This quote seems like it’s lumping every process for arriving at beliefs besides reason into one. “If you don’t follow the process I understand and is guaranteed not to produce beliefs like that, then I can’t guarantee you won’t produce beliefs like that!” But there are many such processes besides reason, that could be going on in their “hearts” to produce their beliefs. Because they are all opaque and non-negotiable and not this particular one you trust not to make people murder Sharon Tate, does not mean that they all have the same probability of producing plane-flying-into-building beliefs.
Consider the following made-up quote: “when you say you believe something is acceptable for some reason other than the Bible said so, you have completely justified Stalin’s planned famines. You have justified Pol Pot. If it’s acceptable for for you, why isn’t it acceptable for them? Why are you different? If you say ‘I believe that gays should not be stoned to death and the Bible doesn’t support me but I believe it in my heart’, then it’s perfectly okay to believe in your heart that dissidents should be sent to be worked to death in Siberia. It’s perfectly okay to believe because your secular morality says so that all the intellectuals in your country need to be killed.”
I would respond to it: “Stop lumping all moralities into two classes, your morality, and all others. One of these lumps has lots of variation in it, and sub-lumps which need to be distinguished, because most of them do not actually condone gulags”
And likewise I respond to Penn Jilette’s quote: “Stop lumping all epistemologies into two classes, yours, and the one where people draw beliefs from their ‘hearts’. One of these lumps has lots of variation in it, and sub-lumps which need to be distinguished, because most of them do not actually result in beliefs that drive them to fly planes into buildings.”
The wishful-thinking new-age “all powerful force of love” faith epistemology is actually pretty safe in terms of not driving people to violence who wouldn’t already be inclined to it. That belief wouldn’t make them feel good. Though of course, faith plus ancient texts which condone violence can be more dangerous, though as we know empirically, for some reason, people driven to violence by their religions are rare these days, even coming from religions like that.
I don’t think it’s lumping everything together. It’s criticizing the rule “Act on what you feel in your heart.” That applies to a lot of people’s beliefs, but it certainly isn’t the epistemology of everyone who doesn’t agree with Penn Jillette.
The problem with “Act on what you feel in your heart” is that it’s too generalizable. It proves too much, because of course someone else might feel something different and some of those things might be horrible. But if my epistemology is an appeal to an external source (which I guess in this context would be a religious book but I’m going to use “believe whatever Rameses II believed” because I think that’s funnier), then that doesn’t necessarily have the same problem.
You can criticize my choice of Rameses II, and you probably should. But now my epistemology is based on an external source and not just my feelings. Unless you reduce me to saying I trust Rameses because I Just Feel that he’s trustworthy, this epistemology does not have the same problem as the one criticized in the quote.
All this to say, Jillette is not unfairly lumping things together and there exist types of morality/epistemology that can be wrong without having this argument apply.
The problem with “Act on what you feel in your heart” is that it’s too generalizable. It proves too much, because of course someone else might feel something different and some of those things might be horrible. But if my epistemology is an appeal to an external source (which I guess in this context would be a religious book but I’m going to use “believe whatever Rameses II believed” because I think that’s funnier), then that doesn’t necessarily have the same problem.
‘Act on an external standard’ is just as generalizable—because you can choose just about anything as your standard. You might choose to consistently act like Gandhi, or like Hitler, or like Zeus, or like a certain book suggests, or like my cat Peter who enjoys killing things and scratching cardboard boxes. If the only thing I know about you is that you consistently behave like someone else, but I don’t know like whom, then I can’t actually predict your behavior at all.
The more important question is: if you act on what you feel in your heart, what determines or changes what is in your heart? And if you act on an external standard, what makes you choose or change your standard?
The problem with “Act on what you feel in your heart” is that it’s too generalizable. It proves too much, because of course someone else might feel something different and some of those things might be horrible.
It looks like there’s all this undefined behavior, and demons coming out the nose from the outside because you aren’t looking at the exact details of what’s going on in with their feelings that are choosing the beliefs. Though a C compiler given an undefined construct may cause your program to crash, it will never literally cause demons to come out of your nose, and you could figure this out if you looked at the implementation of the compiler. It’s still deterministic.
As an atheistic meta-ethical ant-realist, my utility function is basically whatever I want it to be. It’s entirely internal. From the outside, from someone who has a system where they follow something external and clearly specified, they could shout “Nasal demons!”, but demons will never come out my nose, and my internal, ever so frighteningly non-negotiable desires are never going to include planned famines. It has reliable internal structure.
The mistake is looking at a particular kind of specification that defines all the behavior, and then looking at a system not covered by that specification, but which is controlled by another specification you haven’t bothered to understand, and saying “Who can possibly say what that system will do?”
