Broadly agree. Also, to me, deontological “will that it would become universal law” only makes sense in the context of errors that, if repeated, represent infinite loss. These can be positive or negative. Poker provides the toy case for me as usual (“never go all-in for 100+ BB with pocket 7′s to win the blinds” generalizes outward to things like “don’t defend against a carjacking with a defensive carbomb”). There just are any number of mathematically incorrect in all cases decisions. This isn’t quite Kelly criterion in terms of proactively forbidding all exploitative play when severe information assymetries exist but instead is something like an intuition that there are general mathematical principles that can be used to negatively define all non-contradictory liberties.
I feel like virtue ethics combines “accept your likes and dislikes as evolved pre-training while being attentive to epistemic and personal limitations” and I feel almost any moral system would be improved by this
Broadly agree. Also, to me, deontological “will that it would become universal law” only makes sense in the context of errors that, if repeated, represent infinite loss. These can be positive or negative. Poker provides the toy case for me as usual (“never go all-in for 100+ BB with pocket 7′s to win the blinds” generalizes outward to things like “don’t defend against a carjacking with a defensive carbomb”). There just are any number of mathematically incorrect in all cases decisions. This isn’t quite Kelly criterion in terms of proactively forbidding all exploitative play when severe information assymetries exist but instead is something like an intuition that there are general mathematical principles that can be used to negatively define all non-contradictory liberties.
I feel like virtue ethics combines “accept your likes and dislikes as evolved pre-training while being attentive to epistemic and personal limitations” and I feel almost any moral system would be improved by this