People who want LW to be nicer usually do it by being especially nice, not by especially punishing meanness. I notice you're on my list of people I should be exceptionally nice to, but not on my list of exceptionally nice people, which is a bad thing if you love Postel's law. (Which, by Postel's law, nobody but me has to.) The only LessWronger I think is an asshole is wedrifid, and I think this is one of his good traits.

Comment author: Prismattic 02 January 2012 10:25:10PM 2 points [-]

We have traditions of bluntness and flaw-hunting (mostly from hackers, who correctly consider niceness noise when discussing bugs in X), so we ended up rather mean on average, and very tolerant of meanness.

I think there is a difference between choosing bluntness where niceness would tend to obscure the truth, and choosing between two forms of expression which are equally illuminating but not equally nice. I don't know about anyone else, but I'm using "a-hole" here to mean "One who routinely chooses the less nice variant in the latter situation."

(This is not a specific reference to you; your comment just happened to provide a good anchor for it.)

Comment author: TheOtherDave 02 January 2012 11:25:36PM 1 point [-]

Of course, if that's the meaning, then before I judge someone to be an "a-hole" I need to know what they intended to illumine.

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 10:10:43PM *  3 points [-]

The only LessWronger I think is an asshole is wedrifid, and I think this is one of his good traits.

If he's an asshole, then "asshole" needs a new subdefinition. I love that guy.

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2012 10:07:04PM *  1 point [-]

I notice you're on my list of people I should be exceptionally nice to, but not on my list of exceptionally nice people,

Would you mind discussing this with me, because I find it disturbing that I come off as having double-standards, and am interested to know more about where that impression comes from. I personally feel that I do not expect better behaviour from others than I practice, but would like to know (and update my behaviour) if I am wrong about this.

I admit to lowering my level of "niceness" on LW, because I can't seem to function when I am nice and no one else is. However MY level of being "not nice" means that I don't spend a lot of time finding ways to word things in the most inoffensive manner. I don't feel like I am exceptionally rude, and am concerned if I give off that impression.

I also feel like I keep my "punishing meanness" levels to a pretty high standard too: I only "punish" (by downvoting or calling out) what I consider to be extremely rude behavior (ie "I wish you were dead" or "X is crap.") that is nowhere near the level of "meanness" that I feel like my posts ever get near.

Comment author: MixedNuts 02 January 2012 10:45:37PM 4 points [-]

I come off as having double-standards

You come off as having single-standards. That is, I think the minimal level of niceness you accept from others is also the minimal level of niceness you practice - you don't allow wiggle room for others having different standards. I sincerely don't resent that! My model of nice people in general suggests y'all practice Postel's law ("Be liberal in what you accept and conservative in what you send"), but I don't think it's even consistent to demand that someone follow it.

extremely rude behavior (ie "I wish you were dead" or "X is crap.")

...I'm never going to live that one down, am I? Let's just say that there's an enormous amount of behaviours that I'd describe as "slightly blunter than politeness would allow, for the sake of clarity" and you'd describe as "extremely rude".

Also, while I've accepted the verdict that "<thing> is crap" is extremely rude and I shouldn't ever say it, I was taken aback at your assertion that it doesn't contribute anything. Surely "Don't use this thing for this purpose" is non-empty. By the same token, I'd actually be pretty okay with being told "I wish you were dead" in many contexts. For example, in a discussion of eugenics, I'd be quite fine with a position that implies I should be dead, and would much rather hear it than have others dance around the implication.

Maybe the lesson for you is that many people suck really bad at phrasing things, so you should apply the principle of charity harder and be tolerant if they can't be both as nice and as clear as you'd have been and choose to sacrifice niceness? The lesson I've learned is that I should be more polite in general, more polite to you in particular, look harder for nice phrasings, and spell out implications rather than try to bake them in connotations.

Comment author: Prismattic 02 January 2012 08:32:54PM 4 points [-]

Also, many people on this site are just a-holes. Sorry.

