I think you’ve got your meta-levels mixed up. For one thing, there isn’t any such thing as “meta-meta-ethics”; there’s just metaethics, and anything “more meta” than that is still metaethics. For another thing, “sentientism” is definitely object-level ethics; metaethics is about how to reason about ethics—definitionally it cannot include any ethical principles, which “sentientism” clearly is. This really seems like an attempt to sneak in object-level claims by labeling them as “meta-level” considerations.
Ah I see, yes I did have them mixed up. Thanks for the correction.
Yes, that claim is what makes it an intuition pump—but as I said, it doesn’t work, because the hypothetical scenario in the thought experiment has no bearing on any situation we could ever encounter in the real world, has no resemblance to any situation we could ever encounter in the real world, etc.
On the incoherence of the thought experiment, @neo’s comment explains it pretty well I thought. I will say that I think the thought experiment still works with imaginary minds, like the pebblesorters. If the pebblesorters actually exist and are sentient, then they are morally relevant.
But this isn’t just a case of “not exactly the same”. Nothing approximately like, or even remotely resembling, the hypothetical scenario, actually takes place.
What? In the thought experiment and the real world, a great deal of beings are born into a world that gives rise to a variety of valenced experiences. In the thought experiment, you are tasked with determining whether you would be ok with being the one finding themself in any given one of those lives/experiences.
Like the rest of this paragraph, this is non-responsive to my comment, but I am curious: do you have a principled disagreement with all of the arguments for why nothing remotely like this is possible even in principle, or… are you not familiar with them? (Thomas Nagel’s being the most famous one, of course.)
You said that it is impossible for you to have turned out to be a chicken, and so I can’t be talking to you if I say “imagine that you could have been a chicken instead of a human”. I demonstrated how to imagine that very thing, implying that I could indeed be talking to you when I ask that. I agree that it is impossible for you to turn into a chicken, or for you to have been born a chicken instead of you. I disagree that it is impossible to imagine and make educated guesses on the internal mental states of a chicken.
This seems hard to square with the positions you take on all the stuff in your post…
I’m not following, sorry. Can you give an example of a position I take in the post that’s inconsistent with what I said there?
I think there’s some very deep confusion here… are you familiar with Eliezer’s writing on metaethics? (I don’t know whether that would necessarily resolve any of the relevant confusions or disagreements here, but it’s the first thing that comes to mind as a jumping-off point for untangling this.)
Maybe? I’ve read the sequences twice, one of those times poring over ~5 posts at a time as part of a book club, but maybe his writing on metaethics isn’t in there. I think we are likely talking past each other, but I’m not sure exactly where the crux is. @neo described what I’m trying to get at pretty well, and I don’t know how to do better, so maybe that can highlight a new avenue of discussion? I do appreciate you taking the time to go into this with me though!
On the incoherence of the thought experiment, @neo’s comment explains it pretty well I thought.
See my response to that comment.
I will say that I think the thought experiment still works with imaginary minds, like the pebblesorters. If the pebblesorters actually exist and are sentient, then they are morally relevant.
“Works” how, exactly? For example, what are your actual answers to the specific questions I asked about that variant of the scenario?
What? In the thought experiment and the real world, a great deal of beings are born into a world that gives rise to a variety of valenced experiences. In the thought experiment, you are tasked with determining whether you would be ok with being the one finding themself in any given one of those lives/experiences.
In the real world, you only ever find yourself being the person who you turned out to be. There is never, ever, under any circumstances whatsoever, any choice you can make in this matter. You come into existence already being a specific person. There is nothing in reality which is even slightly analogous to there being any kind of reasoning entities that exist behind some sort of “veil of ignorance” prior to somehow becoming real.
I disagree that it is impossible to imagine and make educated guesses on the internal mental states of a chicken.
Ok… it seems that you totally ignored the question that I asked, in favor of restating a summary of your argument. I guess I appreciate the summary, but it wasn’t actually necessary. The question was not rhetorical; I would like to see your answer to it.
This seems hard to square with the positions you take on all the stuff in your post…
I’m not following, sorry. Can you give an example of a position I take in the post that’s inconsistent with what I said there?
I can, but this really seems like a tangent, since it concerns questions like “what beliefs would the disembodied spirits have and why”, which really seems like “how many angels can dance on the head of a pin”, given that the whole “disembodied spirits” concept is so thoroughly nonsensical in the first place. That part of your argument (and of Rawlsian reasoning generally) is an amusing incongruity, but on the whole it’s more of a distraction from the key points than anything.
I’ve read the sequences twice, one of those times poring over ~5 posts at a time as part of a book club, but maybe his writing on metaethics isn’t in there.
“Works” how, exactly? For example, what are your actual answers to the specific questions I asked about that variant of the scenario?
