RichardKennaway comments on Rationality Quotes Thread October 2015 - Less Wrong

3 Post author: elharo 03 October 2015 01:23PM

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Comment author: RichardKennaway 11 November 2015 04:52:45PM 3 points [-]

It's hard to consistently believe that we should have laws against harmful things, have a skewed

fnord

idea of what constitutes "harmful things", and not want laws against them.

There it is again. You think it inconsistent to think a thing harmful, and let people do it. Would you ban alcohol?

C.S. Lewis wrote a great deal about how he thought people should live, and why, yet did not lift a finger to compel them. In this, he follows the example of He who Lewis believed the Father of us all. You do not understand this. Well, I do not pretend to write better than Lewis.

BTW, to talk of "banning" gay marriage is tendentious, presupposing that it is and always has been a thing that can only fail of existence by being "banned". What has actually happened in recent years is that there was no such thing recognised by church, state, or anyone, that a demand for social recognition of same-sex unions has developed, and that in various places, secular marriage has been so extended.

Comment author: Jiro 11 November 2015 06:28:06PM *  0 points [-]

You think it inconsistent to think a thing harmful, and let people do it. Would you ban alcohol?

I think it's inconsistent to think a thing harmful, and let people do it anyway, given that

1) you don't consider personal freedom good in itself or you don't think the gain to personal freedom balances out the harm, and 2) it's practical to ban it

I wouldn't ban alcohol, because of points 1 and 2. Note that if by "harmful" you mean "harmful, in the net" #1 is equivalent to saying that alcohol isn't harmful.

I am skeptical that Lewis believed #1. I find it hard to think that Lewis believed that divorce is harmful by itself but has enough good effects to more than balance out the harm.

And refusing to ban things based solely on #2 would mean only conditionally refusing to ban them. If you don't want to ban divorce based on #2 and society changed so that you could ban divorces without nasty side effects, you should then ban it.

Lewis actually said he didn't want to ban divorce, but his rationale could equally apply to banning murder--it's incoherent.

Comment author: gjm 12 November 2015 04:29:49PM 2 points [-]

I don't think I understand your argument about #1. Surely there's a difference between thinking

  • that X is harmful on net, but that banning X would also be harmful because personal freedom is good, and that the latter outweighs the former

and thinking

  • that X is not harmful on net.

For instance, suppose someone believes the following things:

  • Drinking alcoholic drinks is generally harmful overall to the people who do it.
  • The fact that consumption of alcohol is widespread in our society is, on balance, harmful to our society.
  • Banning the consumption of alcohol would make the world a worse place, not because the effects of reduced alcohol consumption would overall be bad but because
    • compulsion is bad, even when the thing you're compelling is itself good, and
    • the intrusion into people's lives required for enforcement would also be harmful, and
    • some likely consequences of prohibition (black markets etc.) would also be harmful, and
    • the precedent might lead to more prohibitions that would be harmful on balance in similar ways.

That appears to me to be a coherent position; someone whose position it is will disapprove both of drinking alcohol and of prohibiting it. And it seems to me that there's no particular impossibility in supposing that Lewis held a position like this regarding same-sex sex and divorce, or that he would have held a similar position on same-sex marriage if the question had come up and he'd taken it seriously.

(I don't hold such a position regarding alcohol consumption, same-sex sex, same-sex marriage, or divorce, but I think I do regarding lying for small-scale personal gain and callous indifference to the troubles of one's neighbours.)

Comment author: Jiro 12 November 2015 09:14:09PM 0 points [-]

"Harmful on net" means "after you balance the harm against the good, it is harmful".

That appears to me to be a coherent position; someone whose position it is will disapprove both of drinking alcohol and of prohibiting it.

The first part of that doesn't work by itself, since Lewis believes in compulsion for, for instance, anti-murder laws.

