I wonder if Solomon had plans in mind if both women had said the same thing.
That’s what the next pair of claimants did, after learning about the case. That time Solomon’s decision was not wise enough to be included in the sacred texts: he sold the baby into slavery and then promptly executed both claimants. Not surprisingly, no further cases like this were brought before the king.
This is an excellent point I should’ve noticed myself (though it’s been long and long since I encountered the parable). Who says you own a baby just by being its genetic mother?
Albeit sufficiently young babies are plausibly not sentient.
Bizarre. In lieu of a reply by Eliezer himself clarifying things, I am left to understand he thinks that some portion of humans otherwise possessing the structural and anatomical necessities for sensation don’t experience anything even when all their sense organs are working fine, and that animals in general are basically just meat-automata with no inner life at all. Even when they’re communicating about those inner states and have the same structural correlates of various sensations we’d expect to see, and react in ways that sure look like expression of sensation or emotion (even if you sometimes need to be familiar with their particular body language).
That feels a lot more like a strawman than anything, because it’s just so obviously bollocks. If I step on my cat’s tail by mistake, she doesn’t yowl and run from me because “Nociceptor activation threshold met; initiate yowl-and-run subroutine.” She does it because it’s painful and it startled her. I know there are people who honestly believe something like that about nonhuman life across the board, but I hadn’t gotten the impression Eliezer was one.
Sentient vs. Sapient is one of the most common word confusions in the English language. If someone says “sentient,” but the context appears to suggest “sapient,” they probably mean sapient.
The bit about that that’s bothering me is “sapient” is a term of art—it’s science fiction shorthand employed with a purpose (it denotes personhood for the reader, in a field where blatantly-nonhuman but unambiguously-personlike entities are common). It divides the field of hypothetical entities into two neat, clean categories: people no matter what their substrate, appearance, anatomy or drives, and everything from animals of every sort to plants and grains of sand.
It just seems like a weird way of dividing up the world, and more of a cultural artefact than anything; a marker on the map which corresponds to nothing in the territory.
People often use ‘sentient’ to mean ‘sapient’, and it may be that Eliezer intends the latter. It’s at least pretty plausible that animals and very young infants are not sapient, namely not capable of judgement, and that this capacity is what would endow one with a certain autonomy.
I respectfully disagree, sapience is an acquired subjective quality, therefore it is trivial to disregard. Now sentience is orders of magnitude more complex. I was going to say “inherent” to the species, but is it? Now this is supposed to be “the easy problem” go figure that.
1 presumes that minimalist descriptions of superficially-visible output are all you need to reconstruct the actual drivers behind the behavior. 2 presumes that the evolutionarily-shared neural architecture and its basic components of perception, cognition and soforth are not seperated by a barrier of magical reality fluid.
Ah. If you’re saying that 1) implies lesser internal machinery than 2), and that the internal machinery (cognition and soforth) is what’s important, then I agree.
The problem I think is just that, to me, they both sound to me like perfectly reasonable (if vague) descriptions of complex, sentient human pain. It seemed like you were saying nociceptors and subroutines were incapable of producing pain and startlement.
The problem I think is just that, to me, they both sound to me like perfectly reasonable (if vague) descriptions of complex, sentient human pain.
1 sounds to me like an attempt to capture output in the form of a flowchart. It’s like trying to describe the flocking behavior of birds by reference to the Boids cellular automaton—and insisting not that there are similar principles at work in how the birds go about solving the problem of flocking, but that birds literally run an instance of Boids in their heads and that’s all there is to their flocking behavior.
I agree that “Eliezer believes animals and nonpathological infants are just meat-automata who don’t actually possess the mental states they communicating about” is a strawman. I’m not really sure what remains to be cleared up. Can you clarify the question?
Basically what I asked Eliezer: What sense of the word “sentient” is he using, such that babies plausibly don’t qualify? My de facto read of the term and a little digging around Google show two basic senses:
-Possessing sensory experiences (I’m pretty sure insects and even worms do that) -SF/F writer’s term for “assume this fictional entity is a person” (akin to “sapient”; it’s a binary personhood marker, or a secularized soul—it tells the reader to react accordingly to this character’s experiences and behavior)
The latter, applied to the real world, sounds rather more like “soul” than anything coherent and obvious. The former, denied in babies, sounds bizarre and obviously untrue. So...I’m missing something, and I’d like to know what it is.
Maybe the best way to approach this question is backwards. I assume you believe that people (at least) have some moral worth such that they ought not be owned, whimsically destroyed, etc. I also assume you believe that stones (at least) have no moral worth and can be owned, whimsically destroyed, etc. without any immediate moral consequences. So 1) tell me where you think the line is (even if its a very fuzzy, circumstantial one) and 2) tell me in virtue of what something has or lacks such moral worth.
...or 3) toss out my questions and tell me how you think it goes on your own terms.
I assume you believe that people (at least) have some moral worth such that they ought not be owned, whimsically destroyed, etc
Essentially. I don’t consider it a fact-about-the-world per se, but that captures my alief pretty well.
I also assume you believe that stones (at least) have no moral worth and can be owned, whimsically destroyed, etc without any immediate moral consequences.
Eh. Actually I have some squick to cavalier destruction or disruption of inanimate objects, but they don’t register out as the same thing. So we’ll go with that.
…or 3) toss out my questions and tell me how you think it goes on your own terms.
To what extent does an entity respond dynamically to both present and historical conditions in terms impacts on its health, wellbeing, emotional and perceptual experiences, social interactions and so on? To what extent is it capable of experiencing pain and suffering? To what extent does modifying my behavior in response to these things constitute a negative burden on myself or others? To what extent do present circumstances bear on all those things?
Those aren’t so much terms in an equation as independent axes of variance. There are probably some I haven’t listed. They define the shape of the space; the actual answer to your question is lurking somewhere in there.
Thanks, that’s helpful. Given what you’ve said, I doubt you and EY would disagree on much. EY says in his metaethics sequence that moral facts and categories like ‘moral worth’ or ‘autonomy’ are derived properties. In other words, they don’t refer to anything fundamental about the world, but supervene on some complex set of fundamental facts. Given that that’s his view, I think he was just using ‘sentience’ as a shorthand for something like what you’ve written: note that many of the considerations you describe are importantly related to a capacity for complex experiences.
note that many of the considerations you describe are importantly related to a capacity for complex experiences.
Except I’ve interacted with bugs in ways that satisfied that criterion (and that did parse out as morally-good), so clearly the devil’s in the details. If Eliezer suspects young children may reliably not qualify, and I suspect that insects may at least occasionally qualify, we’re clearly drawing very different lines and have very different underlying assumptions about reality.
I assume you believe that people (at least) have some moral worth such that they ought not be owned, whimsically destroyed, etc. I also assume you believe that stones (at least) have no moral worth and can be owned, whimsically destroyed, etc. without any immediate moral consequences. So 1) tell me where you think the line is (even if its a very fuzzy, circumstantial one)
What makes you think there’s a line? I care more about killing (or torturing) a dog than a stone, but less so than a human. Pulling the wings off flies provokes a similar, if weaker, reaction. A continuum might complicate the math slightly, but …
“Self-aware” is one soul-free interpretation of sentient/sapient, often experimentally measured by the mirror test. By that metric, humans are not sentient until well into the second year, and most species we would consider non-sentient fail it. Of course, treating non-self-aware human babies as non-sentient animals is quite problematic. Peter Singer is one of the few people brave enough to tread into this topic.
