It's not a question of valuing my existing utility function. It's a question of using my existing utility function as a basis for differentially valuing everything else, including itself.
Sure, if I'm trying to derive what I ought to care about, from first principles, and I ignore what I actually do care about in the process, then I'm stuck... there's no reason to choose one thing over another. The endpoint of that is, as you say, apathy.
But why should I ignore what I actually do care about?
If I find that I care about whether people suffer, for example -- I'm not saying I ought to, I'm just supposing hypothetically that I do -- why discard that just because it's the result of a contingent evolutionary process rather than the explicit desire of an sapient creator?
Sure, I agree, there's no reason to be loyal to it. If I have the option of replacing it with something that causes more of what I currently care about to exist in the world, that's a fine thing for me to do.
I'm just saying: I'm not starting out in a vacuum. I'm not actually universally apathetic or indifferent. For whatever reason, I actually do care about certain things, and that represents my starting point.
Sure, I agree, there's no reason to be loyal to it. If I have the option of replacing it with something that causes more of what I currently care about to exist in the world, that's a fine thing for me to do.
Why only replace it if it causes more of what you currently care about? Why not just replace it if it causes you to have more of what you will care about. This sounds like loyalty to me!
When considering these hypotheticals, we have a moral circuitry that gets stimulated and reports 'bad' when we consider changing what we care about. This circuitry m...
Link: physicsandcake.wordpress.com/2011/01/22/pavlovs-ai-what-did-it-mean/
Suzanne Gildert basically argues that any AGI that can considerably self-improve would simply alter its reward function directly. I'm not sure how she arrives at the conclusion that such an AGI would likely switch itself off. Even if an abstract general intelligence would tend to alter its reward function, wouldn't it do so indefinitely rather than switching itself off?
If it wants to maximize its reward by increasing a numerical value, why wouldn't it consume the universe doing so? Maybe she had something in mind along the lines of an argument by Katja Grace:
Link: meteuphoric.wordpress.com/2010/02/06/cheap-goals-not-explosive/
I am not sure if that argument would apply here. I suppose the AI might hit diminishing returns but could again alter its reward function to prevent that, though what would be the incentive for doing so?
ETA:
I left a comment over there:
ETA #2:
What else I wrote: