I’m not sure how this chimes with “Do this force us to renounce to the idea of personal CEV [emphasis mine]? Hardly so.”
There are infinitely many possible ways of extrapolating desires. But if you don’t get around the part of “more the people we wished we were” (etc.), let’s not call your musings on extrapolating CEV, because it doesn’t fit the major criteria.
If an obscurantist (or anyone else for that matter) does not wish for his desires to change in any way, there is no personal CEV of him. Simple as that.
There may be other sensible ways of extrapolating / streamlining a utility function. It’s an open question, and one that’s much bigger than just CEV, the CEV part (as it’s defined) is often answered easily enough.
Assume there’s no personal CEV for certain obscurantists, then we are left with a theory that’s supposed to tells us how to make people happy—i.e. CEV—and the example of an agent who cannot be made happy through their personal CEV—i.e. an obscurantist; as the whole point of CEV is desire-satisfaction, if that fails to occur then the proposal isn’t exactly fulfilling its role. You’re correct that my musings aren’t only on CEV, as they relate to the bigger question of what is a correct desire-satisfaction theory of well-being, which in turn might require figuring out how to extrapolate utility functions.
I’m not sure how this chimes with “Do this force us to renounce to the idea of personal CEV [emphasis mine]? Hardly so.”
There are infinitely many possible ways of extrapolating desires. But if you don’t get around the part of “more the people we wished we were” (etc.), let’s not call your musings on extrapolating CEV, because it doesn’t fit the major criteria.
If an obscurantist (or anyone else for that matter) does not wish for his desires to change in any way, there is no personal CEV of him. Simple as that.
There may be other sensible ways of extrapolating / streamlining a utility function. It’s an open question, and one that’s much bigger than just CEV, the CEV part (as it’s defined) is often answered easily enough.
Assume there’s no personal CEV for certain obscurantists, then we are left with a theory that’s supposed to tells us how to make people happy—i.e. CEV—and the example of an agent who cannot be made happy through their personal CEV—i.e. an obscurantist; as the whole point of CEV is desire-satisfaction, if that fails to occur then the proposal isn’t exactly fulfilling its role. You’re correct that my musings aren’t only on CEV, as they relate to the bigger question of what is a correct desire-satisfaction theory of well-being, which in turn might require figuring out how to extrapolate utility functions.