I only know what the decision theory folks are doing, don't know about the SingInst party line.
Formally defining "love" may be easier than you think. For example, Paul Christiano's blog has some posts about using "pointers" to our world: take a long bitstring, like the text of Finnegans Wake, and tell the AI to influence whatever algorithm was most likely to produce that string under the universal prior. Also I have played with the idea of using UDT to increase the measure of specified bitstrings. Such ideas don't require knowing correct physics down to the level of atoms, and I can easily imagine that we may find a formal way of pointing the AI at any human-recognizable idea without going through atoms.
Thanks for the reference! I skimmed over the blog, and wow! The amount of seriously considered weirdness is staggering :) (like: acausal counterfactual takeover by a simulating UFAI!). It is of huge entertainment value, of course, but... most of it appears to be conditioned on blatantly impossible premises, so it's hard to take the concerns seriously. Maybe it's lack of imagination on my part...
Regarding the solution to defining complex concepts via low-level inputs, as far as I understood the idea, you do not remove the multi-leveledness, just let it be ...
Some people on LW have expressed interest in what's happening on the decision-theory-workshop mailing list. Here's an example of the kind of work we're trying to do there.
In April 2010 Gary Drescher proposed the "Agent simulates predictor" problem, or ASP, that shows how agents with lots of computational power sometimes fare worse than agents with limited resources. I'm posting it here with his permission:
About a month ago I came up with a way to formalize the problem, along the lines of my other formalizations:
Also Wei Dai has a tentative new decision theory that solves the problem, but this margin (and my brain) is too small to contain it :-)
Can LW generate the kind of insights needed to make progress on problems like ASP? Or should we keep working as a small clique?