To know that such a number cannot represent an altogether esoteric feature of the universe that can nevertheless be the legitimate subject of infinite value I would need to know the smallest number that can be assigned to a quantum state.
I think you are conflating quantum probabilities with Bayesian probabilities here, but I’m not sure. Unless you think this point is worth discussing further I’ll move on to your more significant disagreement.
Someone can assign infinite utility to Australia winning the ashes if that is what they really want. I’d think them rather silly but that is just my subjective evaluation, nothing to do with maths.
Hm...I initially wrote a two-paragraph explanation of why you were wrong, then deleted it because I changed my mind. So, I think we are making progress!
I initially thought I accorded disdain to unbounded utility functions for the same reason that I accorded disdain to ridiculous priors. But the difference is that your priors affect your epistemic state, and in the case of beliefs there is only one right answer. On the other hand, there is nothing inherently wrong with being a paperclip maximizer.
I think the actual issue I’m having is that I suspect that most people who claim to have unbounded utility functions would have been unwilling to make the trades implied by this before reading about VNM utility / “Shut up and multiply”. So my objection is not that unbounded utility functions are inherently wrong, but that they cannot possibly reflect the preferences of a human.
I think the actual issue I’m having is that I suspect that most people who claim to have unbounded utility functions would have been unwilling to make the trades implied by this before reading about VNM utility / “Shut up and multiply”. So my objection is not that unbounded utility functions are inherently wrong, but that they cannot possibly reflect the preferences of a human.
I think you are conflating quantum probabilities with Bayesian probabilities here, but I’m not sure. Unless you think this point is worth discussing further I’ll move on to your more significant disagreement.
Hm...I initially wrote a two-paragraph explanation of why you were wrong, then deleted it because I changed my mind. So, I think we are making progress!
I initially thought I accorded disdain to unbounded utility functions for the same reason that I accorded disdain to ridiculous priors. But the difference is that your priors affect your epistemic state, and in the case of beliefs there is only one right answer. On the other hand, there is nothing inherently wrong with being a paperclip maximizer.
I think the actual issue I’m having is that I suspect that most people who claim to have unbounded utility functions would have been unwilling to make the trades implied by this before reading about VNM utility / “Shut up and multiply”. So my objection is not that unbounded utility functions are inherently wrong, but that they cannot possibly reflect the preferences of a human.
On this I believe we approximately agree.