findis comments on Philosophical Landmines - Less Wrong

84 [deleted] 08 February 2013 09:22PM

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Comment author: Eugine_Nier 09 February 2013 12:38:52AM 4 points [-]

Particularly when it comes to public policy.

That would require being able to predict the results of public policy decisions with a reasonable degree of accuracy.

Comment author: findis 17 February 2013 03:56:00AM 3 points [-]

Wouldn't a rational consequentialist estimate the odds that the policy will have unpredictable and harmful consequences, and take this into consideration?

Regardless of how well it works, consequentialism essentially underlies public policy analysis and I'm not sure how one would do it otherwise. (I'm talking about economists calculating deadweight loss triangles and so on, not politicians arguing that "X is wrong!!!")

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 17 February 2013 04:36:13AM 0 points [-]

Wouldn't a rational consequentialist estimate the odds that the policy will have unpredictable and harmful consequences, and take this into consideration?

The discussion was about consequentialist heuristics, not hypothetical perfectly rational agents.