The thought experiment as I execute it requires me to construct a model of other minds, human or not, that is more detailed than what I would normally think about, and emotionally weight that understanding in order to get a deeper understanding of how important that is. To give an example, it’s possible for me to think about torture and be very decoupled with it and shrug and think “that sucks for the people getting tortured”, but if I think about it more carefully, and imagine my own mental state if I was about to be tortured, then the weight of how extremely fucked up it is becomes very crisp and clear.
Perhaps it was a mistake to use Rawl’s VOI if it also implies other things that I didn’t realize I was invoking, but the way I think of it, every sentient being is actually feeling the valence of everything they’re feeling, and from an impartial perspective the true weight of that is not different from ones own valenced experiences. And if you know that some beings experience extreme negative valence, one strategy to get a deeper understanding of how important that is, is to think about it as if you were going to experience that level of negative valence. No incoherent beings of perfect emptiness required, just the ability to model other minds based on limited evidence, imagine how you would personally react to states across the spectrum of valence, and the ability to scale that according to the distribution of sentient beings in the real world.
And this works on pebblesorters too, although it’s more difficult since we can’t build a concrete model of them beyond what’s given in the story + maybe some assumptions if their neurobiology is at all similar to ours. If an “incorrect” pebble stack gives them negative valence of around the same level that the sound of nails on a chalkboard does for me, then that gives me a rough idea of how important it is to them (in the fictional world). If pebblesorters existed and that was the amount of negative valence caused by an “incorrect” stack, I wouldn’t mess up their stacks any more than I go around scratching chalkboards at people (while wearing earplugs so it doesn’t bother me).
To go back to the master/slave example, if the master truly thought he was about to become a slave, and everything that entails, I’m not convinced he would stick to his guns on how it’s the right order of the universe. I’m sure some people would genuinely be fine with it, but I’m guessing if you actually had a mercenary trying to kidnap and enslave him, he’d start making excuses and trying to get out of it, in a similar way as the one claiming the invisible dragon in their garage will have justifications for why you can’t actually confirm it exists.
In other words, I’m trying to describe a way of making moral views pay rent about the acceptable levels of negative valence in the world. Neither my views, nor the thought experiment I thought I was talking about, depends on disembodied spirits.
Ok… it seems that you totally ignored the question that I asked, in favor of restating a summary of your argument. I guess I appreciate the summary, but it wasn’t actually necessary. The question was not rhetorical; I would like to see your answer to it.
I only see two questions in this line of conversation?
do you have a principled disagreement with all of the arguments for why nothing remotely like this is possible even in principle, or… are you not familiar with them?
I’m not familiar with the specific arguments you’re referring to, but I don’t think it’s actually possible for disembodied minds to exist at all, in the first place. So no I don’t have principled disagreements for those arguments, I have tentative agreement with them.
Another way to put it is that you are asking us (by extending what Rawls is asking us) to perform a mental operation that is something like “imagine that you could have been a chicken instead of a human”. When you ask a question like this, who are you talking to? It is obviously impossible for me—Said Achmiz, the specific person that I am, right now—to have turned out to be a chicken (or, indeed, anyone other than who I am). So you can’t be talking to me (Said Achmiz).
(bold added to highlight your question, which I’m answering) When I ask a question like that, I’m talking to you (or whoever else I’m talking to at the time).
I only see two questions in this line of conversation?
do you have a principled disagreement with all of the arguments for why nothing remotely like this is possible even in principle, or… are you not familiar with them?
I’m not familiar with the specific arguments you’re referring to, but I don’t think it’s actually possible for disembodied minds to exist at all, in the first place. So no I don’t have principled disagreements for those arguments, I have tentative agreement with them.
The “this” in “all of the arguments for why nothing remotely like this is possible even in principle” was referring not to the “disembodied spirits” stuff, but rather to:
With enough time and thought I’m sure I could discuss a wide range of experiences with a wide range of how confident I am at how I’d experience them as a chicken. Even though it would be impossible for me writing this to ever actually experience those things, it’s still easy to take my understanding of the world and apply it in a thought experiment.
And I mentioned Nagel because of this essay (which was by no means the only argument for a position like Nagel’s, just the most famous one).
So it sounds like you’re not familiar with this part of the literature. If that’s so, then I think you’ll find it interesting to delve into it.
Ah I see, yes I did have them mixed up. Thanks for the correction.
On the incoherence of the thought experiment, @neo’s comment explains it pretty well I thought. I will say that I think the thought experiment still works with imaginary minds, like the pebblesorters. If the pebblesorters actually exist and are sentient, then they are morally relevant.
What? In the thought experiment and the real world, a great deal of beings are born into a world that gives rise to a variety of valenced experiences. In the thought experiment, you are tasked with determining whether you would be ok with being the one finding themself in any given one of those lives/experiences.
You said that it is impossible for you to have turned out to be a chicken, and so I can’t be talking to you if I say “imagine that you could have been a chicken instead of a human”. I demonstrated how to imagine that very thing, implying that I could indeed be talking to you when I ask that. I agree that it is impossible for you to turn into a chicken, or for you to have been born a chicken instead of you. I disagree that it is impossible to imagine and make educated guesses on the internal mental states of a chicken.