I think it's more that there are a few a-holes, but they are very prolific (well, that and the same bias that causes us to notice how many red lights we get stopped at but not how many green lights we speed through also focuses our attention on the worst posting behavior).

Comment author: TheOtherDave 02 January 2012 09:22:00PM 3 points [-]

Interesting. Who are the prolific "a-holes"?

Comment author: Prismattic 02 January 2012 09:31:01PM 4 points [-]

Explicitly naming names accomplishes nothing except inducing hostility, as it will be taken as a status challenge. Not explicitly naming names, one hopes, leaves everyone re-examining whether their default tone is appropriately calibrated.

Comment author: Solvent 02 January 2012 07:45:18AM 0 points [-]

Well, it sure looks like babies have a lot of things in common with people, and will become people one day, and lots of people care about them.

Comment author: Bakkot 02 January 2012 06:46:47PM 6 points [-]

babies have a lot of things in common with people

If your definition of "people" is going to include AI's but exclude pigs, then babies don't really have much in common with people at all.

and will become people one day

The "will become people" discussion is being had elsewhere in this thread, but recapping briefly: if the reason for not killing babies is that they're going to become people, then (it seems to me) one must conclude that the morally correct thing to do is to create as many people as possible, since the argument is (as far as I can tell) that increasing the number of people in the world is a net positive.

I don't agree with this conclusion, and I doubt you do either. For me, I reject the premise; this nicely explains my rejection of the conclusion. Do you reject the premise, or that the conclusion follows from the premise? Why?

and lots of people care about them

If this is all we're left with, it's a weak argument indeed. What if society started caring a lot about moths? Does this lend significant weight to the proposition that it should be illegal to kill moths?

Comment author: Solvent 03 January 2012 04:06:37AM *  0 points [-]

babies have a lot of things in common with people

I meant humans, not people. Sorry.

And I agree that we should treat animals better. I'm vegetarian.

and will become people one day

I agree that this discussion is slightly complex. Gwern's abortion dialogue contains a lot of relevant material.

However, I don't feel that saying that "we should protect babies because one day they will be human" requires aggregate utilitarianism as opposed to average utilitarianism, which I in general prefer. Babies are already alive, and already experience things.

and lots of people care about them

This argument has two functions. One is the literal meaning of "we should respect people's preferences". See discussion on the Everybody Draw Mohammed day. The other is that other people's strong moral preferences are some evidence towards the correct moral path.

Comment author: Bakkot 04 January 2012 07:27:02PM 0 points [-]

And I agree that we should treat animals better. I'm vegetarian. ...

However, I don't feel that saying that "we should protect babies because one day they will be human" requires aggregate utilitarianism as opposed to average utilitarianism, which I in general prefer. Babies are already alive, and already experience things.

Ah, the fact that you're vegetarian is somewhat illuminating. The next questions, then: Do you think pigs should be weighted more strongly as babies in the moral calculus? If not, is it because babies are going to become people? If it is because babies are going to become people, why does that matter at all?

This argument has two functions. One is the literal meaning of "we should respect people's preferences". See discussion on the Everybody Draw Mohammed day. The other is that other people's strong moral preferences are some evidence towards the correct moral path.

Agreed, but again, it's very weak evidence.

Comment author: Estarlio 01 January 2012 10:35:39PM 0 points [-]

I think you may have taken me to be talking about whether it was acceptable or moral in the sense that society will allow it, that was not my intent. Society allows many unwise, inefficient things and no doubt will do so for some time.

My question was simply whether you thought it wise. If we do make an FAI, and encoded it with some idealised version of our own morality then do we want a rule that says 'Kill everything that looks unlike yourself'? If we end up on the downside of a vast power gradient with other humans do we want them thinking that everything that has little or no value to them should be for the chopping block?

In a somewhat more pithy form, I guess what I’m asking you is: Given that you cannot be sure you will always be strong enough to have things entirely your way, how sure are you this isn’t going to come back and bite you in the arse?

