The world of Ishuzoku Reviewers is a fun utopia I would actually want to live in. There are no villains in Ishuzoku Reviewers. Instead, the conflict comes from diversity. Different demi-human species have different preferences and different priorities. The dishomogeneity fuels friction, misunderstanding and arbitrage. But never hatred.
This is what coherent extrapolated volition looks like.
How ironic, if at all, is that final statement?
What comes to mind is that that sounds like tossing out a lot of what people care about today, and so my gut reaction here is leery. Even though today people’s more conflictual values are shaped by the resource constraints in our environment, those values might ultimately survive reflection in some post-instrumental form, the way that many of our other human values have. Is that world impoverished, value-wise, in the way the
How ironic, if at all, is that final statement?
What comes to mind is that that sounds like tossing out a lot of what people care about today, and so my gut reaction here is leery. Even though today people’s more conflictual values are shaped by the resource constraints in our environment, those values might ultimately survive reflection in some post-instrumental form, the way that many of our other human values have. Is that world impoverished, value-wise, in the way the
Superhappy world
is?