The mirror test is interesting for sure, especially in a cross-species context. However, I’m far from convinced about the straightforward reading of “the expected response indicates the subject has an internal map of oneself.” Since you read the Wikipedia article down that far, you could also scroll down to the “Criticisms” section and see a variety of objections to that.
Besides all that, even if we assume self-awareness is the thing you seem to be making of it, I’m not clear how that would draw moral-worth line so neatly between humans (or some humans) and literally everything else. From a consequentialist perspective, if I assume that dogs or rats can experience pain and suffering, it seems weird to neglect them from my utility function on the basis they don’t jump through that particular (ambiguous, methodologically-questionable) experimental hoop.
Oh, I agree that the mirror test is quite imperfect. The practical issue is how to draw a Schelling somewhere sensible. Clearly mosquitoes can be treated as non-sentient, clearly most humans cannot be. Treating human fetuses and some mammals as non-sentient is rather controversial. Just “experiencing pain” is probably too wide a net for moral worth, as nociceptors are present in most animals, including the aforementioned mosquito. Suffering is probably a more restrictive term, but I am not aware of a measurable definition of it. It is also probably sometimes too narrow, as most of us would find it immoral to harm people who do not experience suffering due to a mental or a physical issue, like pain insensitivity or asymbolia.
Clearly mosquitoes can be treated as non-sentient,
Disagree that it’s clear. I’ve had interactions with insects that I could only parse as “interaction between two sentient beings, although there’s a wide gulf of expectation and sensation and emotion and so forth which pushes it right up to the edges of that category.” I’ve not had many interactions with mosquitos beyond “You try to suck my blood because you’re hungry and I’m a warm, CO2-breathing blood source in your vicinity”, but I assume that there’s something it feels like to be a mosquito, that it has a little mosquito mind that might not be very flexible or impressive when weighted against a human one, but it’s there, it’s what the mosquito uses to navigate its environment and organize its behavior intelligibly, and all of its searching for mates and blood and a nice place to lay eggs is felt as a drive… that in short it’s not just a tiny little bloodsucking p-zombie. That doesn’t mean I accord it much moral weight either—I won’t shed any tears over it if I should smash it while reflexively brushing it aside, even though I’m aware arthropods have nociception and, complex capacity for emotional suffering or not, they still feel pain and I prefer not to inflict that needlessly (or without a safeword).
But I couldn’t agree it isn’t sentient, that it’s just squishy clockwork.
Just “experiencing pain” is probably too wide a net for moral worth, as nociceptors are present in most animals, including the aforementioned mosquito.
It seems to me that the problem you’re really trying to solve is how to sort the world into neat piles marked “okay to inflict my desires on regardless of consequences” and “not okay to do that to.” Which is probably me just stating the obvious, but the reason I call attention to it is I literally don’t get that. The universe just is not so tidy; personhood or whatever word you wish to use is not just one thing, and the things that make it up seem to behave such that the question is less like “Is this a car or not?” and more like “Is this car worth 50,000 dollars, to me, at this time?”
Suffering is probably a more restrictive term, but I am not aware of a measurable definition of it.
That is ever the problem—you can’t even technically demonstrate without lots of inference that your best friend or your mother really suffer. This is why I don’t like drawing binary boundaries on that basis.
It is also probably sometimes too narrow, as most of us would find it immoral to harm people who do not experience suffering due to a mental or a physical issue, like pain insensitivity or asymbolia.
Though strangely enough, plenty of LWers seem to consider many disorders with similarly pervasive consequences for experience to result in “lives barely worth living...”
My (but not necessarily yours) concern with all this is a version of the repugnant conclusion: if you assign some moral worth to mosquitoes or bacteria, and you allow for non-asymptotic accumulation based on the number of specimen, then there is some number of bacteria whose moral worth is at least one human. If you don’t allow for accumulation, then there is no difference between killing one mosquito and 3^^^3 of them. If you impose asymptotic accumulation (no amount of mosquitoes have moral worth equal to that of one human, or one cat), then the goalpost simply shifts to a different lifeform (how many cats are worth a human?). Imposing an artificial Schelling fence at least provides some solution, though far from universal. Thus I’m OK with ignoring suffering or moral worth of some lifeforms. I would not approve of needlessly torturing them, but mostly because of the anguish it causes humans like you.
You seem to suggest that there is more than one dimension to moral worth, but, just like with utility function or with deontological ethics, eventually it comes down to making a decision, and all your dimensions converge into one.
My (but not necessarily yours) concern with all this is a version of the repugnant conclusion: if you assign some moral worth to mosquitoes or bacteria, and you allow for non-asymptotic accumulation based on the number of specimen, then there is some number of bacteria whose moral worth is at least one human.
Sure, that registers—if there were a thriving microbial ecosystem on Mars, I’d consider it immoral to wipe it out utterly simply for the sake of one human being. Though I think my function-per-individual is more complicated than that; wiping it out because that one human is a hypochondriac is more-wrong in my perception than wiping it out because, let’s say, that one human is an astronaut stranded in some sort of weird microbial mat, and the only way to release them before they die is to let loose an earthly extremophile which will, as a consequence, propagate across Mars and destroy all remaining holdouts of the local biosphere. That latter is very much more a tossup, such that I don’t view other humans going ‘Duh, save the human!’ as exactly committing an atrocity or compounded the wrong. Sometimes reality just presents you with situations that are not ideal, or where there is no good choice. No-win situations happen, unsatisfying resolutions and all. That doesn’t mean do nothing; it just means trying to set up my ethical and moral framework to make it impossible feels silly.
Imposing an artificial Schelling fence at least provides some solution, though far from universal.
To be honest, that’s all this debate really seems to be to me—where do we set that fence? And I’m convinced that the decision point is more cultural and personal than anything, such that the resulting discussion does not usefully generalize.
You seem to suggest that there is more than one dimension to moral worth, but, just like with utility function or with deontological ethics, eventually it comes down to making a decision, and all your dimensions converge into one.
And once I do, even if my decision was as rational as it can be under the circumstances and I’ve identified a set of priorities most folks would applaud in principle, there’s still the potential for regrets and no-win situations. While a moral system that genuinely solved that problem would please me greatly, I see no sign that you’ve stumbled upon it here.
-Possessing sensory experiences (I’m pretty sure insects and even worms do that)
Are you claiming that insects and worms possess functioning sense-organs, or that they possess subjective experience of the resulting sense-data? I find the latter somewhat unlikely wrt insects and worms. Regarding babies, it doesn’t seem “obviously untrue” to me that babies lack subjective experience. Though, nor does it seem obviously true.
A nervous system is just a lump of matter, the same as any other. Another object with functioning sense-organs is my laptop, yet I wouldn’t say my laptop possesses subjective experience.
A nervous system is just a lump of matter, the same as any other.
So you will have no objection to me replacing your brain with an intricately-carved wooden replica, then?
