IIUC, your model would (at least tentatively) predict that
if person P has a lot of power over person Q,
and P is not sadistic,
and P is sufficiently secure/well-resourced that P doesn’t “need” to exploit Q,
then P will not intentionally do anything that would be horrible for Q?
If so, how do you reconcile that with e.g. non-sadistic serial killers, rapists, or child abusers? Or non-sadistic narcissists in whose ideal world everyone else would be their worshipful subject/slave?
That last point also raises the question: Would you prefer the existence of lots of (either happily or grudgingly) submissive slaves over oblivion?
To me it seems that terrible outcomes do not require sadism. Seems sufficient that P be low in empathy, and want from Q something Q does not want to provide (like admiration, submission, sex, violent sport, or even just attention).[1] I’m confused as to how/why you disagree.
Also, AFAICT, about 0.5% to 8% of humans are sadistic, and about 8% to 16% have very little or zero empathy. How did you arrive at “99% of humanity [...] are not so sadistic”? Did you account for the fact that most people with sadistic inclinations probably try to hide those inclinations? (Like, if only 0.5% of people appear sadistic, then I’d expect the actual prevalence of sadism to be more like ~4%.)
IIUC, your model would (at least tentatively) predict that
if person P has a lot of power over person Q,
and P is not sadistic,
and P is sufficiently secure/well-resourced that P doesn’t “need” to exploit Q,
then P will not intentionally do anything that would be horrible for Q?
If so, how do you reconcile that with e.g. non-sadistic serial killers, rapists, or child abusers? Or non-sadistic narcissists in whose ideal world everyone else would be their worshipful subject/slave?
That last point also raises the question: Would you prefer the existence of lots of (either happily or grudgingly) submissive slaves over oblivion?
To me it seems that terrible outcomes do not require sadism. Seems sufficient that P be low in empathy, and want from Q something Q does not want to provide (like admiration, submission, sex, violent sport, or even just attention).[1] I’m confused as to how/why you disagree.
Also, AFAICT, about 0.5% to 8% of humans are sadistic, and about 8% to 16% have very little or zero empathy. How did you arrive at “99% of humanity [...] are not so sadistic”? Did you account for the fact that most people with sadistic inclinations probably try to hide those inclinations? (Like, if only 0.5% of people appear sadistic, then I’d expect the actual prevalence of sadism to be more like ~4%.)