For Existential Choices Debate Week, we’re trying out a new type of event: the Existential Choices Symposium. It'll be a written discussion between invited guests and any Forum user who'd like to join in.
How it works:
- Any forum user can write a top-level comment that asks a question or introduces a consideration, the answer of which might affect people’s answer to the debate statement[1]. For example: “Are there any interventions aimed at increasing the value of the future that are as widely morally supported as extinction-risk reduction?” You can start writing these comments now.
- The symposium’s signed-up participants, Will MacAskill, Tyler John, Michael St Jules, Andreas Mogensen and Greg Colbourn, will respond to questions, and discuss them with each other and other forum users, in the comments.
- To be 100% clear - you, the reader, are very welcome to join in any conversation on this post. You don't have to be a listed participant to take part.
This is an experiment. We’ll see how it goes and maybe run something similar next time. Feedback is welcome (message me with feedback here).
The symposium participants will be online between 3 - 5 pm GMT on Monday the 17th.
Brief bios for participants (mistakes mine):
- Will MacAskill is an Associate Professor of moral philosophy at the University of Oxford, and Senior Research Fellow at Forethought. He wrote the books Doing Good Better, Moral Uncertainty, and What We Owe The Future. He is the cofounder of Giving What We Can, 80,000 Hours, Centre for Effective Altruism and the Global Priorities Institute.
- Tyler John is an AI researcher, grantmaker, and philanthropic advisor. He is an incoming Visiting Scholar at the Cambridge Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence and an advisor to multiple philanthropists. He was previously the Programme Officer for emerging technology governance and Head of Research at Longview Philanthropy. Tyler holds a PhD in philosophy from Rutgers University—New Brunswick, where his dissertation focused on longtermist political philosophy and mechanism design, and the case for moral trajectory change.
- Michael St Jules is an independent researcher, who has written on “philosophy of mind, moral weights, person-affecting views, preference-based views and subjectivism, moral uncertainty, decision theory, deep uncertainty/cluelessness and backfire risks, s-risks, and indirect effects on wild animals”.
- Andreas Mogensen is a Senior Research Fellow in Philosophy at the Global Priorities Institute, part of the University of Oxford’s Faculty of Philosophy. His current research interests are primarily in normative and applied ethics. His previous publications have addressed topics in meta-ethics and moral epistemology, especially those associated with evolutionary debunking arguments.
- Greg Colbourn is the founder of CEEALAR and is currently a donor and advocate for Pause AI, which promotes a global AI moratorium. He has also supported various other projects in the space over the last 2 years.
Thanks for reading! If you'd like to contribute to this discussion, write some questions below which could be discussed in the symposium.
NB- To help conversations happen smoothly, I'd recommend sticking to one idea per top-level comment (even if that means posting multiple comments at once).
I tend to think that the arguments against any theory of the good that encodes the intuition of neutrality are extremely strong. Here's one that I think I owe to Teru Thomas (who may have got it from Tomi Francis?).
Imagine the following outcomes, A - D, where the columns are possible people, the numbers represent the welfare of each person when they exist, and # indicates non-existence.
A 5 -2 # #
B 5 # 2 2
C 5 2 2 #
D 5 -2 6 #
I claim that if you think it's neutral to make happy people, there's a strong case that you should think that B isn't better than A. In other words, it's not better to prevent someone from coming to exist and enduring a life that's not worth living if you simultaneously create two people with lives worth living. And that's absurd. I also think it's really hard to believe if you believe the other side of the asymmetry: that it's bad to create people whose lives are overwhelmed by suffering.
Why is there pressure on you to accept that B isn't better than A? Well, first off, it seems plausible that B and C are equally good, since they have the same number of people at the same welfare levels. So let's assume this is so.
Now, if you accept utilitarianism for a fixed population, you should think that D is better than C, since all the same people exist in these outcomes, and there's more total/average welfare. (I'm pretty sure you can support this kind of verdict on weaker assumptions if necessary.)
So let's suppose, on this basis, that D is better than C. B and C are equally good. I assume it follows that D is better than B.
Suppose that B were better than A. Since D is better than B, it would follow that D is better than A as well. But we know this can't be so, if it's neutral to make happy people, because D and A differ only in the existence of an extra person who has a life worth living. The neutrality principle entails that D isn't better than B. But it's absurd to think that B isn't better than A.
Arguments like this make me feel pretty confident that the intuition of neutrality is mistaken.