“Do you know what the most popular book is? No, it’s not Harry Potter. But it does talk about spells. It’s the Bible, and it has been for centuries. In the past 50 years alone, the Bible has sold over 3.9 billion copies. And the second best-selling book? The Quran, at 800 million copies.
As Oxford Professor William MacAskill, author of the new book “What We Owe The Future”—a tome on effective altruism and “longtermism”—explains, excerpts from these millennia-old schools of thought influence politics around the world: “The Babylonian Talmud, for example, compiled over a millennium ago, states that ‘the embryo is considered to be mere water until the fortieth day’—and today Jews tend to have much more liberal attitudes towards stem cell research than Catholics, who object to this use of embryos because they believe life begins at conception. Similarly, centuries-old dietary restrictions are still widely followed, as evidenced by India’s unusually high rate of vegetarianism, a $20 billion kosher food market, and many Muslims’ abstinence from alcohol.”
The reason for this is simple: once rooted, value systems tend to persist for an extremely long time. And when it comes to factory farming, there’s reason to believe we may be at an inflection point.”
Read the rest on Forbes.
Thanks for sharing Brian!
If you don't mind, I'll copy the two parts that stood out to me the most and helped to clarify the point for me better. If these points are valid, and I do think the logic makes sense, then this is quite concerning. Would love to hear other peoples thoughts on this.
Agree with the sentiment, thanks for the reply!
Exactly what I was thinking too. Unfortunately I think AGI will (and likely already is) move at light speed compared to the inclusion of animal consideration in our moral circle (when has tech not greatly exceeded pace with social movements?). If there's going to be a lock in, I'm fairly confident it's going to be well before we'll be where we ne... (read more)