Haven’t read the book yet, but from reviews I understand that one action implied by longtermism is ensuring that we avoid value lock-in to allow moral progress to continue.
Does your book discuss the downsides of avoiding value lock-in, eg—risks of moral regress / the risk of worse values being locked in in the future if we don’t lock in our current set of values?
Haven’t read the book yet, but from reviews I understand that one action implied by longtermism is ensuring that we avoid value lock-in to allow moral progress to continue.
Does your book discuss the downsides of avoiding value lock-in, eg—risks of moral regress / the risk of worse values being locked in in the future if we don’t lock in our current set of values?