Posted on June 30, 2008 by Peter Turney
I’ve said a number of things about good and evil at Overcoming Bias, and I decided to gather my comments together in one place. I’ve extracted the following quotes out of their surrounding context. The full original discussion can be found in Rationality Quotes 7 and Morality Is Overrated. Arguments similar to mine appear in [...]
Filed under: Political Science | Tagged: conflict, cooperation, ethics, iterated prisoners dilemma, morality | No Comments »
Posted on June 28, 2008 by Peter Turney
Some people believe that, “In an ideal world, disagreements would not exist”, and that “‘agreeing to disagree’ is a sign of mutual disrespect and contempt.” Others disagree. I believe that agreeing to disagree is a sign of respect and a practical necessity.
Filed under: Political Science | Tagged: argumentation, cooperation, debate, experimentation, facts, iterated prisoners dilemma, values | No Comments »
Posted on February 24, 2008 by Peter Turney
Ethical axioms are found and tested not very differently from the axioms of science. Truth is what stands the test of experience. — Albert Einstein
The traditional view is that science has nothing to say about ethics and morality. Science tells us what is and morality tells us what ought to be. You can’t get ought [...]
Filed under: Evolution, Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy of Science, Political Science | Tagged: conflict, cooperation, ethics, facts, morality, science, values | 24 Comments »
Posted on December 18, 2007 by Peter Turney
Daniel Lemire has an interesting blog post on competition in science. I will quote from this post and respond to each of the points that he makes.
Filed under: Philosophy of Science, Political Science | Tagged: competition, cooperation, research | 3 Comments »
Posted on November 15, 2007 by Peter Turney
The second most important research problem is understanding cooperation and how to improve cooperation. Most of the problems that face us today (and in the past) can be traced back to conflict between what is good and desirable for society as a whole and what is good and desirable for an individual (climate change, pollution, [...]
Filed under: Computer Science, Political Science | Tagged: conflict, cooperation, ethics, research, society | 3 Comments »
Posted on June 19, 2007 by Peter Turney
Consider an analogy of the form A:B::C:D, “A is to B as C is to D”; for example, “mason is to stone as carpenter is to wood”. This kind of analogy is often called a proportional analogy. The Greeks believed that proportional analogy is like the numerical equation A/B = C/D; for example, 1/2 = [...]
Filed under: Evolution, Philosophy of Mind, Political Science, Semantics | Tagged: analogy, cooperation, ethics, iterated prisoners dilemma | 2 Comments »
Posted on January 29, 2007 by Peter Turney
Creating friendly AI is a popular topic among singularitarians. For example, Michael Anissimov writes:
As best as we can currently figure, the amount of effort needed to create a Friendly AI is small relative to the effort needed to create AI in the first place. But it’s a very important [...]
Filed under: Computer Science, Evolution, Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy of Science, Political Science | Tagged: AI, cooperation, ethics, friendly AI | 3 Comments »