It’s not a bias if you value an additional dollar less once all your needs are met.
It’s not a bias if you value a random human life less if there are billions of others, compared to if there are only a few others.
You may choose for yourself to value a $10 bill the same whether you’re dirt poor, or a millionaire. Same with human lives. But you don’t get to “that’s a bias” others who have a more nuanced and context-sensitive estimation.
Except that humans actually have a bias called scope insensitivity and that’s a known thing, and it behaves differently to any claimed bounded utility function we might have.
It’s not a bias if you value an additional dollar less once all your needs are met.
It’s not a bias if you value a random human life less if there are billions of others, compared to if there are only a few others.
You may choose for yourself to value a $10 bill the same whether you’re dirt poor, or a millionaire. Same with human lives. But you don’t get to “that’s a bias” others who have a more nuanced and context-sensitive estimation.
Except that humans actually have a bias called scope insensitivity and that’s a known thing, and it behaves differently to any claimed bounded utility function we might have.