Another object with functioning sense-organs is my laptop, yet I wouldn’t say my laptop possesses subjective experience.
How would you know if it did?
If you don’t think a nervous system is relevant there, I’m curious to know what you think is behind you having subjective experiences, and if you believe in p-zombies. Your laptop doesn’t organize that sense input and integrate it into a complex system. But even simple organisms do that.
Your response suggests you do understand the distinction between possessing sensory information and subjective experience of the same. As such, I suppose my job here is complete. But nevertheless:
The important thing is not the composition of an object, but its functionality. An intricately-carved wooden machine that correctly carried out the functionality of my brain would be a fine replacement, even if it lacks the elan vital neural matter supposedly has.
My laptop doesn’t have subjective experience. You do. An elephant most likely does. What about Watson?. The robots in those robot soccer competitions? Or BigDog?
I mostly understand “sentient” as most people use the term as the second meaning. Eliezer in particular seems to use “sentient” and “person” pretty much interchangeably here, for example, without really defining either, so I understand him to use the word similarly.
The latter, applied to the real world, sounds rather more like “soul” than anything coherent and obvious.
Were I inclined to turn this assertion into a question, it would probably be something like “what properties does a typical adult have that a typical 1-year-old lacks which makes it more OK to kill the latter than the former?”
Were I inclined to turn this assertion into a question, it would probably be something like “what properties does a typical adult have that a typical 1-year-old lacks which makes it more OK to kill the latter than the former?” Is that the question you’re asking?
-SF/F writer’s term for “assume this fictional entity is a person” (akin to “sapient”; it’s a binary personhood marker, or a secularized soul—it tells the reader to react accordingly to this character’s experiences and behavior)
I realize you seem to have deleted your account, but: this.
Albeit sufficiently young babies are plausibly not sentient.
My super-villain side just got slapped by my censors before it could formulate any way to exploit this. I’m still pondering whether this is a good thing.
My super-villain side went on to try to devise a way to emulate the Rai Stones economy using an abstract exchange of not-yet-sentient babies and various related opportunity costs, before realizing that even my super-villain side is not good enough at economics to conjure efficient economic systems out of thin air like that while making sure that they benefit him.
Certainly, however, my super-villain side did fall back on the secondary, less-desirable option of lending resources and medical assistance to pregnant mothers, such as to have legal ownership claim on the nonsentient babies in order to re-sell them for services or work or money to said mothers afterwards.
Does it sound like a good thing or a bad thing that I can think of this without flinching?
Given the wording of the story, both women were in the practice of sleeping directly next to their babies. The other woman didn’t roll over her baby because she was wicked, she rolled over her baby because it was next to her while she slept. They left out the part where the “good mother” rolled over her own baby two weeks later and everyone just threw up their hands and declared “What can we do, these things just happen, ya’ know?”
They left out the part where the “good mother” rolled over her own baby two weeks later and everyone just threw up their hands and declared “What can we do, these things just happen, ya’ know?”
Co-sleeping is controversial, not one-sided. It seems that co-sleeping increases the risk of smothering but decreases the risk of SIDS, leading to a net decrease in infant mortality. Always be wary of The Seen and The Unseen.
On the other hand, the majority of related studies seem to be observational, rather than interventional, so it’s quite possible that both co-sleeping and observed “effects” are the result of some third factor, such as the attitude of the parent. For example, it’s likely that a parent who chooses to co-sleep is more well-disposed toward the infant, and is therefore far less likely to kill it deliberately (infanticide), thus making up some unknown decrease in the overall frequency of “SIDS”.
For example, it’s likely that a parent who chooses to co-sleep is more well-disposed toward the infant, and is therefore far less likely to kill it deliberately (infanticide), thus making up some unknown decrease in the overall frequency of “SIDS”.
Indeed; this also probably explains some of the benefit of room-sharing.
How much is the decrease? I imagine that the effect of being responsible for your child’s death by smothering is probably a lot more upsetting and mentally damaging than that of having a child die from SIDS. Maybe that’s lessened by knowing the above information; but most people don’t.
It’s hard to get solid numbers. Roomsharing (which is recommended) decreases SIDS rates by half, which will be the majority of the benefit of a transition from own-room sleeping to cosleeping. It also seems like the overwhelming majority of smothering deaths deal involve other known risk factors, like smoking or drug use by the mother. It’s also frequently recommended against the infant sleeping with the father or siblings (by both sides). Epidemiological studies have the issue that cosleeping is officially discouraged.
If you’re adding in psychological factors, though, there’s some suggesting that cosleeping is good for the infant / their later development.
As may be unsurprising to the cynic, much research on infant sleep is funded by crib manufacturers. My read of the issue is that cosleeping was recommended against because of the known danger of smothering and the social benefit of parental independence from the infant, and that more information is slowly coming to light that the infant is better off cosleeping with the mother, except when other risks are present.
If you co-sleep intelligently, it’s not even much of an issue. There’s lots of devices, both modern and ancient, you can use to keep the child within reach but at no risk of rolling over them.
I expected that.
My own opinion is that if it is necessary for some reason, it’s a good idea, but personally I’d rather be possibly, indirectly, and one instance of a poorly understood syndrome responsible for my baby’s death than actually being the one that crushed him.
It seems that sleeping separately very drastically decreases your chances of personally killing your baby in your sleep.
Such are your desires, then, at the object level. But do you also desire that they be your desires? Are you satisfied with being the sort of person who cares more about avoiding guilt and personal responsibility than about the actual survival and well-being of his/her child? Or would you change your preferences, if you could?
My desires concerning what my desires should be are also determined by my desires, so your question is not valid, it’s a recursive loop. You are first assuming that I care about anything at all, secondly assuming that I experience guilt at all, and thirdly that I would care about my children. As it turns out, you are correct on all three assumptions, just keep in mind that those are not always givens among humans.
What I was saying was that in the two situations (my child dies due to SIDS), and (my child dies due to me rolling over onto him), in the first situation not only could I trick myself into believing it wasn’t my fault, it’s also completely possible that it really wasn’t my fault, and that it had some other cause; in the second situation, there’s really no question, and a very concrete way to prevent it.
To answer your unasked question, I still do not alieve that keeping my child a safe distance away while sleeping but showing love and care at all other times increases her chance of SIDS. If I was to be shown conclusive research of cause and effect between them, I would reverse my current opinion, mos’ def.
Your second-order desires are fixed by your desires as a whole, trivially. But they aren’t fixed by your first-order desires. So it makes sense for me to ask whether you harbor a second-order desire to change your first-order desires in this case, or whether you are reflectively satisfied with your first-order desires.
Consider the alcoholic who desires to stop craving alcohol (a second-order desire), but who continues to drink alcohol (because his first-order desires are stronger than his desire-desires). Presumably your first-order desires are currently defeating your second-order ones, else you’d have already switched first-order desires. But it doesn’t follow from this that your second-order desires are nonexistent!
Perhaps, for instance, your second-order desire is strong enough that if you could simply push a button to forever effortlessly change your first-order desires, you would do so; but your second-order desire isn’t so strong that you’ll change first-order desires by willpower alone, without having a magic button to press. This, I think, is an extremely common situation humans find themselves in. So I was curious whether you were satisfied or unsatisfied with your current first-order priorities.
