All of Dan Fitch's Comments + Replies

Answer by Dan Fitch90

Either way you fall on the physics, there's no reason that the many-worlds hypothesis forces EVERY choice to be taken in an even distribution. Given a choice A or B, there is probability distribution between them. If A is the more ethical choice, you should still try to strive towards A, so that more of you in all the possible worlds also strive towards A.

If anything, if you think many-worlds could be true, it makes ethics that much more important to think about. You are carving out the corner, and making it expand outward into possibility space.

2TAG
MWI is deterministic, so how much striving you do or do not do is determined.

I don't know if this is a useful "soft" submission, considering I am still reading and learning in the area.

But I think the current metaphors (paperclips, etc.) are not very persuasive for convincing folks in the world at large that value alignment is a BIG, HARD PROBLEM. Here is my attempt to add a possibly-new metaphor to the mix: https://nilscript.wordpress.com/2017/11/26/parenting-alignment-problem/

2cousin_it
Thank you! Acknowledged. Do you have an email address for contact?