Some processors (even x86) have instructions (such as bit rotate) which are useful for significant performance boosts in stuff like cryptography, and yet aren’t accessible from C or C++, and to use it you have to perform hacks like writing the machine code out as bytes, casting its address to a function pointer and calling it. That’s undefined behavior with respect to the C/C++ standard. But it’s perfectly predictable if you know what platform you’re on.
Other people who aren’t meta-ethical anti-realists’ utility functions are not really negotiable either. You can’t really give them a valid argument that will convince them not to do something evil if they happen to be psychopaths. They just have internal desires and things they care about, and they care a lot more about having a morality which sounds logical when argued for than I do.
And if you actually examine what’s going on with the feelings of people with feeling-driven epistemology that makes them believe things, instead of just shouting “Nasal demons! Unspecified behavior! Infinitely beyond the reach of understanding!” you will see that the non-psychopathic ones have mostly-deterministic internal structure to their feelings that prevents them from believing that they should murder Sharon Tate. And psychopaths won’t be made ethical by reasoning with them anyway. I don’t believe the 9/11 hijackers were psychopaths, but that’s the holy book problem I mentioned, and a rare case.
In most cases of undefined C constructs, there isn’t another carefully-tuned structure that’s doing the job of the C standard in making the behavior something you want, so you crash. And faith-epistemology does behave like this (crashing, rather than running hacky cryptographic code that uses the rotate instructions) when it comes to generating beliefs that don’t have obvious consequences to the user. So it would have been a fair criticism to say “You believe something because you believe it in your heart, and you’ve justified not signing your children up for cryonics because you believe in an afterlife,” because (A) they actually do that, (B) it’s a result of them having an epistemology which doesn’t track the truth.
Disclaimer: I’m not signed up for cryonics, though if I had kids, they would be.
my utility function is basically whatever I want it to be.
I very much doubt that. At least with present technology you cannot self-modify to prefer dead babies over live ones; and there’s presumably no technological advance that can make you want to.
my utility function is basically whatever I want it to be.
If utility functions are those constructed by the VNM theorem, your utility function is your wants; it is not something you can have wants about. There is nothing in the machinery of the theorem that allows for a utility function to talk about itself, to have wants about wants. Utility functions and the lotteries that they evaluate belong to different worlds.
Are there theorems about the existence and construction of self-inspecting utility functions?
Though of course, faith plus ancient texts which condone violence can be more dangerous
That means you can actually make people less harmful if you tell them to listen to their hearts instead of listening to ancient texts. The person who’s completely in their head and analyses the ancient text for absolute guidance of action is dangerous.
A lot of religions also have tricks were the believer has to go through painful exercises. Just look at a Christian sect like Opus Dei with cilices. The kind of religious believer who wears a cilice loses touch with his heart.
Getting someone who’s in the habit of causing his own body pain with a cilice to harm other people is easier.
I’d have to disagree here; I think that “faith” is a useful reference class that pretty effectively cleaves reality at the joints, which does in fact lump together the epistemologies Penn Jilette is objecting to.
The fact that some communities of people who have norms which promote taking beliefs on faith do not tend to engage in acts of violence, while some such communities do, does not mean that their epistemologies are particularly distinct. Their specific beliefs might be different, but one group will not have much basis to criticize the grounds of others’ beliefs.
The flaw he’s arguing here is not “faith-based reasoning sometimes drives people to commit acts of violence,” but “faith-based reasoning is unreliable enough that it can justify anything, in practice as well as principle, including acts of extreme violence.”
I’d have to disagree here; I think that “faith” is a useful reference class that pretty effectively cleaves reality at the joints, which does in fact lump together the epistemologies Penn Jilette is objecting to.
People who follow the moral code of the Bible versus peopel that don’t is also a pretty clear criteria that separates some epistemologies from others.
The fact that some communities of people who have norms which promote taking beliefs on faith do not tend to engage in acts of violence, while some such communities do, does not mean that their epistemologies are particularly distinct.
People who uses a pendulum to make decisions as a very different epistemology than someone who thinks about what the authorities in his particular church want him to do and acts accordingly.
“faith-based reasoning is unreliable enough that it can justify anything, in practice as well as principle, including acts of extreme violence.”
The kind of people who win the world debating championship also haave no problem justying policies like genocide with rational arguments that win competive intellectual debates.
Justifying actions is something different than decision criteria.
People who follow the moral code of the Bible versus peopel that don’t is also a pretty clear criteria that separates some epistemologies from others.
Yes, but then you can go a step down from there, and ask “why do you believe in the contents of the bible?” For some individuals, this will actually be a question of evidence; they are prepared to reason about the evidence for and against the truth of the biblical narrative, and reject it given an adequate balance of evidence. They’re generally more biased on the question than they realize, but they are at least convinced that they must have adequate evidence to justify their belief in the biblical narrative.