I still do not alieve that keeping my child a safe distance away while sleeping but showing love and care at all other times increases her chance of SIDS. If I was to be shown conclusive research of cause and effect between them, I would reverse my current opinion, mos’ def.
So it’s not really the case that you’d prioritize psychological-guilt-avoidance over SIDS-avoidance? In that case the question is less interesting, since it’s just a matter of how well you can think yourself into the hypothetical in which you have to choose between, say, increasing your child’s odds of surviving by 1% and the cost of, say, increasing your guilt-if-the-child-does-die by 200%.
In that case the question is less interesting, since it’s just a matter of how well you can think yourself into the hypothetical in which you have to choose between, say, increasing your child’s odds of surviving by 1% and the cost of, say, increasing your guilt-if-the-child-does-die by 200%.
I guess, but in real life I don’t sit down with a calculator to figure that out; I’d settle for some definitive research.
Your second-order desires are fixed by your desires as a whole, trivially. But they aren’t fixed by your first-order desires. So it makes sense for me to ask whether you harbor a second-order desire to change your first-order desires in this case, or whether you are reflectively satisfied with your first-order desires.
[all that quote], trivially. What I am saying is that even my “own” desires and the goals that I think are right are only what they are because of my biology and upbringing. If I seek to “debug” myself, it’s still only according to a value system that is adapted to perpetuate our DNA. So to answer truthfully, I am NOT satisfied with my first-order desires, in fact I am not satisfied with being trapped in a human body, from which the first-order desires are spawned.
It seems that sleeping separately very drastically decreases your chances of personally killing your baby in your sleep.
In the story, maybe. I think nowadays you can get specially designed cribs that sort of merge onto the bed, so you’re co-sleeping but can’t roll onto your baby–see http://www.armsreach.com/
I’m involved in a local Native American community and one of the medicine elders I know often makes a sort of device for families with infant children, especially ones with colic or other sleep-disrupting conditions. It’s kind of a cradle-sling type thing you hang securely above your own bed; if kiddo’s crying but otherwise okay you can just reach up and rock them, and they’re otherwise within reach. I’ve seen replicas of the pre-contact version, and even made of birchbark and hung from the rafters of a lodge with sinew it’s evidently still quite sturdy and safe; like, you’d have to knock over the house for it to be an issue. These days, using modern materials, they’re even safer. So this goes back quite a long way.
Then I still blame the mother in the story for not building one of those!
That is pretty neat, I wholeheartedly endorse using those, just in case. In the unlikely event that I produce more biological offspring, I will make use of that knowledge.
She’s not seen as evil because she inadvertently killed her baby, she’s seen as evil because she stole the other woman’s baby and assented to killing it. Right?
It was a property dispute, not a measurement of righteousness. The story served to illustrate Solomon’s wisdom; spiritual judgment of the women was not an issue. As for my opinion, I see both of them as stupid, and only evil to the degree that stupidity influences evil.
Albeit sufficiently young babies are plausibly not sentient.
This is why I reject binary “sentient/nonsentient” criteria for moral worth. If mentally subnormal adults or small children are worthless, then you have followed simplicity off a cliff.
You seem to equate “nonperson” with “worthless” here. Do you do that advisedly, or carelessly? And if the former, can you summarize your reasons for considering nonpersons worthless?
[ETA: the parent has been edited after this comment was written.]
Which raises the question: do you actually know anyone who considers small children worthless, or are you just bracketing here?
I mean, I know lots of people who consider small children (and various precursors to small children) to have less value than other things they value… indeed, I don’t know anyone who doesn’t, although there are certainly disagreements about what clears that bar and what doesn’t. But that needn’t involve walking off any cliffs… that’s just what it means to live in a world where we sometimes have to choose among things of value.
Well, worthless is a mild exaggeration, but Eliezer has argued that eating babies is justified if they’re young enough. Infanticide (or “post-natal abortion”) is approved of by a small but real minority. I have yet to encounter anyone who thinks toddlers are equivalent to animals (who doesn’t use this to argue for animals’ rights) but I assume they exist as a minority of a minority. But if they can talk, most people are convinced. (This does not apply to sign language, for some reason.)
What I get from your answer is that you believe there exist people who support killing children if they’re young enough, though you haven’t talked to any of them about the parameters of that support, and you infer from that position that they value young children less than they ought to, which is what you meant by considering young children “worthless” in the first place.
That is, as I currently understand you. your original sentiment can be rephrased “If you value small children less than you ought to, you have followed simplicity off a cliff” and you believe Eliezer values small children less than he ought to, or at the very least has made arguments from which one could infer that, and that other unnamed people do too..
There are some moral theories that sound simple and reasonable in the abstract (“maximize happiness”, for example) but in reality do not encompass the full range of human value. There are two possible responses to this; you can either examine the evidence and conclude you missed something, or you can decide your theory is self-evidently true and everyone else must be biased, and bite the bullet
Of course, everyone sometimes is biased, and some bullets should be bitten. But when you start advocating forcible wireheading (or eating babies) you should at least reexamine the evidence.
Eliezer may be right. But I predict he hasn’t examined binary personhood … ever? Recently, at any rate.
With respect to Eliezer in particular, it would greatly surprise me if your disagreement with him was actually about complexity of value as you seem to suggest here, or about unexamined notions of binary personhood. That said, my preference is to let you have your argument with him with him, rather than trying to have your argument with him with me.
With respect to your general point, I’m all in favor of re-examining evidence when it leads me to unexpected conclusions. But as you say, some bullets should be bitten… sometimes it turns out that habitual beliefs are unjustified, and re-examining evidence leads me to reject them with greater confidence.
For my own part, I probably value human infants less than you think I ought to… though it’s hard to be sure, since I’m not exactly sure where you draw the line.
Just to put a line in the sand for calibration: for at least 99.99999% of children aged 2 years or younger, and a randomly chosen adult, I would easily endorse killing any 10 of the former to save the latter (probably larger numbers as well, but with more difficulty), and I don’t think I’ve walked off any cliffs in the process.
Oh, I daresay I value infants more than most people think I ought to. That’s the problem with consistency :(
Still, I think it’s fair to say that binary personhood has a problem with the fact that most people seem to care about things on a sliding scale, and it’s probably not just bias.
Anyway, seems like this point has been quite thoughrily clarified...
Brecht wrote a play based on the Solomon story where the the birth mother only wants the child because she can’t inherit without him. The judge has a circle of chalk drawn and says the two women are to simultaneously try to pull the child from it; if they tear him in half, they will each get their part. The adoptive mother lets go, and he deems her the true mother.
It suddenly occurs to me that the first woman is the right choice for raising the child, regardless of who the birth mother is.
Indeed; I strongly suspect Solomon had that in mind, but wanted to keep the post as short as possible.
I wonder if Solomon had plans in mind if both women had said the same thing.
Quite possibly. I also wonder if it would depend on what they both said- if both volunteered to retract their claim, then as wedrifid suggests lots were commonly used to show the will of God. If both reacted spitefully, then...
You’re familiar with the empirical work on ultimatum games, right? It is common for people to prefer to get nothing equitably than to accept an inequitable split where they are worse off.
