The more I think about value monism, I get confused about why some people really want to cling to it, even though our own experience seems to tell us every day that we are in fact not value monists. We care about many different values and also care about what values other people hold. When we ask people who are dying most of them will talk of friendship, love, and regrets. Does all of this just count instrumentally toward one "super value" such as welfare or are there some values we hold dear as ends in themselves?
I came up with a short experiment that can maybe act as an intuition pump in this regard. I would be interested in your thoughts!
Thought experiment: What do we care about at the end of time?
We are close to the end of time. Humanity gained sophisticated technologies we can only imagine. Still, only two very old humans remain alive: Alice and Bob. However, there also remain machines that can predict the effects of medicines and states of consciousness and lived experience.
It seems like the last day for both Alice and Bob has come. Alice is terminally ill and in severe pain, Bob is simply old but also feels he is about to die a peaceful death soon. They have used up almost all of the medicine which was still around, only one dose of morphine remains.
The medical machines tell them that if Alice takes the morphine her pain would be soothed but the effect would not be as strong as normally due to her specific physiology which dampens the effect of morphine. Bob on the other hand would have a really great time if he took the morphine. His specific physiology is super receptive to morphine. He would experience unimaginable heights and states of bliss. The medical machines are entirely sure that net happiness would be several times higher if Bob would take the morphine. If Alice would take it, they would simply have one last conversation and both die peacefully.
How should Alice and Bob decide? What values are important in their decision?
Hey Devin,
first of all, thanks for engaging and the offer in the end. If you want to continue the discussion feel free to reach out via PM.
I think there is some confusion about my and also Spencer Greenberg's position. Afaik, we are both moral anti-realists and not suggesting that moral realism is a tenable position. Without presuming to know much about Spencer, I have taken his stance in the post to be that he did not want to "argue" with realists in that post because even though he rejects their position, it requires a different type of argument than what he was after for that post. He wanted to draw attention to the fact that moral anti-realism and utilitarian value monism doesn't necessarily and "naturally" go well together. Many of the statements he heard from people in the EA community were confusing to him not because anti-realism is confusing but being anti-realist and steadfastly holding on to value monism was, given that we empirically seem to value many more things than just one "super value" such as "welfare" and that there is no inherent obligation that we "should" only value one "super value". He elaborates that also in another post.
My point was also mainly to point out that we should see moral theories as instruments that can help us get us more of what we value. They can help us reach some end-in-view and be evaluated in this regard, anything else is specious.
From my perspective, adopting classic utilitarianism can be very limiting because it can oversimplify and obscure what we actually care about in a given situation. It's maybe useful as a helpful guide for considering what should be important but I am trying to not delude myself that "welfare" must be the only thing I should care about. This would be akin to a premature closure of inquiry into the specific situation at hand. I cannot and will never be able to fully anticipate all relevant details and aspects of a real world situation, so how can I be a priori certain that there is only one value I should care about?
If you are interested in this kind of position, feel free to check out: Ulrich, W. (2006). Critical Pragmatism: A New Approach to Professional and Business Ethics. In Interdisciplinary Yearbook for Business Ethics. V. 1, v. 1,. Peter Lang Pub Inc.