Astro Cat wrote: ↑Tue Aug 02, 2022 7:17 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Aug 02, 2022 4:04 am
Astro Cat wrote: ↑Tue Aug 02, 2022 3:04 am
If I create a sentient and sapient AI, that AI is its own being: it is not obligated to fulfill my wishes. That’s just slavery with extra steps.
But in the world you describe, slavery itself is not "wrong."
But all this is speculative: there is no such thing as AI -- not really. And if it ever happens, then maybe there will be moral questions...provided my worldview is true...
Not in yours.
In the world I describe, people will still have values against slavery, and they will probably be in the majority in today's world.
Actually, there are more slaves, in worse conditions, today than at any time in history. Sex slavery, for example, is really huge...human trafficking, sweat shops, and regular chattel slavery still exists and is very active in places like North Africa. And that does not even get into the deplorable conditions of women in the Middle East.
So the majority of the world has social practices favourable to slavery, actually. And historically, that's always been true. By every dimension, slavery is an ancient and approved practice.
Not that it matters. Morality is not a popularity poll, of course. But we must also ask what it means that Astro Cat happens not to value slavery, or happens to value freedom. If it's just her, that is nothing against slavery...unless she's actually, objectively right about slavery being evil.
Immanuel Can wrote:Astro Cat wrote:Plus I do not believe the argument “creations must fulfill the wishes of their creators” has substance; it has the feeling of a preference, not a truth. Can you argue for its truth?
Where did you take that "quotation" from? I don't think it's from me.
But your question is really, "Does the creature have a duty to fulfill the Creator's wishes." And my answer to that is, "Of course."
For you are not self-created. Your design is not your own. And you have no power at all to give yourself life. You are, instead, part of a divine plan, a fixture in the beneficent intentions of a loving God...blessed to have the opportunity to discover all the wonderful potentials He has put in you, and endowed with your own volition and choices. You owe your Creator, at least, your gratitude; but
if you want to be all that you can be, you also owe Him your love and your service in the purposes He has prepared you to fulfill. You have a mission, a calling, a purpose in this world; and it is not merely to gratify your animal desires and then die.
(Emphasis added)
The quotations were only meant as a paraphrase, sorry if that needs to be more explicit. Do you see how your argument here is a hypothetical imperative from the bolded text?
You make too much of that. My argument goes, "This is the right thing AND it will make you happier," not "This is the right thing BECAUSE it will make you happier."
Again the word "because," interpretively inserted there, is the problem. I'm not saying you ought
because "if" you do it will make you happy. That would be a poor rationale for anything but egoism or hedonism, plausibly...or perhaps for utilitarianism, if the quantities were weighed. I'm none of those, and make no such argument.
Do you have an argument for why it would be true that a creation has a duty to fulfill a creator's wishes outside of a hypothetical imperative? To be absolutely clear, no if/then statements.
It is above. There are plenty of reasons given there. Simply understand the "if" as implying a bonus consequence, not a cause of "oughtness."
Hypothetical imperative oughts make sense.
I really don't see that they do.
A hypothetical of the kind you indict above would be impossible to rationalize,
unless you already know what the teleological goal in view is. If you know, already, for certain, that the point of life is to "be happy," say, then one can say "if" and "then" with a view to that teleological goal...and one may plausibly even be right about the instrumental connection one is positing. But the point worth debating, and the one that makes any case for hypotheticals, is the teleological goal itself.
Is our purpose to gratify our own urges? Is that why we're here, on this planet? You'll have to make that case for me, because it doesn't seem obvious either from a Theistic or a secular viewpoint. From a Theistic one, we're here to know God, of course; but even rejecting that, we can't say it suddenly becomes obvious we're here to gratify ourselves, either. In actuality, secularly speaking, being on a mudball in space that is an accident in origin (the Big Bang) and is proceeding by entropy toward inevitable Heat Death and extinction, it's much more obvious that we have no purpose or teleology at all -- that NOTHING is guaranteed to us, that life has no actual point (even if we are terrified and make one up to console ourselves), and that "if" and "because" are merely temporal instrumental, and probabilistic, and in no way genuinely moral at all.
But the moral realist position is that oughts exist which are not formed on hypothetical imperatives. So, ought a creation to obey its creators wishes because of the fact that the creator created them? I don't think you can establish that that's "true." I think you maybe intuit it (I don't), but I don't think there's an argument you can make for its truth.
