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Lumifer comments on Immortality: A Practical Guide - Less Wrong Discussion

34 Post author: G0W51 26 January 2015 04:17PM

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Comment author: Lumifer 27 January 2015 09:23:49PM -1 points [-]

will not substantially impact how much enjoyment most people get out of life

And how do you know this?

Comment author: JoshuaZ 27 January 2015 09:26:34PM 0 points [-]

It is possible that they won't, but at a certain point I have to rely on my rough model for human behavior which doesn't include people not enjoying themselves so much that they'd rather die for doing things like occasionally going to the doctor.

Comment author: Lumifer 27 January 2015 09:39:49PM 0 points [-]

That's a pretty silly way to look at this trade-off. The choice is not between giving up something and dying. The choice is between (slightly) changing the enjoyment you get out of life and (slightly) changing the distribution of your life expectancy and/or what you will die of.

There are a lot of choices like that and different people make different choices.

Comment author: JoshuaZ 27 January 2015 09:43:06PM 0 points [-]

The goal of the post in question was to live long enough to the point where medicine lets one reach actuarial escape velocity yes?

Comment author: Lumifer 28 January 2015 04:29:03PM 0 points [-]

What I am quibbling with is your certainty about what will or will not "substantially impact how much enjoyment most people get out of life".