nyan_sandwich comments on Just One Sentence - Less Wrong

33 Post author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 05 January 2013 01:27AM

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Comment author: [deleted] 05 January 2013 02:57:28AM 1 point [-]

I think we can take it as given that even with the nukes, science has been a win. Then again, we are talking about a post-apocalyptic future....

Comment author: OrphanWilde 05 January 2013 02:58:52AM 5 points [-]

Science has been a win in cultures in which knowledge hasn't exclusively been pursued for the purposes of killing people. It's not merely that it's a post-apocalyptic future, it's a problem that there has historically been a self-selection process about who pursued knowledge, which is getting subverted here.

Comment author: [deleted] 05 January 2013 03:12:40AM 4 points [-]

That's a good point. Maybe we can come up with a better incentive.

"If you do X, you will unlock the secrets of the ancients."

Comment author: TimS 05 January 2013 03:52:59AM 3 points [-]

We need some historical cites, because I don't know what you are talking about.

Comment author: OrphanWilde 05 January 2013 04:23:01AM 3 points [-]

For the obvious example, many of the best scientists working on the Manhattan Project only agreed because they were worried about Germany getting nuclear weapons first and what it would mean; likewise, scientists in Germany were deliberately sabotaging their own research.

There's a safety feature here that this quote, to the extent that it is effective at all, deliberately attempts to remove.

Comment author: TimS 05 January 2013 04:39:48AM 0 points [-]

scientists in Germany were deliberately sabotaging their own research

Brief research suggests this might not be true.

I'm unconvinced that scientific progress is an existential risk, and the increased wealth scientific progress has created has funded or inspired most social progress.

Comment author: OrphanWilde 05 January 2013 05:03:37AM 2 points [-]

Scientific progress for the explicit and deliberate purpose of killing people more efficiently is a different animal than scientific progress more generally. You're engaging in an association fallacy, specifically honor by association (although that fallacy is more often used to refer to individuals or organizations rather than abstract concepts).

Comment author: TimS 05 January 2013 05:38:08AM 2 points [-]

Yes, that is the essence of our disagreement. You think I'm committing an association fallacy, and I think you are artificially dividing science in ways that don't reflect actual historic scientific practice.