On the nematode example, it could go further than that: we might assign an imprecise credence between X and 100% to a set of standards for sentience that nematodes don’t meet (see my other post on gradations of moral weight). So, the ratio could be anywhere between 0 and 1 (assuming we’re taking the absolute value, or only consider same-sign valence).
If the ratio is anywhere between 0 and 1, then whenever we’re looking at affecting nematode-seconds relative to their welfare ranges more than human-seconds relative to our welfare ranges, it would be indeterminate which is affected more. I think that would be every time in practice.
If we don’t need to deal with gradations/​vagueness like this, then I would probably assign expected welfare ranges (conditional on sentience) between constant and roughly proportional to the number of neurons, and this could give many more practically useful comparisons. EDIT: although conscious subsystems makes me more inclined towards approximately proportional, if we’re entertaining nematode sentience.
On the nematode example, it could go further than that: we might assign an imprecise credence between X and 100% to a set of standards for sentience that nematodes don’t meet (see my other post on gradations of moral weight). So, the ratio could be anywhere between 0 and 1 (assuming we’re taking the absolute value, or only consider same-sign valence).
If the ratio is anywhere between 0 and 1, then whenever we’re looking at affecting nematode-seconds relative to their welfare ranges more than human-seconds relative to our welfare ranges, it would be indeterminate which is affected more. I think that would be every time in practice.
If we don’t need to deal with gradations/​vagueness like this, then I would probably assign expected welfare ranges (conditional on sentience) between constant and roughly proportional to the number of neurons, and this could give many more practically useful comparisons. EDIT: although conscious subsystems makes me more inclined towards approximately proportional, if we’re entertaining nematode sentience.
I would be curious to know your thoughts on this discussion between me and Anthony DiGiovanni about imprecise expected values.