It would, in a certain sense, be partially deontologist,
And that's the problem. For in practice a partial deontoligist-partial consequentialist will treat its deontoligical rules as obstacles to achieving what its consequentialist part wants and route around them.
This is both a problem and a solution because it makes the AI weaker. A weaker AI would be good because it would allow us to more easily transition to safer versions of FAI than we would otherwise come up with independently. I think that delaying a FAI is obviously much better than unleashing a UFAI. My entire goal throughout this conversation has been to think of ways that would make hostile FAIs weaker, I don't know why you think this is a relevant counter objection.
You assert that it will just route around the deontological rules, that's nonsense and a ...
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