There would still be at least two thirds of the book left, and there would still be a huge amount of people who would find it controversial, and I’m not just talking about religious fundamentalists.
I wouldn’t limit “people who don’t understand science” to “religious fundamentalists,” so I don’t think we really disagree. A huge amount of people find evolution to be controversial, too, but I wouldn’t give much credence to that “controversy” in a serious discussion.
The difference is huge. Eliezer (and I) do believe that our ‘convictions’ have the same status as objective laws of nature (although we assign lower probability to some of them, obviously).
The quantum numbers which an electron possesses are the same whether you’re a human or a Pebblesorter. There’s an objectively right answer, and therefore objectively wrong answers. Convictions/terminal values cannot be compared in that way.
If you identify rightness with this huge computational property, then moral judgments are subjunctively objective (like math), subjectively objective (like probability), and capable of being true (like counterfactuals).
but he later says
Finally I realized that there was no foundation but humanity—no evidence pointing to even a reasonable doubt that there was anything else—and indeed I shouldn’t even want to hope for anything else—and indeed would have no moral cause to follow the dictates of a light in the sky, even if I found one.
That’s what the difference is, to me. An electron would have its quantum numbers whether or not humanity existed to discover them. 2 + 2 = 4 is true whether or not humanity is around to think it. Terminal values are higher level, less fundamental in terms of nature, because humanity (or other intelligent life) has to exist in order for them to exist. We can find what’s morally right based on terminal values, but we can’t find terminal values that are objectively right in that they exist whether or not we do.
Careful. The quantum numbers are no more than a basis for describing an electron. I can describe a stick as spanning a distance 3 meters wide and 4 long, while a pebblesorter describes it as being 5 meters long and 0 wide, and we can both be right. The same thing can happen when describing a quantum object.
I wouldn’t limit “people who don’t understand science” to “religious fundamentalists,” so I don’t think we really disagree. A huge amount of people find evolution to be controversial, too, but I wouldn’t give much credence to that “controversy” in a serious discussion.
Okay, let me make my claim stronger then: A huge amount of people who understand science would find the truncated version of TML described above controversial: A big fraction of the people who usually call themselves moral nihilists or moral relativists.
The quantum numbers which define an electron are the same whether you’re a human or a Pebblesorter. There’s an objectively right answer, and therefore objectively wrong answers. Convictions/terminal values cannot be compared in that way.
I’m saying that there is an objectively right answer, that terminal values can be compared (in a way that is tautological in this case, but that is fundamentally the only way we can determine the truth of anything). See this comment.
Do you believe it is true that “For every natural number x, x = x”? Yes? Why do you believe that? Well, you believe it because for every natural number x, x = x. How do you compare this axiom to “For every natural number x, x != x”?
Anyway, at least one of us is misunderstanding the metaethics sequence, so this exchange is rather pointless unless we want to get into a really complex conversation about a sequence of posts that has to total at least 100,000 words, and I don’t want to. Sorry.
I wouldn’t limit “people who don’t understand science” to “religious fundamentalists,” so I don’t think we really disagree. A huge amount of people find evolution to be controversial, too, but I wouldn’t give much credence to that “controversy” in a serious discussion.
The quantum numbers which an electron possesses are the same whether you’re a human or a Pebblesorter. There’s an objectively right answer, and therefore objectively wrong answers. Convictions/terminal values cannot be compared in that way.
I understand what Eliezer means when he says:
but he later says
That’s what the difference is, to me. An electron would have its quantum numbers whether or not humanity existed to discover them. 2 + 2 = 4 is true whether or not humanity is around to think it. Terminal values are higher level, less fundamental in terms of nature, because humanity (or other intelligent life) has to exist in order for them to exist. We can find what’s morally right based on terminal values, but we can’t find terminal values that are objectively right in that they exist whether or not we do.
Careful. The quantum numbers are no more than a basis for describing an electron. I can describe a stick as spanning a distance 3 meters wide and 4 long, while a pebblesorter describes it as being 5 meters long and 0 wide, and we can both be right. The same thing can happen when describing a quantum object.
Yes, I should have been more careful with my language. Thanks for pointing it out. Edited.
Okay, let me make my claim stronger then: A huge amount of people who understand science would find the truncated version of TML described above controversial: A big fraction of the people who usually call themselves moral nihilists or moral relativists.
I’m saying that there is an objectively right answer, that terminal values can be compared (in a way that is tautological in this case, but that is fundamentally the only way we can determine the truth of anything). See this comment.
Do you believe it is true that “For every natural number x, x = x”? Yes? Why do you believe that? Well, you believe it because for every natural number x, x = x. How do you compare this axiom to “For every natural number x, x != x”?
Anyway, at least one of us is misunderstanding the metaethics sequence, so this exchange is rather pointless unless we want to get into a really complex conversation about a sequence of posts that has to total at least 100,000 words, and I don’t want to. Sorry.