CronoDAS comments on Morality is Awesome - Less Wrong

86 [deleted] 06 January 2013 03:21PM

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Comment author: CronoDAS 05 January 2013 07:27:21AM 22 points [-]

Is it "awesome" to crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of the women?

Is it "awesome" to be the one who gets crushed?

Comment author: [deleted] 05 January 2013 07:40:55AM *  5 points [-]

Maybe. (Though Conan would disagree. I'm sure we could have a nice discussion/battle about it.) I think the balance of awesomeness does come out against it. As awesome as it is to crush your enemies, I don't really like people getting hurt.

I notice that using "awesomeness" gives a different answer (more ambiguous) than "right" or "good" in this case. I think this is a win because the awesomeness criteria is forcing me to actually evaluate whether it is awesome, instead of just trying to signal.

Is it "awesome" to be the one who gets crushed?

No.

Comment author: CronoDAS 05 January 2013 09:05:23AM *  7 points [-]

I would have said "hell yes!" to the first one. At least it's awesome for you... but not so much for the people you're crushing. As Mel Brooks said, it's good to be the king - having power is awesome, but being subject to someone else's power generally isn't.

Comment author: AspiringRationalist 06 January 2013 07:07:55AM 0 points [-]

Awesomeness for who?

I would suggest the heuristic that hedonism is about maximizing awesomeness for oneself, while morality is about maximizing everyone's awesomeness.

Comment author: ikrase 11 January 2013 09:57:51PM 1 point [-]

I'd pretty much agree. Plus cooperation and... whatever we call the stuff behind the golden rule can lead to weak optimization of awesomeness for everybody with only self-awesomeness strongly desired.

Comment author: aleksiL 05 January 2013 02:53:23PM 4 points [-]

Given you have enemies you hate deeply enough? Yes.

Having such enemies in the first place? Definitely not.

Comment author: ialdabaoth 05 January 2013 03:31:00PM 7 points [-]

Having such enemies in the first place? Definitely not.

There are entire cultural systems of tracking prestige based around having such enemies; the vestiges of them survive today as modern "macho" culture. Having enemies to crush mercilessly, and then doing so, is an excellent way to signal power to third parties.

Comment author: [deleted] 05 January 2013 07:37:37AM 0 points [-]

One could argue that that's context-sensitive, but I think the best answer to that is mu.