If you agree we should help those who will have moral status, that’s it. That’s one of the main pillars of longtermism. Whether or not present and future moral status are “comparable” in some sense is beside the point. The important point of comparison is whether they both deserve to be helped, and they do.
I agree that we should help those who have moral status now, whether those people are existing or just will exist someday . People who will exist someday are people who will exist in our beliefs about the pathway into the future that we are on.
There is a set of hypothetical future people on pathways into the future that we are not on. Those pathways are of two types:
pathways that we are too late to start down (impossible future people)
pathways that we could still start down (possible future people or plausible future people)
If you contextualize something with respect to a past time point, then it is trivial to make it impossible. For example, “The child I had when I was 30 is an impossible future person.” With that statement, I describe an impossible person because I contextualized its birth as occurring when I was 30. But I didn’t have a child when I was 30, and I am almost two decades older than 30. Therefore, that hypothetical future person is impossible.
Then there’s the other kind of hypothetical future person, for example, a person that I could still father. My question to you is whether that person should have moral status to me now, even though I don’t believe that the future will be welcoming and beneficial for a child of mine.
If you believe that a hypothetical future child does have moral status now, then you believe that I am behaving immorally by denying it opportunities for life because in your belief, the future is positive and my kid’s life will be a good one, if I have the kid. I don’t like to be seen as immoral in the estimation of others who use flawed reasoning.
The flaw in your reasoning is that the hypothetical future child that I won’t have has moral status and that I should act on its behalf even though I won’t conceive it. You could be right that the future is positive. You are wrong that the hypothetical future child has any moral status by virtue of its future existence when you agree that the child might not ever exist.
If I had plans to have a child, then that future child would immediately take on a moral status, contingent on those plans, and my beliefs in my influence over the future. However, I have no such plans. And, in fact, not much in the way of beliefs about my influence over the future.
I think you keep misinterpreting me, even when I make things explicit. For example, the mere fact that X is good doesn’t entail that people are immoral for not doing X.
Maybe it would be more productive to address arguments step by step.
Do you think it would be bad to hide a bomb in a populated area and set it to go off in 200 years?
I would like to avoid examples or discussion of the bomb example in this thread, thanks. I don’t like it.
We have talked about these issues quite a bit, so let me point out information to mark off directions this conversation could go:
I think that a belief can be established at any level of rational certainty about the belief’s assertion or with any amount of confidence in the cogency of arguments that support the belief.
I use the word belief as broadly as I can. Some people talk about the strength of beliefs, and I think there are certainly differences between types of belief and their evidence. I am not referencing subtypes of beliefs when I use the word belief.
I’m not a solipsist. I think the world is real and people are real and outside my mind and exist when I’m not perceiving them, etc. At the same time, I don’t think possible future people currently exist outside of any belief that I have in their future existence.
As I have said several times, I do not think people have to actually exist now in order to have moral status. They can exist in the future as well and still have moral status now, to me, provided that I believe that they will exist in the future.
An entity having moral status is not the only reason to have a concern about its (hypothetical) well-being. For me, moral status is not the only measure of concern a person can have for [or about] a possible future entity.
I take some actions using a heuristic: I take actions sometimes just because I don’t like being incorrect and then regretting it (in advance of its possible consequences). But I go on believing I’m correct in the meantime. If I thought a future entity could exist, and if it did, then it would have moral status ( meaning I would care that it’s there), then I might still act on its behalf now, just in case it comes into being, even though I don’t believe that it will come into being.
Yes, I could act on behalf of people that might exist in the far future, despite me not believing that they will exist. To a longtermist, it would seem like I heavily discounted the moral status of those future people but what they would be seeing is how much effort I feel like putting into my heuristic (of avoiding my failing to prevent regrettable possible consequences) at the time.
The heuristic is not based on a rational argument for possible future people’s moral status. However, I do use it to choose all kinds of actions where I think that if I were wrong and didn’t take action, it would matter to me. To convince me of possible future people’s moral status, all I would really need to think is that those people actually will exist. I believe people will be born in the next 60-70 years. They have moral status to me now.
In general, I care about people. At the same time, I qualify the level of care that I feel for others with thoughts about the character or behavior of those people.
If you are wondering whether I can uncover my beliefs about people in the future, people that will exist, the answer is, yes I can. Those people have moral status. There will be large numbers of people born over the next 30 years for example, and all those people have moral status in my thinking.
I can qualify assertions about the future as contingent, and then talk about counterfactuals to what I believe. For example, contingent on people doing a better job of taking care of our only home world and ourselves, Earth could be home to humans in X centuries from now.
I still haven’t read MacAskill’s book, and hope to get to that soon. Should we hold off further conversation until then?
I think they will have moral status once they exist, and that’s enough to justify acting for the sake of their welfare.
Do you believe that:
possible future people have moral status once they exist
it’s enough that future people with moral status are possible to justify acting on their behalf
I believe point 1.
If you believe point 2, is that because you believe that possible future people have moral status now?
