Do you (Michael) see your views about precise and imprecise credences significantly affecting what you would actually do in the real world in a scenario where you had to blame Jones or Smith?
Probably not. I see it as more illustrative of important cases. Imagine instead it’s between supporting an intervention or not, and it has similar complexity and considerations going in each direction.
More relevant examples to us could be: crops vs nature for wild animals, climate change on wild animals, fishing on wild animals, the far future effects of our actions, the acausal influence of our actions. These are all things I feel clueless enough about to mostly bracket away and ignore when they are side effects of direct interventions I’m interested in supporting. I’m not ignoring them because I think they’re small. I think they are likely much larger than the effects I’m not ignoring.
I may also want to further study some of them, but I’m often not that optimistic about making much progress (especially for far future effrcts and acausal influence) and for that progress to be used in a way that isn’t net negative overall by my lights.
How much more optimistic would you be about research on i) the welfare of soil animals and microorganisms, and ii) comparisons of (expectedhedonistic) welfare across species if you strongly endorsed expectational total hedonistic utilitarianism, moral realism, and precise probabilitites, and ignored acausal effects, and effects after 100 years?
Probably not. I see it as more illustrative of important cases. Imagine instead it’s between supporting an intervention or not, and it has similar complexity and considerations going in each direction.
More relevant examples to us could be: crops vs nature for wild animals, climate change on wild animals, fishing on wild animals, the far future effects of our actions, the acausal influence of our actions. These are all things I feel clueless enough about to mostly bracket away and ignore when they are side effects of direct interventions I’m interested in supporting. I’m not ignoring them because I think they’re small. I think they are likely much larger than the effects I’m not ignoring.
I may also want to further study some of them, but I’m often not that optimistic about making much progress (especially for far future effrcts and acausal influence) and for that progress to be used in a way that isn’t net negative overall by my lights.
How much more optimistic would you be about research on i) the welfare of soil animals and microorganisms, and ii) comparisons of (expected hedonistic) welfare across species if you strongly endorsed expectational total hedonistic utilitarianism, moral realism, and precise probabilitites, and ignored acausal effects, and effects after 100 years?