Comment author: HedonicTreader 27 May 2015 09:26:57AM 1 point [-]

Pasquale Cirillo and Nassim Nicholas Taleb†

I am curious why you put the sign of the cross there. None of these people appear to be dead. (?)

Comment author: IlyaShpitser 22 April 2015 09:49:59AM 3 points [-]

Suicide is a reliable cure

Please, please don't do this.

Comment author: HedonicTreader 22 April 2015 11:19:20AM -2 points [-]

Do what? Commit suicide or talk about suicide?

As for the latter, the request is childish, and as for the former, I have yet to meet a person who would even pay the financial cost of living for another person.

Yet, for some reason, everybody feels entitled to judge whose life is worth living - even for total strangers. And why wouldn't you? You get to be morally superior AND you get to have higher social status AND you get the upvotes for being a nice person AND you don't have to go through the suffering AND you don't have to pay the cost.

Bravo. Well done. Thanks for the objective discussion.

Comment author: Lumifer 22 April 2015 01:04:30AM -2 points [-]

His ethical guideline has nothing to do with how close humanity is to extinction.

However, if practiced diligently, it can bring humanity to extinction in a few generations from any population size.

Comment author: HedonicTreader 22 April 2015 04:33:16AM 0 points [-]

His ethical guideline has nothing to do with how close humanity is to extinction.

Except I already wrote:

You can easily augment the underlying harm avoidance principle with a condition that it should not result in the extinction of intelligent life (assuming that intelligent life doesn't cause even more harm in the long run).

You don't even have to apply the principle of charity, you could just look at what I had literally written.

However, if practiced diligently, it can bring humanity to extinction in a few generations from any population size.

Nonsense. Most humans don't live in a warzone at any time now. And followed in extreme poverty, this principle would reduce local malthusian traps and probably reduce poverty; at least the suffering of children from poverty.

Comment author: mwengler 21 April 2015 10:01:03PM 1 point [-]

Suicide is a reliable cure at least for the experience of it

You will be even more anhedonic and hypothymic after you are dead. That is NOT a cure, not even unreliably!

Comment author: HedonicTreader 22 April 2015 04:28:47AM *  1 point [-]

I know you are sincere, but you are understimating that getting rid of the unpleasantness is half the game for us depressives. Being dead objectively removes the unpleasantness, by destroying the parts of the brain that instantiate unpleasantness.

You deny this so strongly because you are offended by it, which is simply a mix of cultural programming and psychological death aversion on your part.

What you have to realize is that you are harming people by it, because this is the political foundation for the reduction in our suicide options. I would be objectively far better off if I could buy a deadly dose of barbiturates, drink it, fall asleep and then die. Society as a whole would also be objectively better off (an improved version would be one that allows me to donate my organs).

Facts don't go away because you don't like them; LessWrong is the one place where I would have expected people to understand that.

Comment author: Lumifer 21 April 2015 03:12:45PM 1 point [-]

we might still consider it ethically undesirable to have kids in a time and place where military conflict or politically caused poverty is likely.

Applying this, humanity would have quietly died out a few thousand years ago...

Comment author: HedonicTreader 21 April 2015 03:15:51PM 0 points [-]

2 responses:

  1. It is possible that this would have been better overall.
  2. Even if we reject 1, humanity was no where near extinction for thousands of years now.

You can easily augment the underlying harm avoidance principle with a condition that it should not result in the extinction of intelligent life (assuming that intelligent life doesn't cause even more harm in the long run).

Comment author: Romashka 21 April 2015 10:22:39AM 1 point [-]

I personally wouldn't decide to have kids in a warzone... But what context are you referring to? Is there any context outside of sudden, subjectively unlikely disaster where the quote is meaningful?

Comment author: HedonicTreader 21 April 2015 10:35:54AM -1 points [-]

I personally wouldn't decide to have kids in a warzone...

...but it's okay if others do it? How is that different from saying, "I personally woudn't decide to abuse children..."

Is there any context outside of sudden, subjectively unlikely disaster where the quote is meaningful?

It was written by Michael Jackson. I don't think he was referring to sudden, subjectively unlikely disasters, but the personal material means of people deciding to become parents.

Comment author: Lumifer 20 April 2015 06:07:03PM 1 point [-]

I think "unintended consequences" is a better analysis framework than "parasite response from the ecosystem".

And speaking of, there is a recent paper discussed on MR which claims to show how safety nets drive down the decline in labor force participation and, in particular, that "the Clinton-era welfare reforms lowered the incentive to work".

Comment author: HedonicTreader 21 April 2015 07:49:16AM -1 points [-]

I think "unintended consequences" is a better analysis framework than "parasite response from the ecosystem".

It certainly sounds less cynical, unless we use strong charity and see it in the most technical way possible.

I think the most plausible use case for government-funded incentives to have extra kids is a wide consensus that a society doesn't have enough of them at the time, according to some economical or social optimum.

But even this requires a level of cynicism in seeing kids as a means to an end.

Comment author: Romashka 18 April 2015 07:11:41PM 3 points [-]

Right, just the thing they should have told those irrational pregnant women who ran away from the Eastern part of Ukraine.

Comment author: HedonicTreader 21 April 2015 07:45:01AM -1 points [-]

Even if we're willing to take it out of context like this, we might still consider it ethically undesirable to have kids in a time and place where military conflict or politically caused poverty is likely.

Comment author: HedonicTreader 19 April 2015 03:07:59PM 0 points [-]

But does quantum physics really imply that food has no location and physicists don't need to eat?

Comment author: TheOtherDave 17 April 2015 02:39:07PM 1 point [-]

Interesting... can you say more about why you include a term in that equation for internal negative value (what you label "suffering" here), but not internal positive value (e.g., "pleasure" or "happiness" or "joy" or "Fun" or whatever label we want to use)?

Comment author: HedonicTreader 18 April 2015 12:32:07AM -1 points [-]

I suppose it was because the original quote started with a negative framing, the assumption that the baby might not be fed.

I think both birth and death are stressful experiences that are not worth going through unless there are compensating other factors. I don't think infants have enough of those if they die before they grow up.

Also I suspect human life is generally overrated, and the positives of life are often used as an excuse to justify the suffering of others. I do not trust people to make a realistic estimate and act with genuine benevolence.

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