When you say “values”, do you mean instrumental values, or do you mean terminal values? If the former then the answer is simple. This is what we spend most of our time doing. Will tweaking my diet in this way cause me to have more energy? Will asking my friend in this particular way cause them to accept my request? Etc. This is as mundane as it gets.
If the latter, the answer is a bit more complicated, but really it shouldn’t be all that confusing. As agents, we’re built with motivation systems, where out of all possible sensory patterns, some present to us as neutral, others as inherently desirable, and the last subset as inherently undesirable. Some things can be more desirable or less desirable, etc., thus these sensory components each run on at least one dimension.
Sensory patterns that present originally as inherently neutral may either be left as irrelevant (these are the things put on auto-ignore, which are apt to make a return to one’s conscious awareness if certain substances are taken, or careful introspection is engaged in), or otherwise acquire a ‘secondary’ desirability or undesirability via being seen to be in causal connection with something that presents as inherently one way or the other, for example finding running enjoyable because of certain positive benefits acquired in the past from the activity.
Thus to discover one’s terminal values, one must simply identify these inherently desirable sensory patterns, and figure out which ones would top the list as ‘most desirable’ (in terms of nothing other than how it strikes one’s perception). A good heuristic for this would be to see what other people consider enjoyable or fun, and then try it, and see what happens, but at the same time making sure to disambiguate any identity issues from the whole thing, such as sexual hangups making one unable to enjoy something widely considered to have one of the strongest effects in terms of ‘wanting to engage in this behavior because it’s so great’—sexual or romantic interaction.
But at the most fundamental, there’s nothing to the task of figuring out one’s terminal values other than simply figuring out what sensory patterns are most ‘enjoyable’ in the most basic sort of way imaginable, on a timescale sufficiently long-term to be something one would be unlikely to refer to as ‘akrasia’. Even someone literally physically unable to experience certain positive sensory patterns, such as someone with extremely low libido because of physiological problems, would most likely qualify as making a ‘good choice’ if they engage in a course of action apt to cause them to begin to be able to experience these sensory patterns, such as that person implementing a particular lifestyle protocol likely to fix their physiological issues and bring them libido to a healthy level.
It gets somewhat confusing when you factor in the fact that the sensory patterns one is able to experience can shift over time, such as libido increasing or decreasing, or going through puberty, or something like that, along with factoring in akrasia, and other problems that make us seem less ‘coherent’ of agents, but I believe all the fog can be cut through if one simply makes the observation that sensory patterns present to us as either neutral, inherently desirable, or inherently undesirable, and that the latter two run on a dimension of ‘more or less’. Neutral sensory patterns acquire ‘secondary’ quality on these dimensions depending on what the agent believes to be its causal connection to other sensory patterns, ultimately needing to run up against an ‘inherently motivating’ sensory pattern.
When you say “values”, do you mean instrumental values, or do you mean terminal values? If the former then the answer is simple. This is what we spend most of our time doing. Will tweaking my diet in this way cause me to have more energy? Will asking my friend in this particular way cause them to accept my request? Etc. This is as mundane as it gets.
If the latter, the answer is a bit more complicated, but really it shouldn’t be all that confusing. As agents, we’re built with motivation systems, where out of all possible sensory patterns, some present to us as neutral, others as inherently desirable, and the last subset as inherently undesirable. Some things can be more desirable or less desirable, etc., thus these sensory components each run on at least one dimension.
Sensory patterns that present originally as inherently neutral may either be left as irrelevant (these are the things put on auto-ignore, which are apt to make a return to one’s conscious awareness if certain substances are taken, or careful introspection is engaged in), or otherwise acquire a ‘secondary’ desirability or undesirability via being seen to be in causal connection with something that presents as inherently one way or the other, for example finding running enjoyable because of certain positive benefits acquired in the past from the activity.
Thus to discover one’s terminal values, one must simply identify these inherently desirable sensory patterns, and figure out which ones would top the list as ‘most desirable’ (in terms of nothing other than how it strikes one’s perception). A good heuristic for this would be to see what other people consider enjoyable or fun, and then try it, and see what happens, but at the same time making sure to disambiguate any identity issues from the whole thing, such as sexual hangups making one unable to enjoy something widely considered to have one of the strongest effects in terms of ‘wanting to engage in this behavior because it’s so great’—sexual or romantic interaction.
But at the most fundamental, there’s nothing to the task of figuring out one’s terminal values other than simply figuring out what sensory patterns are most ‘enjoyable’ in the most basic sort of way imaginable, on a timescale sufficiently long-term to be something one would be unlikely to refer to as ‘akrasia’. Even someone literally physically unable to experience certain positive sensory patterns, such as someone with extremely low libido because of physiological problems, would most likely qualify as making a ‘good choice’ if they engage in a course of action apt to cause them to begin to be able to experience these sensory patterns, such as that person implementing a particular lifestyle protocol likely to fix their physiological issues and bring them libido to a healthy level.
It gets somewhat confusing when you factor in the fact that the sensory patterns one is able to experience can shift over time, such as libido increasing or decreasing, or going through puberty, or something like that, along with factoring in akrasia, and other problems that make us seem less ‘coherent’ of agents, but I believe all the fog can be cut through if one simply makes the observation that sensory patterns present to us as either neutral, inherently desirable, or inherently undesirable, and that the latter two run on a dimension of ‘more or less’. Neutral sensory patterns acquire ‘secondary’ quality on these dimensions depending on what the agent believes to be its causal connection to other sensory patterns, ultimately needing to run up against an ‘inherently motivating’ sensory pattern.