I’m not sure. I did put in some effort to survey various strands of philosophy related to axiology, but not much effort. E.g. looked at some writings in the vein of Anscombe’s study of intention; tried to read D+G because maybe “machines” is the sort of thing I’m asking about (was not useful to me lol); have read some Heidegger; some Nietzsche; some more obscure things like “Care Crosses the River” by Blumenberg; the basics of the “analytical” stuff LWers know (including doing some of my own research on decision theory); etc etc. But in short, no, none of it even addresses the question—and the failure is the sort of failure that was supposed to have its coarsest outlines brought to light by genuinely Socratic questioning, which is why I call it “pre-Socratic”, not to say that “no one since Socrates has billed themselves as talking about something related to values or something”.
I think even communicating the question would take a lot of work, which as I said is part of the problem. A couple hints:
You should think of the question of values as being more like “what is the driving engine” rather than “what are the rules” or “what are the outcomes” or “how to make decisions” etc.
I’m not sure. I did put in some effort to survey various strands of philosophy related to axiology, but not much effort. E.g. looked at some writings in the vein of Anscombe’s study of intention; tried to read D+G because maybe “machines” is the sort of thing I’m asking about (was not useful to me lol); have read some Heidegger; some Nietzsche; some more obscure things like “Care Crosses the River” by Blumenberg; the basics of the “analytical” stuff LWers know (including doing some of my own research on decision theory); etc etc. But in short, no, none of it even addresses the question—and the failure is the sort of failure that was supposed to have its coarsest outlines brought to light by genuinely Socratic questioning, which is why I call it “pre-Socratic”, not to say that “no one since Socrates has billed themselves as talking about something related to values or something”.
I think even communicating the question would take a lot of work, which as I said is part of the problem. A couple hints:
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/NqsNYsyoA2YSbb3py/fundamental-question-what-determines-a-mind-s-effects (I think if you read this it will seem incredibly boringly obvious and trivial, and yet, literally no one addresses it! Some people sort of try, but fail so badly that it can’t count as progress. Closest would be some bits of theology, maybe? Not sure.)
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/p7mMJvwDbuvo4K7NE/telopheme-telophore-and-telotect (I think this distinction is mostly a failed attempt to carve things, but the question that it fails to answer is related to the important question of values.)
You should think of the question of values as being more like “what is the driving engine” rather than “what are the rules” or “what are the outcomes” or “how to make decisions” etc.