Curiously—not indignantly—how should I interpret your statement that all but a handful of parents are “lousy”? Does this mean that your values are different from theirs? This might be what is usually meant when someone says someone is “lousy”.
Your explicit argument seems to be that they’re selfish if they’re purchasing fleeting entertainment when they could invest that money in cryonics for their children. However, if they don’t buy cryonics for themselves, either, it seems like cryonics is something they don’t value, not that they’re too selfish to buy it for their children.
Eliezer is criticizing parents who in principle think that cryonics is a good thing, but don’t get it for their children, whether or not they get it for themselves.
My guess is that such parents are much more common than parents who buy it for themselves but not for their children, just because “thinking that cryonics is good in principle” is much more common than actually buying it for yourself.
Exactly. If a parent doesn’t think cryonics makes sense, then they wouldn’t get it for their kids anyways. Eliezer’s statement can only criticize parents who get cryonics for themselves but not their children. This is a small group, and I assume it is not the one he was targeting.
Curiously—not indignantly—how should I interpret your statement that all but a handful of parents are “lousy”? Does this mean that your values are different from theirs? This might be what is usually meant when someone says someone is “lousy”.
Your explicit argument seems to be that they’re selfish if they’re purchasing fleeting entertainment when they could invest that money in cryonics for their children. However, if they don’t buy cryonics for themselves, either, it seems like cryonics is something they don’t value, not that they’re too selfish to buy it for their children.
Eliezer is criticizing parents who in principle think that cryonics is a good thing, but don’t get it for their children, whether or not they get it for themselves.
My guess is that such parents are much more common than parents who buy it for themselves but not for their children, just because “thinking that cryonics is good in principle” is much more common than actually buying it for yourself.
Exactly. If a parent doesn’t think cryonics makes sense, then they wouldn’t get it for their kids anyways. Eliezer’s statement can only criticize parents who get cryonics for themselves but not their children. This is a small group, and I assume it is not the one he was targeting.