When I try to do virtue ethics, I find that all my virtues turn to swiss cheese after a day’s worth of exception handling.
“Put simply: inconsistency between words and actions is no big deal. Why should your best estimate about good strategies be anchored to what you’re already doing? The anti-hypocrisy norm seems to implicitly assume we’re already perfect; it leaves no room for people who are in the process of trying to improve.” — Abram Demski, Hufflepuff Cynicism on Hypocrisy
”With ‘unlimited power’ you have no need to crush your enemies. You have no moral defense if you treat your enemies with less than the utmost consideration. With ‘unlimited power’ you cannot plead the necessity of monitoring or restraining others so that they do not rebel against you. If you do such a thing, you are simply a tyrant who enjoys power, and not a defender of the people. Unlimited power removes a lot of moral defenses, really. You can’t say ‘But I had to.’ You can’t say ‘Well, I wanted to help, but I couldn’t.’ The only excuse for not helping is if you shouldn’t, which is harder to establish. You cannot take refuge in the necessity of anything—that is the meaning of unlimited power.” — Eliezer Yudkowsky, Not Taking Over the World
“Put simply: inconsistency between words and actions is no big deal. Why should your best estimate about good strategies be anchored to what you’re already doing? The anti-hypocrisy norm seems to implicitly assume we’re already perfect; it leaves no room for people who are in the process of trying to improve.”
— Abram Demski, Hufflepuff Cynicism on Hypocrisy
”With ‘unlimited power’ you have no need to crush your enemies. You have no moral defense if you treat your enemies with less than the utmost consideration.
With ‘unlimited power’ you cannot plead the necessity of monitoring or restraining others so that they do not rebel against you. If you do such a thing, you are simply a tyrant who enjoys power, and not a defender of the people.
Unlimited power removes a lot of moral defenses, really. You can’t say ‘But I had to.’ You can’t say ‘Well, I wanted to help, but I couldn’t.’ The only excuse for not helping is if you shouldn’t, which is harder to establish.
You cannot take refuge in the necessity of anything—that is the meaning of unlimited power.”
— Eliezer Yudkowsky, Not Taking Over the World