I think I mostly agree with your comment and partially update, the absolute revealed caring about older people living longer is substantial.
One way to frame the question is “how much does society care about children and younger adults dying vs people living to 130”. I think people’s stated preferences would be something like 5-10x for the children / younger adults (at least for their children while they are dying of aging) but I don’t think this will clearly show itself in healthcare spending prioritization which is all over the place.
Random other slightly related point: if we’re looking at societal wide revealed preference based on things like spending, then “preservation of the current government power structures” is actually quite substantial and pushes toward society caring more about AIs gaining control (and overthrowing the us government, at least de facto). I don’t think a per person preference utilitarian style view should care much about this to be clear.
I think I mostly agree with your comment and partially update, the absolute revealed caring about older people living longer is substantial.
One way to frame the question is “how much does society care about children and younger adults dying vs people living to 130”. I think people’s stated preferences would be something like 5-10x for the children / younger adults (at least for their children while they are dying of aging) but I don’t think this will clearly show itself in healthcare spending prioritization which is all over the place.
Random other slightly related point: if we’re looking at societal wide revealed preference based on things like spending, then “preservation of the current government power structures” is actually quite substantial and pushes toward society caring more about AIs gaining control (and overthrowing the us government, at least de facto). I don’t think a per person preference utilitarian style view should care much about this to be clear.