Response: Human value instability is not purely caused by biological quirks. Societies differ in how strongly they attempt to impart their values on their members, e.g. more authoritarian governments attempt to control what their subjects are allowed to say to each other in order to suppress dissent. Despite this, the most powerful human societies of today are not those that most stringently attempt to ensure their own stability, suggesting that their are competitive pressures acting against value stability in humans, not just biological limits.
This seems like a contrived analogy at best. Human values are in part innate, with values such as enjoying nice food. Authoritiarian societies do notably less well in this respect. People fleeing authoritarian societies, given an option to do so, is common. Authoritarian leaders, or similar, were probably a feature of the environment of evolutionary adaptedness. Humans tendency to act the loyal minion or rebel is determined by the ancestral success of rebellion.
A dictatorship is one person trying to use nash equilibria to force their values on everyone else.
This seems like a contrived analogy at best. Human values are in part innate, with values such as enjoying nice food. Authoritiarian societies do notably less well in this respect. People fleeing authoritarian societies, given an option to do so, is common. Authoritarian leaders, or similar, were probably a feature of the environment of evolutionary adaptedness. Humans tendency to act the loyal minion or rebel is determined by the ancestral success of rebellion.
A dictatorship is one person trying to use nash equilibria to force their values on everyone else.