Well, yeah, but… For readers to think “wow, that Solomon guy was so wise!” rather than “that’s supposed to be a joke, right?”, the characters would have to have at least some amount of plausibility in their cultural context. (Then again, the Bible wasn’t the place where one’d expect to find jokes in the first place.)
(Then again, the Bible wasn’t the place where one’d expect to find jokes in the first place.)
Perhaps not long form narrative jokes, but the bible is actually loaded with humorous word play (puns, double entendre, etc). Unfortunately, pretty much all of it requires a pretty decent understanding of biblical Hebrew. I often wonder if biblical literalists would take such a hard line if they realized the writer was often writing for wordplay as much as for conveying a message.
Well, yeah, but… For readers to think “wow, that Solomon guy was so wise!” rather than “that’s supposed to be a joke, right?”, the characters would have to have at least some amount of plausibility in their cultural context.
It suddenly occurs to me that the first woman is the right choice for raising the child, regardless of who the birth mother is.
I wonder if Solomon had plans in mind if both women had said the same thing.
That’s what the next pair of claimants did, after learning about the case. That time Solomon’s decision was not wise enough to be included in the sacred texts: he sold the baby into slavery and then promptly executed both claimants. Not surprisingly, no further cases like this were brought before the king.
Parchment, shears, rock.
*stone
*carbuncle
This is an excellent point I should’ve noticed myself (though it’s been long and long since I encountered the parable). Who says you own a baby just by being its genetic mother?
Albeit sufficiently young babies are plausibly not sentient.
What definition of “sentient” are you using, such that young babies don’t meet it?
One that also excludes animals, but includes healthy adult humans.
Bizarre. In lieu of a reply by Eliezer himself clarifying things, I am left to understand he thinks that some portion of humans otherwise possessing the structural and anatomical necessities for sensation don’t experience anything even when all their sense organs are working fine, and that animals in general are basically just meat-automata with no inner life at all. Even when they’re communicating about those inner states and have the same structural correlates of various sensations we’d expect to see, and react in ways that sure look like expression of sensation or emotion (even if you sometimes need to be familiar with their particular body language).
That feels a lot more like a strawman than anything, because it’s just so obviously bollocks. If I step on my cat’s tail by mistake, she doesn’t yowl and run from me because “Nociceptor activation threshold met; initiate yowl-and-run subroutine.” She does it because it’s painful and it startled her. I know there are people who honestly believe something like that about nonhuman life across the board, but I hadn’t gotten the impression Eliezer was one.
Someone clear this up for me?
Sentient vs. Sapient is one of the most common word confusions in the English language. If someone says “sentient,” but the context appears to suggest “sapient,” they probably mean sapient.
The bit about that that’s bothering me is “sapient” is a term of art—it’s science fiction shorthand employed with a purpose (it denotes personhood for the reader, in a field where blatantly-nonhuman but unambiguously-personlike entities are common). It divides the field of hypothetical entities into two neat, clean categories: people no matter what their substrate, appearance, anatomy or drives, and everything from animals of every sort to plants and grains of sand.
It just seems like a weird way of dividing up the world, and more of a cultural artefact than anything; a marker on the map which corresponds to nothing in the territory.
People often use ‘sentient’ to mean ‘sapient’, and it may be that Eliezer intends the latter. It’s at least pretty plausible that animals and very young infants are not sapient, namely not capable of judgement, and that this capacity is what would endow one with a certain autonomy.
“Soul”, gotcha. Binary personhood marker. Reified concept not sufficiently unpacked. Okie.
That’s a rather uncharitable misinterpretation of what hen wrote, caused by anger and frustration, I’m guessing.
No, just the expressed befuddlement.
I respectfully disagree, sapience is an acquired subjective quality, therefore it is trivial to disregard. Now sentience is orders of magnitude more complex. I was going to say “inherent” to the species, but is it? Now this is supposed to be “the easy problem” go figure that.
1)”Nociceptor activation threshold met; initiate yowl-and-run subroutine.” 2)She does it because it’s painful and it startled her.
What’s the difference between 1 and 2?
1 presumes that minimalist descriptions of superficially-visible output are all you need to reconstruct the actual drivers behind the behavior. 2 presumes that the evolutionarily-shared neural architecture and its basic components of perception, cognition and soforth are not seperated by a barrier of magical reality fluid.
Ah. If you’re saying that 1) implies lesser internal machinery than 2), and that the internal machinery (cognition and soforth) is what’s important, then I agree.
The problem I think is just that, to me, they both sound to me like perfectly reasonable (if vague) descriptions of complex, sentient human pain. It seemed like you were saying nociceptors and subroutines were incapable of producing pain and startlement.
1 sounds to me like an attempt to capture output in the form of a flowchart. It’s like trying to describe the flocking behavior of birds by reference to the Boids cellular automaton—and insisting not that there are similar principles at work in how the birds go about solving the problem of flocking, but that birds literally run an instance of Boids in their heads and that’s all there is to their flocking behavior.
I agree that “Eliezer believes animals and nonpathological infants are just meat-automata who don’t actually possess the mental states they communicating about” is a strawman. I’m not really sure what remains to be cleared up. Can you clarify the question?
Basically what I asked Eliezer: What sense of the word “sentient” is he using, such that babies plausibly don’t qualify? My de facto read of the term and a little digging around Google show two basic senses:
-Possessing sensory experiences (I’m pretty sure insects and even worms do that)
-SF/F writer’s term for “assume this fictional entity is a person” (akin to “sapient”; it’s a binary personhood marker, or a secularized soul—it tells the reader to react accordingly to this character’s experiences and behavior)
The latter, applied to the real world, sounds rather more like “soul” than anything coherent and obvious. The former, denied in babies, sounds bizarre and obviously untrue. So...I’m missing something, and I’d like to know what it is.
Maybe the best way to approach this question is backwards. I assume you believe that people (at least) have some moral worth such that they ought not be owned, whimsically destroyed, etc. I also assume you believe that stones (at least) have no moral worth and can be owned, whimsically destroyed, etc. without any immediate moral consequences. So 1) tell me where you think the line is (even if its a very fuzzy, circumstantial one) and 2) tell me in virtue of what something has or lacks such moral worth.
...or 3) toss out my questions and tell me how you think it goes on your own terms.
Essentially. I don’t consider it a fact-about-the-world per se, but that captures my alief pretty well.
Eh. Actually I have some squick to cavalier destruction or disruption of inanimate objects, but they don’t register out as the same thing. So we’ll go with that.
To what extent does an entity respond dynamically to both present and historical conditions in terms impacts on its health, wellbeing, emotional and perceptual experiences, social interactions and so on? To what extent is it capable of experiencing pain and suffering? To what extent does modifying my behavior in response to these things constitute a negative burden on myself or others? To what extent do present circumstances bear on all those things?
Those aren’t so much terms in an equation as independent axes of variance. There are probably some I haven’t listed. They define the shape of the space; the actual answer to your question is lurking somewhere in there.
