I don’t think he is “mad”, at least not if you press him enough.
(You argue that the madness in question, if present, is compartmentalized. The intended sense of “madness” (normal use on LW) includes the case of compartmentalized madness, so your argument doesn’t seem to disagree with Eliezer’s position.)
(You argue that the madness in question, if present, is compartmentalized. The intended sense of “madness” (normal use on LW) includes the case of compartmentalized madness, so your argument doesn’t seem to disagree with Eliezer’s position.)
((For those who haven’t seen it yet: http://lesswrong.com/lw/2q6/compartmentalization_in_epistemic_and/ ))