The aliens promise that, if we give them all our stuff, they will simulate a bunch of super happy copies of us.
Do we give them stuff?
If it were up to Thud, he’d say “no”, since he doesn’t care about simulations. However, he’s a soldier, not a politician, so that decision wouldn’t be part of his job.
In retrospect, perhaps I should have done the story with that premise and “President Thud” instead. It would have allowed me to show an example about inappropriate care about simulations, but without the confusing issue of how to deal with extortion situations.
already suggested that. Depends on how many super happy copies, how super happy, whether we expect to be able to do that ourselves, and possibly whose copies and how representative/diverse they are.
What about the reverse, then?
The aliens promise that, if we give them all our stuff, they will simulate a bunch of super happy copies of us.
Do we give them stuff?
If it were up to Thud, he’d say “no”, since he doesn’t care about simulations. However, he’s a soldier, not a politician, so that decision wouldn’t be part of his job.
In retrospect, perhaps I should have done the story with that premise and “President Thud” instead. It would have allowed me to show an example about inappropriate care about simulations, but without the confusing issue of how to deal with extortion situations.
already suggested that. Depends on how many super happy copies, how super happy, whether we expect to be able to do that ourselves, and possibly whose copies and how representative/diverse they are.
Depending on those answers possibly yes.
This. Basically this becomes an economic transaction; we are buying simulations. If it’s a good price, buy them. If not, don’t.