Thanks, that’s helpful. Given what you’ve said, I doubt you and EY would disagree on much. EY says in his metaethics sequence that moral facts and categories like ‘moral worth’ or ‘autonomy’ are derived properties. In other words, they don’t refer to anything fundamental about the world, but supervene on some complex set of fundamental facts. Given that that’s his view, I think he was just using ‘sentience’ as a shorthand for something like what you’ve written: note that many of the considerations you describe are importantly related to a capacity for complex experiences.
Except I’ve interacted with bugs in ways that satisfied that criterion (and that did parse out as morally-good), so clearly the devil’s in the details. If Eliezer suspects young children may reliably not qualify, and I suspect that insects may at least occasionally qualify, we’re clearly drawing very different lines and have very different underlying assumptions about reality.
What makes you think there’s a line? I care more about killing (or torturing) a dog than a stone, but less so than a human. Pulling the wings off flies provokes a similar, if weaker, reaction. A continuum might complicate the math slightly, but …
“Self-aware” is one soul-free interpretation of sentient/sapient, often experimentally measured by the mirror test. By that metric, humans are not sentient until well into the second year, and most species we would consider non-sentient fail it. Of course, treating non-self-aware human babies as non-sentient animals is quite problematic. Peter Singer is one of the few people brave enough to tread into this topic.
The mirror test is interesting for sure, especially in a cross-species context. However, I’m far from convinced about the straightforward reading of “the expected response indicates the subject has an internal map of oneself.” Since you read the Wikipedia article down that far, you could also scroll down to the “Criticisms” section and see a variety of objections to that.
Moreover, when asked to choose between the interpretation that the test isn’t sufficient for its stated purpose, and the interpretation that six-year olds in Fiji aren’t self-aware I rather suspect the former is more likely.
Besides all that, even if we assume self-awareness is the thing you seem to be making of it, I’m not clear how that would draw moral-worth line so neatly between humans (or some humans) and literally everything else. From a consequentialist perspective, if I assume that dogs or rats can experience pain and suffering, it seems weird to neglect them from my utility function on the basis they don’t jump through that particular (ambiguous, methodologically-questionable) experimental hoop.
Oh, I agree that the mirror test is quite imperfect. The practical issue is how to draw a Schelling somewhere sensible. Clearly mosquitoes can be treated as non-sentient, clearly most humans cannot be. Treating human fetuses and some mammals as non-sentient is rather controversial. Just “experiencing pain” is probably too wide a net for moral worth, as nociceptors are present in most animals, including the aforementioned mosquito. Suffering is probably a more restrictive term, but I am not aware of a measurable definition of it. It is also probably sometimes too narrow, as most of us would find it immoral to harm people who do not experience suffering due to a mental or a physical issue, like pain insensitivity or asymbolia.
Disagree that it’s clear. I’ve had interactions with insects that I could only parse as “interaction between two sentient beings, although there’s a wide gulf of expectation and sensation and emotion and so forth which pushes it right up to the edges of that category.” I’ve not had many interactions with mosquitos beyond “You try to suck my blood because you’re hungry and I’m a warm, CO2-breathing blood source in your vicinity”, but I assume that there’s something it feels like to be a mosquito, that it has a little mosquito mind that might not be very flexible or impressive when weighted against a human one, but it’s there, it’s what the mosquito uses to navigate its environment and organize its behavior intelligibly, and all of its searching for mates and blood and a nice place to lay eggs is felt as a drive… that in short it’s not just a tiny little bloodsucking p-zombie. That doesn’t mean I accord it much moral weight either—I won’t shed any tears over it if I should smash it while reflexively brushing it aside, even though I’m aware arthropods have nociception and, complex capacity for emotional suffering or not, they still feel pain and I prefer not to inflict that needlessly (or without a safeword).
But I couldn’t agree it isn’t sentient, that it’s just squishy clockwork.
It seems to me that the problem you’re really trying to solve is how to sort the world into neat piles marked “okay to inflict my desires on regardless of consequences” and “not okay to do that to.” Which is probably me just stating the obvious, but the reason I call attention to it is I literally don’t get that. The universe just is not so tidy; personhood or whatever word you wish to use is not just one thing, and the things that make it up seem to behave such that the question is less like “Is this a car or not?” and more like “Is this car worth 50,000 dollars, to me, at this time?”
That is ever the problem—you can’t even technically demonstrate without lots of inference that your best friend or your mother really suffer. This is why I don’t like drawing binary boundaries on that basis.
Though strangely enough, plenty of LWers seem to consider many disorders with similarly pervasive consequences for experience to result in “lives barely worth living...”
My (but not necessarily yours) concern with all this is a version of the repugnant conclusion: if you assign some moral worth to mosquitoes or bacteria, and you allow for non-asymptotic accumulation based on the number of specimen, then there is some number of bacteria whose moral worth is at least one human. If you don’t allow for accumulation, then there is no difference between killing one mosquito and 3^^^3 of them. If you impose asymptotic accumulation (no amount of mosquitoes have moral worth equal to that of one human, or one cat), then the goalpost simply shifts to a different lifeform (how many cats are worth a human?). Imposing an artificial Schelling fence at least provides some solution, though far from universal. Thus I’m OK with ignoring suffering or moral worth of some lifeforms. I would not approve of needlessly torturing them, but mostly because of the anguish it causes humans like you.
You seem to suggest that there is more than one dimension to moral worth, but, just like with utility function or with deontological ethics, eventually it comes down to making a decision, and all your dimensions converge into one.
Sure, that registers—if there were a thriving microbial ecosystem on Mars, I’d consider it immoral to wipe it out utterly simply for the sake of one human being. Though I think my function-per-individual is more complicated than that; wiping it out because that one human is a hypochondriac is more-wrong in my perception than wiping it out because, let’s say, that one human is an astronaut stranded in some sort of weird microbial mat, and the only way to release them before they die is to let loose an earthly extremophile which will, as a consequence, propagate across Mars and destroy all remaining holdouts of the local biosphere. That latter is very much more a tossup, such that I don’t view other humans going ‘Duh, save the human!’ as exactly committing an atrocity or compounded the wrong. Sometimes reality just presents you with situations that are not ideal, or where there is no good choice. No-win situations happen, unsatisfying resolutions and all. That doesn’t mean do nothing; it just means trying to set up my ethical and moral framework to make it impossible feels silly.
To be honest, that’s all this debate really seems to be to me—where do we set that fence? And I’m convinced that the decision point is more cultural and personal than anything, such that the resulting discussion does not usefully generalize.
And once I do, even if my decision was as rational as it can be under the circumstances and I’ve identified a set of priorities most folks would applaud in principle, there’s still the potential for regrets and no-win situations. While a moral system that genuinely solved that problem would please me greatly, I see no sign that you’ve stumbled upon it here.
Why stop there? Humans have also had interactions with lightning that they could only parse as interactions between two sentient beings!
Are you claiming that insects and worms possess functioning sense-organs, or that they possess subjective experience of the resulting sense-data? I find the latter somewhat unlikely wrt insects and worms. Regarding babies, it doesn’t seem “obviously untrue” to me that babies lack subjective experience. Though, nor does it seem obviously true.
I’m trying to figure out why you think there’s a difference between the two, at least when dealing with anything possessing a nervous system.
A nervous system is just a lump of matter, the same as any other. Another object with functioning sense-organs is my laptop, yet I wouldn’t say my laptop possesses subjective experience.