I’m not following, sorry. Can you give an example of a position I take in the post that’s inconsistent with what I said there?
Maybe? I’ve read the sequences twice, one of those times poring over ~5 posts at a time as part of a book club, but maybe his writing on metaethics isn’t in there. I think we are likely talking past each other, but I’m not sure exactly where the crux is. @neo described what I’m trying to get at pretty well, and I don’t know how to do better, so maybe that can highlight a new avenue of discussion? I do appreciate you taking the time to go into this with me though!
See my response to that comment.
“Works” how, exactly? For example, what are your actual answers to the specific questions I asked about that variant of the scenario?
In the real world, you only ever find yourself being the person who you turned out to be. There is never, ever, under any circumstances whatsoever, any choice you can make in this matter. You come into existence already being a specific person. There is nothing in reality which is even slightly analogous to there being any kind of reasoning entities that exist behind some sort of “veil of ignorance” prior to somehow becoming real.
Ok… it seems that you totally ignored the question that I asked, in favor of restating a summary of your argument. I guess I appreciate the summary, but it wasn’t actually necessary. The question was not rhetorical; I would like to see your answer to it.
I can, but this really seems like a tangent, since it concerns questions like “what beliefs would the disembodied spirits have and why”, which really seems like “how many angels can dance on the head of a pin”, given that the whole “disembodied spirits” concept is so thoroughly nonsensical in the first place. That part of your argument (and of Rawlsian reasoning generally) is an amusing incongruity, but on the whole it’s more of a distraction from the key points than anything.
The Metaethics Sequence (which contains a few posts that didn’t make it into R:AZ a.k.a. “The Sequences” as the term usually meant today) is what you’ll want to check out.
The thought experiment as I execute it requires me to construct a model of other minds, human or not, that is more detailed than what I would normally think about, and emotionally weight that understanding in order to get a deeper understanding of how important that is. To give an example, it’s possible for me to think about torture and be very decoupled with it and shrug and think “that sucks for the people getting tortured”, but if I think about it more carefully, and imagine my own mental state if I was about to be tortured, then the weight of how extremely fucked up it is becomes very crisp and clear.
Perhaps it was a mistake to use Rawl’s VOI if it also implies other things that I didn’t realize I was invoking, but the way I think of it, every sentient being is actually feeling the valence of everything they’re feeling, and from an impartial perspective the true weight of that is not different from ones own valenced experiences. And if you know that some beings experience extreme negative valence, one strategy to get a deeper understanding of how important that is, is to think about it as if you were going to experience that level of negative valence. No incoherent beings of perfect emptiness required, just the ability to model other minds based on limited evidence, imagine how you would personally react to states across the spectrum of valence, and the ability to scale that according to the distribution of sentient beings in the real world.
And this works on pebblesorters too, although it’s more difficult since we can’t build a concrete model of them beyond what’s given in the story + maybe some assumptions if their neurobiology is at all similar to ours. If an “incorrect” pebble stack gives them negative valence of around the same level that the sound of nails on a chalkboard does for me, then that gives me a rough idea of how important it is to them (in the fictional world). If pebblesorters existed and that was the amount of negative valence caused by an “incorrect” stack, I wouldn’t mess up their stacks any more than I go around scratching chalkboards at people (while wearing earplugs so it doesn’t bother me).
To go back to the master/slave example, if the master truly thought he was about to become a slave, and everything that entails, I’m not convinced he would stick to his guns on how it’s the right order of the universe. I’m sure some people would genuinely be fine with it, but I’m guessing if you actually had a mercenary trying to kidnap and enslave him, he’d start making excuses and trying to get out of it, in a similar way as the one claiming the invisible dragon in their garage will have justifications for why you can’t actually confirm it exists.
In other words, I’m trying to describe a way of making moral views pay rent about the acceptable levels of negative valence in the world. Neither my views, nor the thought experiment I thought I was talking about, depends on disembodied spirits.
I only see two questions in this line of conversation?
I’m not familiar with the specific arguments you’re referring to, but I don’t think it’s actually possible for disembodied minds to exist at all, in the first place. So no I don’t have principled disagreements for those arguments, I have tentative agreement with them.
(bold added to highlight your question, which I’m answering) When I ask a question like that, I’m talking to you (or whoever else I’m talking to at the time).
I’ll check it out! and yeah that’s where I read the sequences
The “this” in “all of the arguments for why nothing remotely like this is possible even in principle” was referring not to the “disembodied spirits” stuff, but rather to:
And I mentioned Nagel because of this essay (which was by no means the only argument for a position like Nagel’s, just the most famous one).
So it sounds like you’re not familiar with this part of the literature. If that’s so, then I think you’ll find it interesting to delve into it.