Well, as above, there's much more to be said than merely that.
But it's at least
prima facie a good argument, and requires some sort of refutation. After all, if the creator of an entity does not, in any sense, "own" it, then is there any other candidate who plausibly does? I don't think there is. The creation certainly does not come into existence by its own volition and plan, with its own papers in hand, guaranteed total autonomy from its creator by dint of...what?
Even intuitively, that makes no sense. And I can't see a counterargument even available there. Who is the rival owner?
Immanuel Can wrote:Morality is importantly involved in this. There are ways you are to treat God's creation, and all the people He has put in it. They are not at your disposal to use or abuse as you might feel inclined. They, too, are dignified creatures, each with his or her own best destiny. And you have been gifted with free volition and creativity to use in the actualizing of all that is best in this world and in other people. Now, you are offered the opportunity as well to enter into an eternal relationship with your Creator -- of your own free will, of course -- so that you may achieve things you never imagined possible and become a much better kind of person than you ever imagined you could be.
This still doesn't answer why we
ought to behave as God intends us to. You are making implicit hypothetical imperatives... [/quote]
As above, I'm not, actually. Rather, I think you'll find you're reading them in. They are not intended as instrumental arguments.
For example, I did not write, or imply, "if you value dignity, then you ought not despoil it." I simply said that God assigns all of His creation its relative roles and dignity, and one who disrespects that is afoul of morality and out of step with the reality of things. I can assume you wish to be neither. But the choice always remains our own.
Every time you try, you just give either outright hypothetical imperatives or implied hypothetical imperatives ("your life would be really nice if you did this" -- this is an implied hypothetical imperative...
[Emphasis mine]
There it is. The "implication" is being drawn, rather than being mine. I neither intended it nor implied it myself.
I trust that clears that up. Let us proceed.
Immanuel Can wrote:Astro Cat wrote:You can argue “if you value things like living a healthy life, then you ought to do what God says.” But that is a hypothetical imperative.
I didn't argue that. I just told you what will happen with one choice and with the other. I put on you no "imperative," but rather offer you the free choice.
However, all choices have consequences. And the free choice to reject relationship with the ultimate Source of all life, light, health, joy, purpose, and love is going to have consequences. It's a choice one can make: so long as one also is content to receive the consequences that naturally follow with each choice.
That's what freedom and volition entail. It means you get choice. It doesn't mean all choices are good, or that all choices are pain-free. It means that you get the choice with it's consequences.
OK, then I grant that there is a choice. But the
question was why ought I follow God's wishes for my life?
Here, it seems like you finally did see my point. Thank you for persevering with that.
Why ought Cat to run for charity, so to speak? Because it's the right thing to do, because right things are harmonious with the character of God, and Cat wishes to know God.
Or, she perhaps could choose the alternative, which is to not care about God, not to do what is harmonious with the character of God, and she would be out of step with HIm, make Him an adversary, and cut herself off from the goods that attach to God.
And she is perfectly free to do either. That, too, is a grace God has given us all -- the freedom to choose badly, so that our choice of the good may be free and genuine, and our personhood and volition may be respected and affirmed in all cases. For the one thing God values in Cat, above all, is her personhood. It's the
sine qua non of genuine relationship. So she has her choices and wishes, and lives and dies by them.
We can say "because what God wishes is good." OK. But why is it good? We can say "because God's nature is good." OK. But what does it mean for God's nature to be good? What is goodness? We've never gotten past this question.
I
Well, I pointed out to you that it posits that "good" and "God" are different things. I argue that they are identical. You decline that. I don't know what we can do about that, from here.
I pointed out to you that even Socrates himself recognized that dividing "good" and "gods" was necessary to his argument. You blew by all that, and simply said it didn't matter -- though, of course, it's crucial, being essential to Socrates's very first premise.
What's the next response? I don't know. I don't know what to do with an argument that simply refuses the relevant evidence, as offered straight from the relevant text, verbatim.
So what is goodness?
God.
I keep underlining this point that:
1) God has a nature to be good
2) God didn't choose that nature
I'm sorry, but that's nonsense. it's a violation of the very concept itself. It's definitionally wrong.
A "nature" isn't chosen. "Nature" means what a thing
actually is, not what a thing
chooses. If it were chosen, it could not, by definition, be a "nature."