So you will have no objection to me replacing your brain with an intricately-carved wooden replica, then?
How would you know if it did?
If you don’t think a nervous system is relevant there, I’m curious to know what you think is behind you having subjective experiences, and if you believe in p-zombies. Your laptop doesn’t organize that sense input and integrate it into a complex system. But even simple organisms do that.
Your response suggests you do understand the distinction between possessing sensory information and subjective experience of the same. As such, I suppose my job here is complete. But nevertheless:
The important thing is not the composition of an object, but its functionality. An intricately-carved wooden machine that correctly carried out the functionality of my brain would be a fine replacement, even if it lacks the elan vital neural matter supposedly has.
My laptop doesn’t have subjective experience. You do. An elephant most likely does. What about Watson?. The robots in those robot soccer competitions? Or BigDog?
My opinion on zombies is lw standard.
How would you know if it did?
Ah! I understand, now. Thanks for clarifying.
I mostly understand “sentient” as most people use the term as the second meaning. Eliezer in particular seems to use “sentient” and “person” pretty much interchangeably here, for example, without really defining either, so I understand him to use the word similarly.
Were I inclined to turn this assertion into a question, it would probably be something like “what properties does a typical adult have that a typical 1-year-old lacks which makes it more OK to kill the latter than the former?”
Is that the question you’re asking?
More or less, yeah.
I realize you seem to have deleted your account, but: this.
My super-villain side just got slapped by my censors before it could formulate any way to exploit this. I’m still pondering whether this is a good thing.
Hmm. I’m not sure I have the same censors.
My super-villain side went on to try to devise a way to emulate the Rai Stones economy using an abstract exchange of not-yet-sentient babies and various related opportunity costs, before realizing that even my super-villain side is not good enough at economics to conjure efficient economic systems out of thin air like that while making sure that they benefit him.
Certainly, however, my super-villain side did fall back on the secondary, less-desirable option of lending resources and medical assistance to pregnant mothers, such as to have legal ownership claim on the nonsentient babies in order to re-sell them for services or work or money to said mothers afterwards.
Does it sound like a good thing or a bad thing that I can think of this without flinching?
You tell me.
Given the wording of the story, both women were in the practice of sleeping directly next to their babies. The other woman didn’t roll over her baby because she was wicked, she rolled over her baby because it was next to her while she slept. They left out the part where the “good mother” rolled over her own baby two weeks later and everyone just threw up their hands and declared “What can we do, these things just happen, ya’ know?”
Co-sleeping is controversial, not one-sided. It seems that co-sleeping increases the risk of smothering but decreases the risk of SIDS, leading to a net decrease in infant mortality. Always be wary of The Seen and The Unseen.
On the other hand, the majority of related studies seem to be observational, rather than interventional, so it’s quite possible that both co-sleeping and observed “effects” are the result of some third factor, such as the attitude of the parent. For example, it’s likely that a parent who chooses to co-sleep is more well-disposed toward the infant, and is therefore far less likely to kill it deliberately (infanticide), thus making up some unknown decrease in the overall frequency of “SIDS”.
Indeed; this also probably explains some of the benefit of room-sharing.
How much is the decrease? I imagine that the effect of being responsible for your child’s death by smothering is probably a lot more upsetting and mentally damaging than that of having a child die from SIDS. Maybe that’s lessened by knowing the above information; but most people don’t.
It’s hard to get solid numbers. Roomsharing (which is recommended) decreases SIDS rates by half, which will be the majority of the benefit of a transition from own-room sleeping to cosleeping. It also seems like the overwhelming majority of smothering deaths deal involve other known risk factors, like smoking or drug use by the mother. It’s also frequently recommended against the infant sleeping with the father or siblings (by both sides). Epidemiological studies have the issue that cosleeping is officially discouraged.
If you’re adding in psychological factors, though, there’s some suggesting that cosleeping is good for the infant / their later development.
As may be unsurprising to the cynic, much research on infant sleep is funded by crib manufacturers. My read of the issue is that cosleeping was recommended against because of the known danger of smothering and the social benefit of parental independence from the infant, and that more information is slowly coming to light that the infant is better off cosleeping with the mother, except when other risks are present.
If you co-sleep intelligently, it’s not even much of an issue. There’s lots of devices, both modern and ancient, you can use to keep the child within reach but at no risk of rolling over them.
I expected that. My own opinion is that if it is necessary for some reason, it’s a good idea, but personally I’d rather be possibly, indirectly, and one instance of a poorly understood syndrome responsible for my baby’s death than actually being the one that crushed him.
It seems that sleeping separately very drastically decreases your chances of personally killing your baby in your sleep.
Such are your desires, then, at the object level. But do you also desire that they be your desires? Are you satisfied with being the sort of person who cares more about avoiding guilt and personal responsibility than about the actual survival and well-being of his/her child? Or would you change your preferences, if you could?
My desires concerning what my desires should be are also determined by my desires, so your question is not valid, it’s a recursive loop. You are first assuming that I care about anything at all, secondly assuming that I experience guilt at all, and thirdly that I would care about my children. As it turns out, you are correct on all three assumptions, just keep in mind that those are not always givens among humans.
What I was saying was that in the two situations (my child dies due to SIDS), and (my child dies due to me rolling over onto him), in the first situation not only could I trick myself into believing it wasn’t my fault, it’s also completely possible that it really wasn’t my fault, and that it had some other cause; in the second situation, there’s really no question, and a very concrete way to prevent it.
To answer your unasked question, I still do not alieve that keeping my child a safe distance away while sleeping but showing love and care at all other times increases her chance of SIDS. If I was to be shown conclusive research of cause and effect between them, I would reverse my current opinion, mos’ def.
Your second-order desires are fixed by your desires as a whole, trivially. But they aren’t fixed by your first-order desires. So it makes sense for me to ask whether you harbor a second-order desire to change your first-order desires in this case, or whether you are reflectively satisfied with your first-order desires.
Consider the alcoholic who desires to stop craving alcohol (a second-order desire), but who continues to drink alcohol (because his first-order desires are stronger than his desire-desires). Presumably your first-order desires are currently defeating your second-order ones, else you’d have already switched first-order desires. But it doesn’t follow from this that your second-order desires are nonexistent!
Perhaps, for instance, your second-order desire is strong enough that if you could simply push a button to forever effortlessly change your first-order desires, you would do so; but your second-order desire isn’t so strong that you’ll change first-order desires by willpower alone, without having a magic button to press. This, I think, is an extremely common situation humans find themselves in. So I was curious whether you were satisfied or unsatisfied with your current first-order priorities.
So it’s not really the case that you’d prioritize psychological-guilt-avoidance over SIDS-avoidance? In that case the question is less interesting, since it’s just a matter of how well you can think yourself into the hypothetical in which you have to choose between, say, increasing your child’s odds of surviving by 1% and the cost of, say, increasing your guilt-if-the-child-does-die by 200%.
I guess, but in real life I don’t sit down with a calculator to figure that out; I’d settle for some definitive research.
