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Carinthium comments on Yet more "stupid" questions - Less Wrong Discussion

7 Post author: NancyLebovitz 28 August 2013 03:58PM

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Comment author: Carinthium 06 October 2013 03:22:27PM *  1 point [-]

They no longer exist, so in a sense yes. However, they are replaced with identical copies of what they were in the past.

EDIT: If they existed at the time, of course.

Comment author: Nisan 07 October 2013 07:04:15AM 1 point [-]

Well, here's an intuition pump for you: Suppose the universe is reset to the time of birth of a person P, and the hero (who is someone other than person P) does things differently this time so that person P grows up in a different environment. It seems to me that this act is just as bad for P as the act of killing P and then causing a genetically identical clone of P to be born, which is a bad act.

On the other hand, if the hero resets the universe to 1 millisecond ago, there is virtually no effect on person P, so it does not seem to be a bad act.

Comment author: Carinthium 07 October 2013 08:53:16AM 0 points [-]

So for practical purposes, the hero can use the power for bursts of, say, an hour or less, without ethical issues involved?

Comment author: Nisan 09 October 2013 05:09:24AM 0 points [-]

Well, here are some relevant questions:

  1. How would you like it if tomorrow someone were to reset you back an hour?
  2. How would you like it if right now someone were to reset you back an hour?
  3. How many people will be affected by the reset? (Specifically, how many people will live that hour differently after the reset?)
  4. How much good will the hero accomplish by resetting the universe?
  5. Even if resetting the universe this one time is worth it, are there dangers to getting into the habit of using a universe reset to solve problems?

Your answers to 1 and 2 might be different. I feel like I might answer 1 with "okay" and 2 with "pretty bad", which suggests there's something tricky about assessing how much harm is done.