FeepingCreature comments on Building Phenomenological Bridges - Less Wrong
You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.
You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.
Comments (116)
Hmm. I previously mentioned that in my model of personal identity, our brains include planning machinery that's based on subjective expectation ("if I do this, what do I expect to experience as a result?"), and that this requires some definition of a "self", causing our brains to always have a model for continuity of self that they use in predicting the future.
Similarly, in the comments of The Anthropic Trilemma, Eliezer says:
Translating those notions into the terminology of this post, it would seem like "personal identity" forms an important part of humans' bridge hypothesis: it is a rule that links some specific entity in the world-model into the agent's predicted subjective experience. If I believe that there is a personal continuity between me today and me tomorrow, that means that I predict experiencing the things that me-tomorrow will experience, which means that my bridge hypothesis privileges the me of tomorrow over other agents.
I get the feeling that here lies the answer to Eliezer's question, but I can't quite put my finger on the exact formulation. Something like "you can alter your world-model or even your model of your own bridge hypothesis, but you can't alter..." the actual bridge hypothesis? The actual bridge? Something else?
Your plan succeeded. Nothing went wrong. By your own admission you have ceased to be EY. In fact, you are an entirely new person who has just this moment come to be alive in a body negligently left behind with obligations by one EY, recently semantically deceased.
Seriously, what Eliezer did there was not "adapting a belief" but "pretending to have adapted a belief". His claim that, paraphrased, "I define only those people as EY" is simply false as a matter of reporting on his own brain.