If it is unwise, then it would make sense to weaken that strand of thought in society - to destroy less out of hand, rather than more. That the strand is already quite strong in society would not alter that.

Comment author: Bakkot 01 January 2012 10:45:02PM 2 points [-]

If we do make an FAI, and encoded it with some idealised version of our own morality then do we want a rule that says 'Kill everything that looks unlike yourself'?

No. But we do want a rule that says something like "the closer things are to being people, the more importance should be given to them". As a consequence of this rule, I think it should be legal to kill your newborn children.

how sure are you this isn’t going to come back and bite you in the arse? I'm observably a person. Any AI which concluded otherwise is probably already so dangerous that worrying about how my opinions stated here would affect it is probably completely pointless. So... pretty sure.

Oh, and I'm never encouraging killing your newborns, just arguing that it should be allowed (if done for something other than sadism).

Comment author: Estarlio 02 January 2012 12:42:58AM -1 points [-]

You did not answer me on the human question - how we’d like powerful humans to think .

No. But we do want a rule that says something like "the closer things are to being people, the more importance should be given to them". As a consequence of this rule, I think it should be legal to kill your newborn children.

This sounds fine as long as you and everything you care about are and always will be included in the group of, ‘people.’ However, by your own admission, (earlier in the discussion to wedrifid,) you've defined people in terms of how closely they realise your ideology:

Extremely young children are lacking basically all of the traits I'd want a "person" to have.

You’ve made it something fluid; a matter of mood and convenience. If I make an AI and tell it to save only ‘people,’ it can go horribly wrong for you - maybe you’re not part of what I mean by ‘people.’ Maybe by people I mean those who believe in some religion or other. Maybe I mean those who are close to a certain processing capacity - and then what happens to those who exceed that capacity? And surely the AI itself would do so....

There are a lot of ways it can go wrong.

I'm observably a person.

You observe yourself to be a person. That’s not necessarily the same thing as being observably a person to someone else operating with different definitions.

Any AI which concluded otherwise is probably already so dangerous that worrying about how my opinions stated here would affect it is probably completely pointless. So... pretty sure.

The opinion you state may influence what sort of AI you end up with. And at the very least it seems liable to influence the sort of people you end up with.

Oh, and I'm never encouraging killing your newborns, just arguing that it should be allowed (if done for something other than sadism).

-shrug- You’re trying to weaken the idea that newborns are people, and are arguing for something that, I suspect, would increase the occurrence of their demise. Call it what you will.

Comment author: Bakkot 02 January 2012 01:53:28AM 1 point [-]

You did not answer me on the human question - how we’d like powerful humans to think .

I want powerful humans to have a rule like "the closer things are to being people, the more importance should be given to them".

they realise your ideology

I think I must have been unclear, since both you and wedrifid seemed to interpet the wrong thing. What I meant was that I don't have a good definition for person, but no reasonable partial definition I can come up with includes babies. I didn't at all mean that just because I would like people to be nice to each other, and so on, I wouldn't consider people who aren't nice not to be people. I'd intended to convey this distinction by the quotation marks.

There are a lot of ways it can go wrong.

Obviously. There's a lot of ways any AI can go wrong. But you have to do something. Is your rule "don't kill humans"? For what definition of human, and isn't that going to be awfully unfair to aliens? I think "don't kill people" is probably about as good as you're going to do.

You observe yourself to be a person. That’s not necessarily the same thing as being observably a person to someone else operating with different definitions.

I don't want the rule to be "don't kill people" for whatever values of "kill" and "people" you have in your book. For all I know you're going to interpet this as something I'd understand more like "don't eat pineapples". I want the rule to be "don't kill people" with your definitions in accordance with mine.

-shrug- You’re trying to weaken the idea that newborns are people, and are arguing for something that, I suspect, would increase the occurrence of their demise. Call it what you will.

If you don't understand the distinction between "legal" and "encouraged", we're going to have a very difficult time communicating.