No, it’s because future moral status also matters.
Huh. “future moral status” Is that comparable to present moral status in any way?
Longtermists think we should help those who do (or will) have moral status.
Oh, I agree with that, but is “future moral status” comparable to or the same as “present moral status”?
If you agree we should help those who will have moral status, that’s it. That’s one of the main pillars of longtermism. Whether or not present and future moral status are “comparable” in some sense is beside the point. The important point of comparison is whether they both deserve to be helped, and they do.
I agree that we should help those who have moral status now, whether those people are existing or just will exist someday . People who will exist someday are people who will exist in our beliefs about the pathway into the future that we are on.
There is a set of hypothetical future people on pathways into the future that we are not on. Those pathways are of two types:
pathways that we are too late to start down (impossible future people)
pathways that we could still start down (possible future people or plausible future people)
If you contextualize something with respect to a past time point, then it is trivial to make it impossible. For example, “The child I had when I was 30 is an impossible future person.” With that statement, I describe an impossible person because I contextualized its birth as occurring when I was 30. But I didn’t have a child when I was 30, and I am almost two decades older than 30. Therefore, that hypothetical future person is impossible.
Then there’s the other kind of hypothetical future person, for example, a person that I could still father. My question to you is whether that person should have moral status to me now, even though I don’t believe that the future will be welcoming and beneficial for a child of mine.
If you believe that a hypothetical future child does have moral status now, then you believe that I am behaving immorally by denying it opportunities for life because in your belief, the future is positive and my kid’s life will be a good one, if I have the kid. I don’t like to be seen as immoral in the estimation of others who use flawed reasoning.
The flaw in your reasoning is that the hypothetical future child that I won’t have has moral status and that I should act on its behalf even though I won’t conceive it. You could be right that the future is positive. You are wrong that the hypothetical future child has any moral status by virtue of its future existence when you agree that the child might not ever exist.
If I had plans to have a child, then that future child would immediately take on a moral status, contingent on those plans, and my beliefs in my influence over the future. However, I have no such plans. And, in fact, not much in the way of beliefs about my influence over the future.
I think you keep misinterpreting me, even when I make things explicit. For example, the mere fact that X is good doesn’t entail that people are immoral for not doing X.
Maybe it would be more productive to address arguments step by step.
Do you think it would be bad to hide a bomb in a populated area and set it to go off in 200 years?
I would like to avoid examples or discussion of the bomb example in this thread, thanks. I don’t like it.
We have talked about these issues quite a bit, so let me point out information to mark off directions this conversation could go:
I think that a belief can be established at any level of rational certainty about the belief’s assertion or with any amount of confidence in the cogency of arguments that support the belief.
I use the word belief as broadly as I can. Some people talk about the strength of beliefs, and I think there are certainly differences between types of belief and their evidence. I am not referencing subtypes of beliefs when I use the word belief.
I’m not a solipsist. I think the world is real and people are real and outside my mind and exist when I’m not perceiving them, etc. At the same time, I don’t think possible future people currently exist outside of any belief that I have in their future existence.
As I have said several times, I do not think people have to actually exist now in order to have moral status. They can exist in the future as well and still have moral status now, to me, provided that I believe that they will exist in the future.
An entity having moral status is not the only reason to have a concern about its (hypothetical) well-being. For me, moral status is not the only measure of concern a person can have for [or about] a possible future entity.
I take some actions using a heuristic: I take actions sometimes just because I don’t like being incorrect and then regretting it (in advance of its possible consequences). But I go on believing I’m correct in the meantime. If I thought a future entity could exist, and if it did, then it would have moral status ( meaning I would care that it’s there), then I might still act on its behalf now, just in case it comes into being, even though I don’t believe that it will come into being.
Yes, I could act on behalf of people that might exist in the far future, despite me not believing that they will exist. To a longtermist, it would seem like I heavily discounted the moral status of those future people but what they would be seeing is how much effort I feel like putting into my heuristic (of avoiding my failing to prevent regrettable possible consequences) at the time.
The heuristic is not based on a rational argument for possible future people’s moral status. However, I do use it to choose all kinds of actions where I think that if I were wrong and didn’t take action, it would matter to me. To convince me of possible future people’s moral status, all I would really need to think is that those people actually will exist. I believe people will be born in the next 60-70 years. They have moral status to me now.
If you are wondering whether I can uncover my beliefs about people in the future, people that will exist, the answer is, yes I can. Those people have moral status. There will be large numbers of people born over the next 30 years for example, and all those people have moral status in my thinking.
I can qualify assertions about the future as contingent, and then talk about counterfactuals to what I believe. For example, contingent on people doing a better job of taking care of our only home world and ourselves, Earth could be home to humans in X centuries from now.
I still haven’t read MacAskill’s book, and hope to get to that soon. Should we hold off further conversation until then?
Yes, I think it would be best to hold off. I think you’ll find MacAskill addresses most of your concerns in his book.