Conflicting terminal values are very much possible. I don’t think they exist to a relevant degree among humans.
Why?
Conflicting learned values do exist (just look at radical islam for example). I don’t think those differences would hold up under reflective value extrapolation.
Why?
However, that simple value difference is mostly symmetrical, and does not warrant cutting up humanity into groups of people with differing aggregate values.
Assuming a community of people are operating with extrapolated reflective values and yet are still selfish, why then is bargaining not optimal for resolving differences in values (they have values that apply to themselves, and values that apply to others, and so selfishness presumably would make them value the former more than the latter)?
Extortionate strategies in the Prisoner’s Dilemma don’t create value as well as nice strategies do, nor do they do as well against one another as nice strategies do; but they beat nice strategies individually.
Some sorts of oppression seem to follow the pattern of extortionate strategies — “I will take advantage of you, and will make it so that you are better off if you let me do so, than if you fight back.”
(Real-world examples are probably unhelpful here; I expect that everyone can think of one or two.)
What if the problem is “I want to oppress you, but I know individually being nicer would get me more of what I want, so instead I’m going to recruit allies that will help me oppress you because I think that will get me even more of what I want.”
You think conflicting terminal values don’t exist to a relevant degree because of a blog post making the point that we’re mostly identical in obvious ways? (ASPD and autism would seem -- I’m not sure what you mean by relevant—to discount conflicting terminal values not existing to a relevant degree, and then there’s enculturation/learning/environment which all affect the brain. Human universals are really cultural universals. To see human universals look towards feral children. This makes your learned values claim suspicious.)
Why?
Why?
Assuming a community of people are operating with extrapolated reflective values and yet are still selfish, why then is bargaining not optimal for resolving differences in values (they have values that apply to themselves, and values that apply to others, and so selfishness presumably would make them value the former more than the latter)?
roughly this
That argument doesn’t address the problem of “I want to oppress you”, “you want to oppress me”.
Extortionate strategies in the Prisoner’s Dilemma don’t create value as well as nice strategies do, nor do they do as well against one another as nice strategies do; but they beat nice strategies individually.
Some sorts of oppression seem to follow the pattern of extortionate strategies — “I will take advantage of you, and will make it so that you are better off if you let me do so, than if you fight back.”
(Real-world examples are probably unhelpful here; I expect that everyone can think of one or two.)
What if the problem is “I want to oppress you, but I know individually being nicer would get me more of what I want, so instead I’m going to recruit allies that will help me oppress you because I think that will get me even more of what I want.”
You think conflicting terminal values don’t exist to a relevant degree because of a blog post making the point that we’re mostly identical in obvious ways? (ASPD and autism would seem -- I’m not sure what you mean by relevant—to discount conflicting terminal values not existing to a relevant degree, and then there’s enculturation/learning/environment which all affect the brain. Human universals are really cultural universals. To see human universals look towards feral children. This makes your learned values claim suspicious.)