From the last thread:
From Costanza's original thread (entire text):
"This is for anyone in the LessWrong community who has made at least some effort to read the sequences and follow along, but is still confused on some point, and is perhaps feeling a bit embarrassed. Here, newbies and not-so-newbies are free to ask very basic but still relevant questions with the understanding that the answers are probably somewhere in the sequences. Similarly, LessWrong tends to presume a rather high threshold for understanding science and technology. Relevant questions in those areas are welcome as well. Anyone who chooses to respond should respectfully guide the questioner to a helpful resource, and questioners should be appropriately grateful. Good faith should be presumed on both sides, unless and until it is shown to be absent. If a questioner is not sure whether a question is relevant, ask it, and also ask if it's relevant."
Meta:
- How often should these be made? I think one every three months is the correct frequency.
- Costanza made the original thread, but I am OpenThreadGuy. I am therefore not only entitled but required to post this in his stead. But I got his permission anyway.
Meta:
- I still haven't figured out a satisfactory answer to the previous meta question, how often these should be made. It was requested that I make a new one, so I did.
- I promise I won't quote the entire previous threads from now on. Blockquoting in articles only goes one level deep, anyway.
First, a terminology point: CEV.HUMANITYCURRENTLYALIVE() != CEV.ALLHUMANITYEVER(). For the anti-realist, CEV.HUMANITYCURRENTLYALIVE() is massively more plausible, and CEV.LONDON() is more plausible than that - but my sense is that this sentence depends on the anti-realist accepting of some flavor of moral relativism.
Second, it seems likely that fairly large groups (i.e. the population of London) already have some {P, ~P}. That's one reason to think making CEV() is really hard.
I don't understand what proving the model means in this context.
I don't understand why you talk about possibility. "Morality is true, simple, and knowable" seems like an empirical proposition: it just turns out to be false. It isn't obvious to me that simple moral realism is necessarily false in the way that 2+5=7 is necessarily true.
How does the world look different if morality is real and inaccessible vs. not real?
Pace certain issues about human appetites as objective things, I am an anti-realist - in case that wasn't clear.
Sure sure. But CEV.ALLHUMANITYEVER is also not the same as all CEV.ALLPOSSIBLEAGENTS.
Some subroutines are probably inverted but there probably aren't people with fully negated utility functions from other people. Trade-offs needn't mean irreconcilable differences. Like I doubt there is anyone in the world who cares as much as you do about the exact opposite of everyt... (read more)