In general, the ethical theory that prevails here on Less Wrong is preference utilitarianism. The fundamental idea is that the correct moral action is the one that satisfies the strongest preferences of the most people. Preferences are discussed with units such as fun, pain, death, torture, etc. One of the biggest dilemmas posed on this site is the Torture vs. Dust Specks problem. I should say, up front, that I would go with dust specks, for some of the reasons I mentioned here. I mention this because it may be biasing my judgments about my question here.
I had a thought recently about another aspect of Torture vs. Dust Specks, and wanted to submit it to some Less Wrong Discussion. Namely, do other people's moral intuitions constitute a preference that we should factor into a utilitarian calculation? I would predict, based on human nature, that a if the 3^^^3 people were asked if they wanted to inflict a dust speck in each one of their eyes, in exchange for not torturing another individual for 50 years, they would probably vote for dust specks.
Should we assign weight to other people's moral intuitions, and how much weight should it have?
Mm? If I have a strong inclination to do X, and a strong moral intuition that "X is wrong", and I suffer anguish because of the conflict, how do you conclude that the best result is that the moral intuition disappears... either in that particular case, or in general? I mean, I happen to agree with you about the particular case you mention, but I don't see how you reached it.
It's worth noting, incidentally, that in addition to "eliminate the intuition" and "eliminate the inclination" there is the option of "eliminate the anguish." That is, I might reach a point where I want to do X, and I think X is wrong, and I experience conflict between those impulses, and I work out some optimal balance between those conflicting impulses, and I am not anguished by this in any way.
Good question; here's a formal answer:
We can, in the long run, keep the inclination and eliminate the intuition, keep the intuition and drop the inclination, or keep both. ... (read more)