It's the end of the world as we know it
Mar. 9th, 2010 04:29 pmThe technical term for a risk that could destroy the whole future of humanity is an "existential risk".
Wikipedia on existential risk
Nick Bostrom: "Our approach to existential risks cannot be one of trial-and-error. There is no opportunity to learn from errors."
Eliezer Yudkowsky, Cognitive biases potentially affecting judgment of global risks [PDF]
Google search
Do you worry about the end of the world?
Wikipedia on existential risk
Nick Bostrom: "Our approach to existential risks cannot be one of trial-and-error. There is no opportunity to learn from errors."
Eliezer Yudkowsky, Cognitive biases potentially affecting judgment of global risks [PDF]
Google search
Do you worry about the end of the world?
no subject
Date: 2010-03-10 07:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-03-11 12:04 am (UTC)No, not solipsistic. I already stated quite clearly that I value life and individual choice, and wouldn't point the 'death ray' unless I was specifically asked to by the individuals affected.
If I was offered the choice between saving myself and saving said islanders, who presumably outnumber me, and had no choice in the matter, I'd pick the latter, since as I said, I don't fear not existing - but that wasn't the choice presented. The choice presented was to kill them, or not kill them. I chose not to.
The comment which you've gleefully misinterpreted was about the difficulty of coming up with a situation that people can relate to where there is no survivor or outside observer. Talk about a world where, say, half of the population is killed off - as you did - and it's easier to see it as a bad thing.
no subject
Date: 2010-03-11 10:49 am (UTC)You speak of the need for an outside observer, but if you and all the islanders die, there is no outside observer, and you still see that outcome as bad, in fact worse than the death of yourself and half the islanders. Your position still seems rather solipsistic to me but it's not consistent enough to draw out what the consequences should be.
You shouldn't need me to "close the doors" on the ways you try to escape the consequences of this thought experiment - you should be able to think of variants that counter your evasions, like the one in which you inevitably die, for yourself.
no subject
Date: 2010-03-11 11:45 am (UTC)Irrelevant to the original topic, sure. I used it as an example of how my world view isn't solipsistic. And I noted that you hadn't proposed it at the time - do keep up! You've ignored the fact that I did answer the question several times, as well.
I have tried to make two points here, firstly that seeing an outcome as bad is not the same as being scared of it, and following on from that, that suffering is more 'scary' than non-existence, I haven't made any value judgements about whether it's more or less 'bad' (of course, rationally, death is 'worse', as it's an irreversible* state as opposed to a potentially reversible one).
Your thought experiment, however, still missed my point. Both are bad, but suffering is simpler to imagine.
I *can't* have nightmares about not existing - after all, I'd remember precisely nothing. The only way to visualise it would be in terms of the effect on people other than myself, or in terms of - oh hey - suffering in the process of moving into that state.
Would I choose death over suffering myself? Maybe, if I thought that the suffering itself was also an irretrievable state. Do I think I have the right to make that choice for anyone else? No.
Let's really simplify this then:
death = bad
bad != scary
Since this is your journal and not mine, I'm not going to to illustrate my entire philosophy here. Maybe I'll get around to it in mine.
*Yeah, I know, cryonics etc. etc. Call it 'less reversible' if you prefer.
no subject
Date: 2010-03-11 12:04 pm (UTC)It's good to see that you recognise that the end of humanity is bad; I hope it leads you to attempt to deliberately correct for the failure of imagination you describe in trying to weight it in your personal moral calculus.
(BTW cryonics people agree that death is irreversible, they just don't agree that legal death is death by that definition)
no subject
Date: 2010-03-11 12:40 pm (UTC)Import of thought experiment fully understood, but it was still irrelevant to what I was trying to say. I'd love to hear how you manage to imagine not existing, though.
Also, I don't 'recognise' that the end of humanity is bad, since 'bad' is a value judgement and not a statement of fact. I don't believe there is any universal truth that says death = bad, but in my personal opinion, it is.
(BTW cryonics people agree that death is irreversible, they just don't agree that legal death is death by that definition)
Useful to know. Thankyou.