Being very very outraged isn’t really an argument.
Give us your own (non-utilitarian I assume) decision theory that you consider encapsulating all that is good and moral, if you please.
If you can’t, please stop being outraged as those of us who try to solve the problem, even if you feel we’ve taken wrong turns in the path towards the solution.
Being very very outraged isn’t really an argument.
Give us your own (non-utilitarian I assume) decision theory that you consider encapsulating all that is good and moral, if you please.
If you can’t, please stop being outraged as those of us who try to solve the problem, even if you feel we’ve taken wrong turns in the path towards the solution.
Found this by random clicking around, I expect no one’s still reading this, but maybe we’ll catch each other via Inbox:
How about “optimize the worst case” from in game theory? It settles both the dust speck vs. torture and the the Utility Monster Felix problems neatly.