And the rest of it means that if you became convinced that the side effects of prohibition weren't as bad as you originally believed, you would then support prohibition. The question then becomes "would Lewis think there are really bad side effects to not allowing same-sex marriage". I doubt it.

Comment author: gjm 12 November 2015 11:52:52PM *  3 points [-]

I understand what "harmful on net" means, and I'm not sure why you think I don't. The point is that there are different things that might or might not be "harmful on net", and you need to not mix them up, and I think you are mixing them up. Specifically, "is drinking alcohol harmful on net?" and "is being allowed to drink alcohol harmful on net?" are very different questions, because of the things I listed that are functions of whether people are allowed to drink alcohol more than of whether they actually do.

The first part of that doesn't work by itself, since Lewis believes in compulsion for, for instance, anti-murder laws.

I'm afraid I don't understand what argument you're making. It appears to have the form "Such-and-such a proposition about alcohol prohibition is wrong, because C S Lewis believed in compelling people not to commit murder" and I don't even understand how anything of that form could be right -- because there are potentially relevant differences between drinking alcohol and committing murder. (Examples: most people who disapprove of drinking alcohol think that murder is much, much worse; empirical evidence suggests that prohibiting alcohol is liable to result in a very large black market in alcohol, while prohibiting murder results in only a small black market in murder.)

[EDITED to fix a trivial typo in the foregoing paragraph.]

if you became convinced that the side effects of prohibition weren't as bad as you originally believed, you would then support prohibition.

Yes, or at least almost. (Well, not me because as I said above I wasn't describing my own position on alcohol. But someone who holds that position would indeed switch to approving of prohibition if they decided that the side effects of prohibition and the badness of the compulsion itself didn't outweigh the harm done by drinking. The bit in italics is why I say "almost" rather than an unqualified "yes".)

The question then becomes "would Lewis think there are really bad side effects to not allowing same-sex marriage".

I don't know what Lewis would have said about same-sex marriage if the question had been put to him in such a way as to get it taken seriously despite his society's general presumption against the idea. For what it's worth, I think he probably would have opposed same-sex marriage (perhaps arguing that it is simply impossible for two people of the same sex to marry, and that calling anything a same-sex marriage is an abuse of language), but if not then it would probably have been on grounds of freedom rather than of bad side effects of prohibition. (You can prohibit certain classes of marriage without needing much intrusion into individuals' lives; it's hard to see how there'd be scope for a big black market in same-sex marriages; any precedents established by the prohibition would probably also be ones Lewis would have been inclined to approve of.)

It may be worth noting that I am not Richard Kennaway and am not necessarily arguing for the same position as he is.

Comment author: RichardKennaway 13 November 2015 12:51:06PM 1 point [-]

It may be worth noting that I am not Richard Kennaway and am not necessarily arguing for the same position as he is.

Nevertheless, I agree with all of what you just said. To it I would add that Jiro is still unconsciously assuming (I say unconsciously, because everything he is saying presupposes it, yet he never says it) that laws and punishment are all about adding up the good and the bad and seeing how the sum comes out. This is the very theory that Lewis was arguing against.

Comment author: Jiro 13 November 2015 04:14:03AM *  0 points [-]

I don't even understand how anything of that form could be right -- because there are potentially relevant differences between drinking alcohol and committing murder.

Of course there are differences. But the differences lead into my other objection, which is that, as the old joke goes, now we're just arguing about the price. If he supports laws against murder because murder does a lot of harm compared to compulsion and stopping it has few side effects, then if he were to be convinced that divorce does a lot of harm and stopping it has few side effects, he would support laws aganst divorce.

Then consider why Lewis believes that divorce (etc.) is harmful. It's arbitrary--if his religion had said something else, he'd have believed something else. And likewise, his belief in the degree of harm done by divorce is arbitrary. His religion happened not to say that that particular sin was harmful enough to justify banning. But it could have said that. And given a long list of sins, it would be a pretty big coincidence if it didn't say that for at least one of them, just by chance.