I have argued people out of their religious belief before (and not just Christianity,) but never someone who thought that it was correct to take factual beliefs that feel right “on faith” without first convincing them that this is incorrect as a general rule, not simply in the specific case of religion. This is an epistemic underpinning which unites people from different religions, whatever tenets or holy books they might ascribe to. I’ve also argued the same point with people who were not religious; it’s not simply a quality of any particular religion, it’s one of the most common memetic defenses in the human arsenal.
This quote seems like it’s lumping every process for arriving at beliefs besides reason into one. “If you don’t follow the process I understand and is guaranteed not to produce beliefs like that, then I can’t guarantee you won’t produce beliefs like that!” But there are many such processes besides reason, that could be going on in their “hearts” to produce their beliefs. Because they are all opaque and non-negotiable and not this particular one you trust not to make people murder Sharon Tate, does not mean that they all have the same probability of producing plane-flying-into-building beliefs.
Consider the following made-up quote: “when you say you believe something is acceptable for some reason other than the Bible said so, you have completely justified Stalin’s planned famines. You have justified Pol Pot. If it’s acceptable for for you, why isn’t it acceptable for them? Why are you different? If you say ‘I believe that gays should not be stoned to death and the Bible doesn’t support me but I believe it in my heart’, then it’s perfectly okay to believe in your heart that dissidents should be sent to be worked to death in Siberia. It’s perfectly okay to believe because your secular morality says so that all the intellectuals in your country need to be killed.”
I would respond to it: “Stop lumping all moralities into two classes, your morality, and all others. One of these lumps has lots of variation in it, and sub-lumps which need to be distinguished, because most of them do not actually condone gulags”
And likewise I respond to Penn Jilette’s quote: “Stop lumping all epistemologies into two classes, yours, and the one where people draw beliefs from their ‘hearts’. One of these lumps has lots of variation in it, and sub-lumps which need to be distinguished, because most of them do not actually result in beliefs that drive them to fly planes into buildings.”
The wishful-thinking new-age “all powerful force of love” faith epistemology is actually pretty safe in terms of not driving people to violence who wouldn’t already be inclined to it. That belief wouldn’t make them feel good. Though of course, faith plus ancient texts which condone violence can be more dangerous, though as we know empirically, for some reason, people driven to violence by their religions are rare these days, even coming from religions like that.
I don’t think it’s lumping everything together. It’s criticizing the rule “Act on what you feel in your heart.” That applies to a lot of people’s beliefs, but it certainly isn’t the epistemology of everyone who doesn’t agree with Penn Jillette.
The problem with “Act on what you feel in your heart” is that it’s too generalizable. It proves too much, because of course someone else might feel something different and some of those things might be horrible. But if my epistemology is an appeal to an external source (which I guess in this context would be a religious book but I’m going to use “believe whatever Rameses II believed” because I think that’s funnier), then that doesn’t necessarily have the same problem.
You can criticize my choice of Rameses II, and you probably should. But now my epistemology is based on an external source and not just my feelings. Unless you reduce me to saying I trust Rameses because I Just Feel that he’s trustworthy, this epistemology does not have the same problem as the one criticized in the quote.
All this to say, Jillette is not unfairly lumping things together and there exist types of morality/epistemology that can be wrong without having this argument apply.
‘Act on an external standard’ is just as generalizable—because you can choose just about anything as your standard. You might choose to consistently act like Gandhi, or like Hitler, or like Zeus, or like a certain book suggests, or like my cat Peter who enjoys killing things and scratching cardboard boxes. If the only thing I know about you is that you consistently behave like someone else, but I don’t know like whom, then I can’t actually predict your behavior at all.
The more important question is: if you act on what you feel in your heart, what determines or changes what is in your heart? And if you act on an external standard, what makes you choose or change your standard?
It looks like there’s all this undefined behavior, and demons coming out the nose from the outside because you aren’t looking at the exact details of what’s going on in with their feelings that are choosing the beliefs. Though a C compiler given an undefined construct may cause your program to crash, it will never literally cause demons to come out of your nose, and you could figure this out if you looked at the implementation of the compiler. It’s still deterministic.
As an atheistic meta-ethical ant-realist, my utility function is basically whatever I want it to be. It’s entirely internal. From the outside, from someone who has a system where they follow something external and clearly specified, they could shout “Nasal demons!”, but demons will never come out my nose, and my internal, ever so frighteningly non-negotiable desires are never going to include planned famines. It has reliable internal structure.
