As far as I can understand, Eliezer has promoted two separate ideas about ethics: defining personal morality as a computation in the person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external, and extrapolating that computation into smarter creatures. The former idea is self-evident, but the latter (and, by extension, CEV) has received a number of very serious blows recently. IMO it’s time to go back to the drawing board. We must find some attack on the problem of preference, latch onto some small corner, that will allow us to make precise statements. Then build from there.
defining personal morality as a computation in the person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external
But I don’t see how that, by itself, is a significant advance. Suppose I tell you, “mathematics is a computation in a person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external”, or “philosophy is a computation in a person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external”, or “decision making is a computation in a person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external” how much have I actually told you about the nature of math, or philosophy, or decision making?
As far as I can understand, Eliezer has promoted two separate ideas about ethics: defining personal morality as a computation in the person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external, and extrapolating that computation into smarter creatures. The former idea is self-evident, but the latter (and, by extension, CEV) has received a number of very serious blows recently. IMO it’s time to go back to the drawing board. We must find some attack on the problem of preference, latch onto some small corner, that will allow us to make precise statements. Then build from there.
But I don’t see how that, by itself, is a significant advance. Suppose I tell you, “mathematics is a computation in a person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external”, or “philosophy is a computation in a person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external”, or “decision making is a computation in a person’s brain rather than something mysterious and external” how much have I actually told you about the nature of math, or philosophy, or decision making?