I originally thought Eliezer was a utilitarian, but changed my mind due to his morality series.
(Though I still thought he was defending something that was fairly similar to utilitarianism. But he wasn’t taking additivity as a given but attempting to derive it from human terminal values themselves—so if human terminal values don’t say that we should apply equal additivity to baby-eater children, and I think they don’t, then Eliezer’s morality, I would have thought, would not apply additivity to them.)
This story however seems to show suspiciously utilitarian-like characteristics in his moral thinking. Or maybe he just has a different idea of human terminal values.
Sure it’s a story, but one with an implicit idea of human terminal values and such.
I’m actually inclined to agree with Faré that they should count the desire to avoid a few relatively minor modifications over the eternal holocaust and suffering of baby-eater children.
I originally thought Eliezer was a utilitarian, but changed my mind due to his morality series.
(Though I still thought he was defending something that was fairly similar to utilitarianism. But he wasn’t taking additivity as a given but attempting to derive it from human terminal values themselves—so if human terminal values don’t say that we should apply equal additivity to baby-eater children, and I think they don’t, then Eliezer’s morality, I would have thought, would not apply additivity to them.)
This story however seems to show suspiciously utilitarian-like characteristics in his moral thinking. Or maybe he just has a different idea of human terminal values.