In the future, it may be possible for you to scan your own brain and create copies of yourself. With the power of a controllable superintelligent AI, it may even be possible to create very accurate instances of your past self (and you could take action today or in the near future to make this easier by using lifelogging tools such as these glasses).
So I ask Less Wrong: how valuable do you think creating extra identical, non-interacting copies of yourself is? (each copy existing in its own computational world, which is identical to yours with no copy-copy or world-world interaction)
For example, would you endure a day's hard labor to create an extra self-copy? A month? A year? Consider the hard labor to be digging a trench with a pickaxe, with a harsh taskmaster who can punish you if you slack off.
Do you think having 10 copies of yourself made in the future is 10 times as good as having 1 copy made? Or does your utility in copies drop off sub-linearly?
Last time I spoke to Robin Hanson, he was extremely keen on having a lot of copies of himself created (though I think he was prepared for these copies to be emulant-wage-slaves).
I have created a poll for LW to air its views on this question, then in my next post I'll outline and defend my answer, and lay out some fairly striking implications that this has for existential risk mitigation.
For those on a hardcore-altruism trip, you may substitute any person or entity that you find more valuable than your own good self: would you sacrifice a day of this entity's life for an extra copy? A year? etc.
UPDATE: Wei Dai has asked this question before, in his post "The moral status of independent identical copies" - though his post focuses more on lock-step copies that are identical over time, whereas here I am interested in both lock-step identical copies and statistically identical copies (a statistically identical copy has the same probability distribution of futures as you do).
All moral questions should be delegated to FAI, whenever that's possible, but this is trivially so and doesn't address the questions.
What I'll choose will be based on some mix of moral intuition, heuristics about the utilitarian shape of morality, and expected utility estimates. But that would be a matter of making the decision, not a matter of obtaining interesting knowledge about the actual answers to the moral questions.
I don't know whether torture or specks are preferable, I can offer some arguments that torture is better, and some arguments that specks are better, but that won't give much hope for eventually figuring out the truth, unlike with the more accessible questions in natural science, like the speed of light. I can say that if given the choice, I'd choose torture, based on what I know, but I'm not sure it's the right choice and I don't know of any promising strategy for learning more about which choice is the right one. And thus I'd prefer to leave such questions alone, so long as the corresponding decisions don't need to be actually made.
I don't see what these thought experiments can teach me.
As it happened several times before, you seem to take as obvious some things that I don't find obvious at all, and which would make nice discussion topics for LW.
How can you tell that some program is a fair extrapolation of your morality? If we create a program that gives 100% correct answers to all "realistic" moral questions that you deal with in real life, but gives grossly unintuitive and awful-sounding answers to many "unrealistic" moral questions like Torture vs Dustspecks or the Repugnant Conclusion, would you force yourself to t... (read more)