They don’t have to agree with our value system for this to be a utopia. They just have to agree that the benefits of living like that outweigh the costs of them having different values. The more religeous people would be against it, but I suspect that at least a large minority of the people would want to move there.
They don’t have to agree with our value system for this to be a utopia.
Actually they do, in order for us to consider the benefits of living like that to outweighs the costs, it has to match some of our values. There is still some overlap between a Medieval peasant and the modern world, this is why we can imagine a fraction of them preferring this existence.
They don’t have to agree with our value system for this to be a utopia. They just have to agree that the benefits of living like that outweigh the costs of them having different values. The more religeous people would be against it, but I suspect that at least a large minority of the people would want to move there.
Actually they do, in order for us to consider the benefits of living like that to outweighs the costs, it has to match some of our values. There is still some overlap between a Medieval peasant and the modern world, this is why we can imagine a fraction of them preferring this existence.
Our world does. Our values do not. I would consider a world full of happy paperclip maximizers a utopia. Their values in no way match my own.
I wouldn’t.