(I suppose there's another possibility: Lewis doesn't want his religion to tell him something is bad enough to ban. His interpretation of his own religion is biased by this desire, so he'll always interpret his own religion as saying that a sin isn't bad enough to ban. In that case, I need not fear Lewis banning anything. I guess that's a defense of Lewis, but I would then note that this kind of bias seems to be pretty rare among religious believers who don't like divorce, gay marriage, etc.)

Comment author: gjm 13 November 2015 08:59:41AM 4 points [-]

now we're just arguing about the price

For me, part of the humour in that story is that the person who says that is wrong -- there really is an important difference (even if only a difference of degree rather than kind) between willingness to have sex with a stranger for $1M and willingness to do it for $100.

Anyway: I'm now not quite sure what argument you're making here. I originally thought it was something like "Although C S Lewis opposed X on the grounds that it's tyrannical, he himself would have been tyrannical given the chance, so he's being hypocritical". But tyranny, like prostitution, comes in degrees. Almost everyone has some things they would prefer to be illegal, so "If C S Lewis were convinced that divorce does a lot of harm and stopping it has few bad side effects, he would support laws against divorce" gives basically zero support to the idea that Lewis was or would have been any more of a tyrant than, say, 95% of the population. Could you clarify what your point is and why you're making it?

Comment author: Lumifer 13 November 2015 03:30:42PM 0 points [-]

the person who says that is wrong

...wrong?

The canonical exchange, IIRC goes as follows:

-- What kind of woman do you take me for?!

-- I think we've already established that, now we're just arguing about the price.

Comment author: gjm 13 November 2015 03:55:07PM 4 points [-]

Yes, wrong, for the reason I already gave. I'll be more explicit:

What "we've already established" is that the woman is prepared to have sex with the man for $1M (or whatever the figure is), but that isn't the same thing as being prepared to do it for (say) $1000, and the "kind of woman" someone's shown to be by the former is not the same as the "kind of woman" they're shown to be by the latter. You can apply some term (e.g., "prostitute") to both, but prostitute-in-sense-1 and prostitute-in-sense2 are very different predicates, apply to very different sets of people, and justify somewhat different sets of inferences about the person in question.

I'll make it more personal. I would not be willing to have sex with you (in the doubtless extremely unlikely event that you wanted me to) for, say, $100k. I would consider it a betrayal of my wife; I would consider it a violation of my marriage vows; I would be concerned about the possibility of damaging or breaking my marriage; knowing nothing about you, I would have to consider the possibility of contracting an STD; I am not much interested in casual sex; I'm pretty sure you're male and I happen to be male and boringly heterosexual. These things matter to me, and they matter a lot. But make it a billion dollars and I'm pretty sure I'd consent, simply on effective-altruism grounds; I could do so damn much good with, say, half the takings as to outweigh those reasons, however compelling I find them.

To consider that the latter indicates "what kind of man" I am and puts me in the same pigeonhole as someone who will happily have sex with strangers for $100 a time is rather like saying that there's no real difference in religious position between an atheist who is 99.9% confident there are no gods of any sort, and a fundamentalist who is 99.999% confident that there is exactly one, namely his own, simply because a sufficiently enormous quantity of evidence might turn one of them into the other.

(I do not, as it happens, share the widespread view that there is something terribly wrong with the "kind of woman" who is willing to have sex with strangers in exchange for moderate sums of money, nor do I think that being that "kind of woman" is good evidence of any more general moral deficiency; but I don't think my opinion on any of this would be very different if I did. E.g., I do think there is something terribly wrong with the kind of person who is willing to kill strangers in exchange for moderate sums of money, but I think I would be willing to carry out an assassination for a billion dollars if I were really sure of getting the money and remaining unarrested for long enough to give a lot of it to effective charities, and confident that the assassination wasn't going to do an amount of harm comparable to the good I could thereby do.)

