In my opinion [i.e. it is my guess that], the value structures and considerations developed by alien evolved civilizations are likely to be similar and partially-inter-translatable to our value structures and considerations, in a manner akin to how their scientific theories and even social life languages are likely to be inter-translatable (perhaps less similar than for scientific theories, more similar than for social languages).
Well, I guess it comes down to the evolutionary niches that produce intelligence and morality, doesn’t it? There doesn’t seem to be any single widely-accepted answer for either of them, although there are plenty of theories, some of which overlap, some don’t.
Then again, we don’t even know how different they would be biologically, so I’m unwilling to make any confidant pronouncement myself, other than professing skepticism for particularly extreme ends of the scale. (Aliens would be humanoid because only humans evolved intelligence!)
Anyway, do you think the arguments for your position are, well, strong? Referring to it as an “opinion” suggests not, but also suggests the arguments for the other side must be similarly weak, right? So maybe you could write about that.
I appeal to (1) the consideration of whether inter-translatability of science, and valuing of certain theories over others, depends on the initial conditions of civilization that develops it. (2) Universality of decision-theoretic and game-theoretic situations. (3) Evolutionary value of versatility hinting at evolved value of diversity.
Not sure what 1 and 3 refer to, but 2 is conditional on a specific theory of origin for morality, right? A plausible one, to be sure, but by no means settled or demonstrated.
My point is that the origin of values, the initial conditions, is not the sole criterion for determining whether a culture appreciates given values. There can be convergence or “discovery” of values.
For some value of “similar”, I agree. Aliens as ‘alien’ as the Babyeaters or the Superhappies don’t sound terribly implausible to me, but it’d be extremely hard for me to imagine anything like the Pebblesorters actually existing.
Do you think that CEV-generating mechanisms are negotiable across species? I.e. whether other species would have a concept of CEV and would agree to at least some of the mechanisms that generate a CEV. It would enable determining which differences are reconcilable and where we have to agree to disagree.
Is babyeating necessarily in babyeaters’ CEV? Which of our developments (drop slavery, stop admiring Sparta etc.) were in our CEV “from the beginning”? Perhaps the dynamics has some degree of convergence even if with more than one basin of attraction.
I agree with your premise, I should have talked about moral progress rather than CEV. ETA: one does not need a linear order for the notion of progress, there can be multiple “basins of attraction”. Some of the dynamics consists of decreasing inconsistencies and increasing robustness.
In my opinion [i.e. it is my guess that], the value structures and considerations developed by alien evolved civilizations are likely to be similar and partially-inter-translatable to our value structures and considerations, in a manner akin to how their scientific theories and even social life languages are likely to be inter-translatable (perhaps less similar than for scientific theories, more similar than for social languages).
Well, I guess it comes down to the evolutionary niches that produce intelligence and morality, doesn’t it? There doesn’t seem to be any single widely-accepted answer for either of them, although there are plenty of theories, some of which overlap, some don’t.
Then again, we don’t even know how different they would be biologically, so I’m unwilling to make any confidant pronouncement myself, other than professing skepticism for particularly extreme ends of the scale. (Aliens would be humanoid because only humans evolved intelligence!)
Anyway, do you think the arguments for your position are, well, strong? Referring to it as an “opinion” suggests not, but also suggests the arguments for the other side must be similarly weak, right? So maybe you could write about that.
I appeal to (1) the consideration of whether inter-translatability of science, and valuing of certain theories over others, depends on the initial conditions of civilization that develops it. (2) Universality of decision-theoretic and game-theoretic situations. (3) Evolutionary value of versatility hinting at evolved value of diversity.
Not sure what 1 and 3 refer to, but 2 is conditional on a specific theory of origin for morality, right? A plausible one, to be sure, but by no means settled or demonstrated.
My point is that the origin of values, the initial conditions, is not the sole criterion for determining whether a culture appreciates given values. There can be convergence or “discovery” of values.
Oh, do you mean that even quite alien beings might want to deal with us?
No, I mean that we might give a shit even about quite alien beings.
For some value of “similar”, I agree. Aliens as ‘alien’ as the Babyeaters or the Superhappies don’t sound terribly implausible to me, but it’d be extremely hard for me to imagine anything like the Pebblesorters actually existing.
Do you think that CEV-generating mechanisms are negotiable across species? I.e. whether other species would have a concept of CEV and would agree to at least some of the mechanisms that generate a CEV. It would enable determining which differences are reconcilable and where we have to agree to disagree.
Is babyeating necessarily in babyeaters’ CEV? Which of our developments (drop slavery, stop admiring Sparta etc.) were in our CEV “from the beginning”? Perhaps the dynamics has some degree of convergence even if with more than one basin of attraction.
People disagree about that, and given that it has political implications (google for “moral progress”) I dare no longer even speculate about that.
I agree with your premise, I should have talked about moral progress rather than CEV. ETA: one does not need a linear order for the notion of progress, there can be multiple “basins of attraction”. Some of the dynamics consists of decreasing inconsistencies and increasing robustness.