I’d say it’s more that a rich person not signing up is expressing a strong preference against. For people who believe rich people are smarter than average this should constitute a substantial piece of evidence.
Imagine people buying a car where it costs $1,000,000 to change the colour. We conclude that anyone who pays cares strongly about the colour; anyone who doesn’t pay we can only say their feelings aren’t enormously strong. Conversely imagine it costs $100 to change the colour. Then for anyone who pays we can only conclude they care a bit about the colour, while anyone who doesn’t pay must be quite strongly indifferent to the car’s colour.
Good point. In fact, Sandberg, Bostrom, and Armstrong are all signed up for cryonics.
As is Peter Thiel.
Peter Thiel is incredibly rich, so signing up for cryonics is not necessarily expressing a strong preference.
It may be considering how few similarly rich people are signed up.
I’d say it’s more that a rich person not signing up is expressing a strong preference against. For people who believe rich people are smarter than average this should constitute a substantial piece of evidence.
Imagine people buying a car where it costs $1,000,000 to change the colour. We conclude that anyone who pays cares strongly about the colour; anyone who doesn’t pay we can only say their feelings aren’t enormously strong. Conversely imagine it costs $100 to change the colour. Then for anyone who pays we can only conclude they care a bit about the colour, while anyone who doesn’t pay must be quite strongly indifferent to the car’s colour.