SquirrelInHell comments on Morality of Doing Simulations Is Not Coherent [SOLVED, INVALID] - Less Wrong

3 [deleted] 07 June 2016 02:34AM

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Comment author: SquirrelInHell 07 June 2016 07:55:37AM 1 point [-]

Pick some simulation that you are sure definitely has the attribute of "no consciousness" you want to defend (e.g. fill the whole data with a regular checked pattern).

Then pick some simulation that I'm doing that you don't like.

Interpolate all situation between them with a continuous parameter from 0 to 1.

At which point does the "no consciousness" attribute disappear?

Comment author: hairyfigment 08 June 2016 09:21:42PM 1 point [-]
  1. The fact that consciousness admits of degrees is verified whenever you go to sleep, or at least when you incorporate external stimuli into a dream. Highway hypnosis seems like another good example.

  2. You say you're already doing the simulation. Interpolations couldn't tell you anything new about what happens within said simulation. Now, there are nevertheless reasons to wonder if they contain consciousness or otherwise add to the problem. But what we know is that you already simulated torture. I need not have a full answer to every philosophical question in order to object.

Comment author: SquirrelInHell 09 June 2016 01:22:47AM *  3 points [-]

Thank you!

Indeed my line of thought was incorrect.

The information-theoretic approach + admitting fractional levels of consciousness neatly solves what seemed paradoxical to me.

I edited the article to reflect this update.