[all that quote], trivially. What I am saying is that even my “own” desires and the goals that I think are right are only what they are because of my biology and upbringing. If I seek to “debug” myself, it’s still only according to a value system that is adapted to perpetuate our DNA. So to answer truthfully, I am NOT satisfied with my first-order desires, in fact I am not satisfied with being trapped in a human body, from which the first-order desires are spawned.
In the story, maybe. I think nowadays you can get specially designed cribs that sort of merge onto the bed, so you’re co-sleeping but can’t roll onto your baby–see http://www.armsreach.com/
I’m involved in a local Native American community and one of the medicine elders I know often makes a sort of device for families with infant children, especially ones with colic or other sleep-disrupting conditions. It’s kind of a cradle-sling type thing you hang securely above your own bed; if kiddo’s crying but otherwise okay you can just reach up and rock them, and they’re otherwise within reach. I’ve seen replicas of the pre-contact version, and even made of birchbark and hung from the rafters of a lodge with sinew it’s evidently still quite sturdy and safe; like, you’d have to knock over the house for it to be an issue. These days, using modern materials, they’re even safer. So this goes back quite a long way.
Then I still blame the mother in the story for not building one of those!
That is pretty neat, I wholeheartedly endorse using those, just in case. In the unlikely event that I produce more biological offspring, I will make use of that knowledge.
She’s not seen as evil because she inadvertently killed her baby, she’s seen as evil because she stole the other woman’s baby and assented to killing it. Right?
It was a property dispute, not a measurement of righteousness. The story served to illustrate Solomon’s wisdom; spiritual judgment of the women was not an issue. As for my opinion, I see both of them as stupid, and only evil to the degree that stupidity influences evil.
Ah, I interpreted your comment as a response to the supposed judgment that the mother whose child died was wicked. That would seem to have been my b.
Thwarted+joy beats desolation+schadenfreude as a utility win even if they were dividing a teddy bear.
Susan Okin’s attempted reductio ad adsurdum of Robert Nozick says that. Though admittedly she did think that undergoing the pregnancy, not just being the genetic mother, was required.
This is why I reject binary “sentient/nonsentient” criteria for moral worth. If mentally subnormal adults or small children are worthless, then you have followed simplicity off a cliff.
In my expert opinion.
You seem to equate “nonperson” with “worthless” here. Do you do that advisedly, or carelessly? And if the former, can you summarize your reasons for considering nonpersons worthless?
[ETA: the parent has been edited after this comment was written.]
Excellent point. Edited.
Fair enough.
Which raises the question: do you actually know anyone who considers small children worthless, or are you just bracketing here?
I mean, I know lots of people who consider small children (and various precursors to small children) to have less value than other things they value… indeed, I don’t know anyone who doesn’t, although there are certainly disagreements about what clears that bar and what doesn’t. But that needn’t involve walking off any cliffs… that’s just what it means to live in a world where we sometimes have to choose among things of value.
Well, worthless is a mild exaggeration, but Eliezer has argued that eating babies is justified if they’re young enough. Infanticide (or “post-natal abortion”) is approved of by a small but real minority. I have yet to encounter anyone who thinks toddlers are equivalent to animals (who doesn’t use this to argue for animals’ rights) but I assume they exist as a minority of a minority. But if they can talk, most people are convinced. (This does not apply to sign language, for some reason.)
Does that answer your question?
I’m not sure.
What I get from your answer is that you believe there exist people who support killing children if they’re young enough, though you haven’t talked to any of them about the parameters of that support, and you infer from that position that they value young children less than they ought to, which is what you meant by considering young children “worthless” in the first place.
That is, as I currently understand you. your original sentiment can be rephrased “If you value small children less than you ought to, you have followed simplicity off a cliff” and you believe Eliezer values small children less than he ought to, or at the very least has made arguments from which one could infer that, and that other unnamed people do too..
Have I understood you correctly?
Pretty much.
There are some moral theories that sound simple and reasonable in the abstract (“maximize happiness”, for example) but in reality do not encompass the full range of human value. There are two possible responses to this; you can either examine the evidence and conclude you missed something, or you can decide your theory is self-evidently true and everyone else must be biased, and bite the bullet
Of course, everyone sometimes is biased, and some bullets should be bitten. But when you start advocating forcible wireheading (or eating babies) you should at least reexamine the evidence.
Eliezer may be right. But I predict he hasn’t examined binary personhood … ever? Recently, at any rate.
OK.
With respect to Eliezer in particular, it would greatly surprise me if your disagreement with him was actually about complexity of value as you seem to suggest here, or about unexamined notions of binary personhood. That said, my preference is to let you have your argument with him with him, rather than trying to have your argument with him with me.
With respect to your general point, I’m all in favor of re-examining evidence when it leads me to unexpected conclusions. But as you say, some bullets should be bitten… sometimes it turns out that habitual beliefs are unjustified, and re-examining evidence leads me to reject them with greater confidence.
For my own part, I probably value human infants less than you think I ought to… though it’s hard to be sure, since I’m not exactly sure where you draw the line.
Just to put a line in the sand for calibration: for at least 99.99999% of children aged 2 years or younger, and a randomly chosen adult, I would easily endorse killing any 10 of the former to save the latter (probably larger numbers as well, but with more difficulty), and I don’t think I’ve walked off any cliffs in the process.
Oh, I daresay I value infants more than most people think I ought to. That’s the problem with consistency :(
Still, I think it’s fair to say that binary personhood has a problem with the fact that most people seem to care about things on a sliding scale, and it’s probably not just bias.
Anyway, seems like this point has been quite thoughrily clarified...
Brecht wrote a play based on the Solomon story where the the birth mother only wants the child because she can’t inherit without him. The judge has a circle of chalk drawn and says the two women are to simultaneously try to pull the child from it; if they tear him in half, they will each get their part. The adoptive mother lets go, and he deems her the true mother.
Indeed; I strongly suspect Solomon had that in mind, but wanted to keep the post as short as possible.
Quite possibly. I also wonder if it would depend on what they both said- if both volunteered to retract their claim, then as wedrifid suggests lots were commonly used to show the will of God. If both reacted spitefully, then...
Indeed; what kind of person answers like the second mother? (Well, there’s three millennia’s worth of mindware gap between me and her, but still...)
You’re familiar with the empirical work on ultimatum games, right? It is common for people to prefer to get nothing equitably than to accept an inequitable split where they are worse off.
Mmm, yeah; I hadn’t thought of that.
One who was invented for the purpose of the story.
Well, yeah, but… For readers to think “wow, that Solomon guy was so wise!” rather than “that’s supposed to be a joke, right?”, the characters would have to have at least some amount of plausibility in their cultural context. (Then again, the Bible wasn’t the place where one’d expect to find jokes in the first place.)
Perhaps not long form narrative jokes, but the bible is actually loaded with humorous word play (puns, double entendre, etc). Unfortunately, pretty much all of it requires a pretty decent understanding of biblical Hebrew. I often wonder if biblical literalists would take such a hard line if they realized the writer was often writing for wordplay as much as for conveying a message.
As I said elsewhere, these sorts of stories (old testament Chuck Norris stories!) aren’t about humor. It’s “yay Solomon!”
Like the plausibility of these stories?
It’s a story about Solomon’s wisdom. Whether it actually happened is not really the point.