Jenner did not "choose" to be born a man. He was. We both know that. Even Jenner knows that, because it's the thing he's always complaining about. His nature is that of a man. Whatever he says about himself now, it's a
resistance to his nature. He's putting his choice
ahead of nature. For him, they're opposites. What he's saying is, "What I feel like I am is more determinative than my basic nature." That's his claim. That's why he had to "trans." It's because his nature was not alligned with his wishes. Otherwise, he would not be "trans" at all, since "trans" implies movement from one state to another.
And he has not changed his DNA, or his fundamental body structure, or his history. And he certainly has not changed his "nature." For which reason, in any discussion of nature, he's still a "he."
So "nature" means "actual constitution," not "choices made afterward." Thus, it is nonsense to object that "God didn't choose His nature." Nobody chooses their "nature," by definition of the concept.
C) God's intentions, beliefs, etc. don't define goodness; goodness defines what God is rather than God defining what goodness is
See Socrates on that. It posits the division between good and God. That's a false dichotomy.
But I don't quite know how I can make this any clearer.
Let's say that I program an AI
No, let's keep our cases real. I think we're on better territory if we do. We know more.
AI does not exist. We have no information of what it would actually entail, if it ever did emerge. But Searle's made a good case (and the Turning Test actually concedes that case), that we can very easily be fooled by our creations. (See also the famous "Eliza" experiment, by Weizenbaum.)
If God has a nature which is good, and that goodness is why God makes good choices, then God's choices have nothing to do with defining what goodness is.
This, I think, is a fairly confused sentence. Let me point out the confusion, if I may.
God is good. God
also makes good choices, because He acts out
of His own nature. But goodness isn't the "because" of His choices; His essential nature is why He makes the choices He does. God always acts consistently with Himself. And that happens to be what we humans understand as "good," as well. But the "goodness" does not precede or cause God to do anything. It's an adjective, a predication of the quality of God. And it's not the only one. But adjectives do not cause things. They are caused by the thing the adjective describes.
God's nature is good. 'Good' doesn't
make God do things. It's the adjective
describing the quality of what God does. 'Good' is not a Platonic reality floating somewhere prior to God Himself.
Clear enough?
Immanuel Can wrote:P.S. -- Interestingly, I note you didn't want to talk about the incoherencies of that in the case of "Jenner." Still, can you not see them?
Well, I feel like a lot of that was discussed in the essentialism thread. My answer is of course the same: that trans people aren't under the illusion they're changing a biological sex reality, but are affecting a societal construction called gender which is just about societal expectations and not about chromosomes. That still responds to this.
Ah. There it is. The "gender" you say, is a "social construction." The
nature is not. You call it "a biological sex reality." Fine, use your own words. But nature is not "societal expectations," as you put it, either.
Nature is involved in what Jenner is resisting...not merely the body shape and the chromosomes, but in Jenner's own recognized and admitted history as a male decathlete, and not only in that but in the very constitution of what Jenner
was made to be. That's "nature."
Ironically, Jenner also wants us to believe that unless he is affirmed in
resisting his nature, that would be...
unnatural,

because he's "really"

a "woman." But what can that "really" imply, other than that Jenner wants to think that feelings, not nature, is determinative of identity? It cannot be otherwise, or he loses his grounds of appeal for a right and necessity to "trans."
Such are the incoherencies of transing.
Now, I know that thought offends the present PC thought of your group. But consider whether or not it should. For lesbianism itself is threatened by transing, as the very pro-lesbian Dr. Debra Soh has so importantly pointed out.
If young women feel unconventional in their bodies, that is capable of two competing interpretations, even within the "community": one is that she's a lesbian, the other is that she's a man. Outside of that "community," of course, it's capable of other interpretations; but let's stay local on that.
How should young women understand their natural adolescent dysphoric experiences? Should they consider themselves lesbians or men? That's not an easy divide to make. But the consequences to the subsequent path are substantial. Should young women hack off their female features, or celebrate them, for example? To what "subcommunity" should they belong...the one that loves womanhood, or the one that wants to avoid being one at all costs?
This problem has not yet hit the group, since they're so busy hating the "heteronormatives" that they have no time for deeper thought, and keep making alliances that make no sense, so long as they're "anti-heteronormative" ones. But the piper will have to be paid one day. I wonder how that will work out...but "nature" will be an important guide, then.
Best we do not debase the concept now, don't you think? We are going to need it later.