And in this dialog, at the very beginning, Greene gives the same example with incest, for which he seems to assert that he considers it the right choice to dispose of moral intuition if you understand how it evolved as adaptation and understand that the reason it evolved is no longer present. This seems to be a total failure to see the Evolutionary-Cognitive Boundary, and is an approach that calls for, say, abolishing love if it no longer contributes to reproduction.
Although his position isn’t clear on this, maybe Roko can clarify, having read the thesis.
And in this dialog, at the very beginning, Greene gives the same example with incest, for which he seems to assert that he considers it the right choice to dispose of moral intuition if you understand how it evolved as adaptation and understand that the reason it evolved is no longer present. This seems to be a total failure to see the Evolutionary-Cognitive Boundary, and is an approach that calls for, say, abolishing love if it no longer contributes to reproduction.
Although his position isn’t clear on this, maybe Roko can clarify, having read the thesis.