The mistake is looking at a particular kind of specification that defines all the behavior, and then looking at a system not covered by that specification, but which is controlled by another specification you haven’t bothered to understand, and saying “Who can possibly say what that system will do?”
Some processors (even x86) have instructions (such as bit rotate) which are useful for significant performance boosts in stuff like cryptography, and yet aren’t accessible from C or C++, and to use it you have to perform hacks like writing the machine code out as bytes, casting its address to a function pointer and calling it. That’s undefined behavior with respect to the C/C++ standard. But it’s perfectly predictable if you know what platform you’re on.
Other people who aren’t meta-ethical anti-realists’ utility functions are not really negotiable either. You can’t really give them a valid argument that will convince them not to do something evil if they happen to be psychopaths. They just have internal desires and things they care about, and they care a lot more about having a morality which sounds logical when argued for than I do.
And if you actually examine what’s going on with the feelings of people with feeling-driven epistemology that makes them believe things, instead of just shouting “Nasal demons! Unspecified behavior! Infinitely beyond the reach of understanding!” you will see that the non-psychopathic ones have mostly-deterministic internal structure to their feelings that prevents them from believing that they should murder Sharon Tate. And psychopaths won’t be made ethical by reasoning with them anyway. I don’t believe the 9/11 hijackers were psychopaths, but that’s the holy book problem I mentioned, and a rare case.
In most cases of undefined C constructs, there isn’t another carefully-tuned structure that’s doing the job of the C standard in making the behavior something you want, so you crash. And faith-epistemology does behave like this (crashing, rather than running hacky cryptographic code that uses the rotate instructions) when it comes to generating beliefs that don’t have obvious consequences to the user. So it would have been a fair criticism to say “You believe something because you believe it in your heart, and you’ve justified not signing your children up for cryonics because you believe in an afterlife,” because (A) they actually do that, (B) it’s a result of them having an epistemology which doesn’t track the truth.
Disclaimer: I’m not signed up for cryonics, though if I had kids, they would be.
I very much doubt that. At least with present technology you cannot self-modify to prefer dead babies over live ones; and there’s presumably no technological advance that can make you want to.
If utility functions are those constructed by the VNM theorem, your utility function is your wants; it is not something you can have wants about. There is nothing in the machinery of the theorem that allows for a utility function to talk about itself, to have wants about wants. Utility functions and the lotteries that they evaluate belong to different worlds.
Are there theorems about the existence and construction of self-inspecting utility functions?
That means you can actually make people less harmful if you tell them to listen to their hearts instead of listening to ancient texts. The person who’s completely in their head and analyses the ancient text for absolute guidance of action is dangerous.
A lot of religions also have tricks were the believer has to go through painful exercises. Just look at a Christian sect like Opus Dei with cilices. The kind of religious believer who wears a cilice loses touch with his heart. Getting someone who’s in the habit of causing his own body pain with a cilice to harm other people is easier.
I’d have to disagree here; I think that “faith” is a useful reference class that pretty effectively cleaves reality at the joints, which does in fact lump together the epistemologies Penn Jilette is objecting to.
The fact that some communities of people who have norms which promote taking beliefs on faith do not tend to engage in acts of violence, while some such communities do, does not mean that their epistemologies are particularly distinct. Their specific beliefs might be different, but one group will not have much basis to criticize the grounds of others’ beliefs.
The flaw he’s arguing here is not “faith-based reasoning sometimes drives people to commit acts of violence,” but “faith-based reasoning is unreliable enough that it can justify anything, in practice as well as principle, including acts of extreme violence.”
People who follow the moral code of the Bible versus peopel that don’t is also a pretty clear criteria that separates some epistemologies from others.
People who uses a pendulum to make decisions as a very different epistemology than someone who thinks about what the authorities in his particular church want him to do and acts accordingly.
The kind of people who win the world debating championship also haave no problem justying policies like genocide with rational arguments that win competive intellectual debates.
Justifying actions is something different than decision criteria.
Yes, but then you can go a step down from there, and ask “why do you believe in the contents of the bible?” For some individuals, this will actually be a question of evidence; they are prepared to reason about the evidence for and against the truth of the biblical narrative, and reject it given an adequate balance of evidence. They’re generally more biased on the question than they realize, but they are at least convinced that they must have adequate evidence to justify their belief in the biblical narrative.
I have argued people out of their religious belief before (and not just Christianity,) but never someone who thought that it was correct to take factual beliefs that feel right “on faith” without first convincing them that this is incorrect as a general rule, not simply in the specific case of religion. This is an epistemic underpinning which unites people from different religions, whatever tenets or holy books they might ascribe to. I’ve also argued the same point with people who were not religious; it’s not simply a quality of any particular religion, it’s one of the most common memetic defenses in the human arsenal.