Comment author: Lumifer 13 November 2015 04:24:14PM 0 points [-]

and the "kind of woman" someone's shown to be by the former is not the same as the "kind of woman" they're shown to be by the latter

You are just arguing definitions. It's pretty clear that the conversation, real or not, riffs on the classification of women into two kinds: those who will sleep with a man for money, and those who will not. You may find this classification inadequate or not matching your personal views, but that does not make it "wrong". It just makes you have a different opinion and prefer a different classification scheme.

Comment author: entirelyuseless 13 November 2015 02:56:28PM 2 points [-]

You are assuming without proof that the claims of Lewis's religion are arbitrary. Of course they are not arbitrary, even assuming that his religion is false.

Comment author: Jiro 13 November 2015 04:18:57PM *  -2 points [-]

You are assuming without proof that the claims of Lewis's religion are arbitrary.

We're on LW. I'm assuming something that just about everyone here assumes anyway. Or at least close to it.

(I'm sure some people would argue that Lewis's religion's claims aren't arbitrary because competition between memes ensures that religions which say extreme things about sins won't last until the modern era. If so, fine, it's not arbitrary in that sense.)

Comment author: entirelyuseless 13 November 2015 05:01:57PM 1 point [-]

Most people on LW would assume that his religion is wrong, but not that it is entirely arbitrary.

Comment author: RichardKennaway 13 November 2015 12:55:36PM 1 point [-]

Then consider why Lewis believes that divorce (etc.) is harmful. It's arbitrary--if his religion had said something else, he'd have believed something else.

This is a universal argument. "Given a different history, you would have believed something else, therefore your actual belief is groundless." You can apply it to anyone, saying anything; which is to say, that it carries no force ever.

I suppose there's another possibility: Lewis doesn't want his religion to tell him

bong!!! But thank you for playing.

This is Bulverism, and not even Bulverism about a real characteristic, but about one you have just made up.

Comment author: Jiro 13 November 2015 04:11:55PM 0 points [-]

This is a universal argument. "Given a different history, you would have believed something else, therefore your actual belief is groundless."

No, it isn't. Religions tell people arbitrary things. Reasoning processes do not.

This is Bulverism

The question is "would there be reason to worry about a person like Lewis banning sins". Figuring out why he believes is not, in that context, Bulverism because the question is not about whether his beliefs are correct, it's a question of what he would do. Furthermore, it's not Bulverism anyway because I have no need to prove his positions false--we're on LW and it can be taken for granted that everyone here thinks gay marriage should be allowed and nobody here thinks divorce and polygamy should be illegal.

Comment author: RichardKennaway 13 November 2015 04:27:36PM 2 points [-]

The question is "would there be reason to worry about a person like Lewis banning sins". Figuring out why he believes is not, in that context, Bulverism because the question is not about whether his beliefs are correct, it's a question of what he would do.

And of course to you, what he would do is to ban things, because that is what you would do, and the idea of not banning things you don't like is to you practically a contradiction in terms. But it's all right for you to ban things, because you would be banning the right things, the sufficient proof of which is that everyone in your circle agrees with you, but it's wrong for Lewis to ban things, because he would be banning the wrongs things, the proof of which is that everyone in your circle agrees they're the wrong things. We are right because we are right, and everyone else is wrong because they are wrong.

Thanks you for setting out your epistemology so clearly.

Comment author: Jiro 13 November 2015 05:30:55PM -2 points [-]

And of course to you, what he would do is to ban things, because that is what you would do,

No, it's what people like him would do. Religious people have a really bad record with respect to believing arbitrary things are bad and then banning them. Your idea that I think he would ban things because I would ban things is pulled out of thin air. I think that people would do lots of things I don't do.

Comment author: entirelyuseless 13 November 2015 03:04:38PM 0 points [-]

Also, Lewis adopted his religion an adult; if it had said something different, he might not have adopted it.