It's counterintuitive. But "disincentives for (i.e. intrinsic negative feedback of) antisocial and immoral behaviors" can play out just as effectively within the upper and lower bounds of even a vastly higher hedonic range than today's norm. Leave aside here my wilder transhumanist speculations on future life based on information-sensitive gradients of superhuman bliss. Focus instead on today's genetic outliers - "hyperthymics" with an unusually high hedonic set-point. OK, I don't know of any rigorous quantitative study to prove it, but there's no evidence that hyperthymic people are more prone to antisocial and immoral behavior than their neurotypical counterparts. Sure, people with mania are prone antisocial and immoral behavior. But that's because (as in chronic unipolar depression) their information-signaling system for good and bad stimuli has partially broken down.Still, it seems to me, the ethical problem remains: if 'negative affects' are eliminated by "radical hedonic uplift", then disincentives for (i.e. intrinsic negative feedbacks of) antisocial and immoral behaviors will be, effectively, eliminated as well. How will this not produce catastrophic consequences? – they would be unintentionally yet foreseeably 'harmful' and, therefore, ought to be avoided, no? — 180 Proof
Direct interventions to enhance emotional well-being could enrich everyone's default quality of life. For sure, whether we consider using drugs, genes or electrodes, such tools could also be abused. But we need a a serious ethical debate. Do we want to conserve our existing reward architecture indefinitely? Or aim for radical hedonic uplift?"mastery of the reward circuitry" would give every autocrat / theocrat a permanent hard-on. — 180 Proof
A qualified version of psychological hedonism may be true. But the commission of atrocities is a function of ignorance. Full-spectrum superintelligences could impartially weigh all possible first-person perspectives and act accordingly.Mastery of our reward circuitry will ensure...
— David Pearce
... that committing atrocities or acts of kindness are identically psychologically motivated, no? — 180 Proof
In practice, almost all intellectual and moral progress depends on false belief, namely the existence of enduring metaphysical egos.As the quote indicates, presentists have no motivation to biologically preserve their own life for the purpose of avoiding eternal oblivion, given that they understand eternal oblivion to be nonsense. — sime
With that in mind, there's a nuance to note about who benefits from this situation the most, meaning the rich and powerful. It seems to me that money can indeed provide for happiness if not realize it in the extension of one's life-span.
May I ask for your opinion, David Pearce? — Shawn
Yes. Mastery of our reward circuitry will ensure the darkest depths of transhuman life are richer than today's "peak experiences".I take it that part of the transhumanist vision is to enable everybody to feel the latter way all the time, and make it so that nobody ever has to feel the former way. — Pfhorrest
But the problem, to quote Wittgenstein, is that "Death is not an event in life". Even if we share a Benatarian pessimism about the human predicament, we should have compassion for aging humans tormented by increasing decrepitude and their own mortality – and the loss of loved ones. Defeating the biology of aging is morally imperative.Is it rational to seek to eliminate death in the absence of any proof that life is better than death? — Foghorn
Unlike the rest of the animal kingdom, mature humans can rationalise and practise adaptive preference formation (aka "sour grapes"):Both the pessimism that says trying is hopeless and the optimism that says it’s unnecessary are just lazy excuses not to try, and in doing so to guarantee failure. I’m extremely proud of transhumanists and techno-progressivists more generally, like David Pearce, for having the courage to dare to at least try to fix the biggest of problems that have always been either seen as hopeless inevitabilities or excused away with happy fantasies as not real problems at all. They’re sort of a manifestation of Camus’ Absurd Hero in that way, too. — Pfhorrest
Antinatalists recognize that creating children with a progressive genetic disease is morally problematic. Aging ravages and then kills its victims. But “hard” antinatalists haven’t faced up to the nature of selection pressure. Inevitably, natalists will inherit the Earth. So I’d urge antinatalists to swallow hard and embrace the transhumanist agenda. Defeating involuntary aging, death and suffering may take centuries. Yet as far as I can tell, the project is scientifically and sociologically viable – just dauntingly ambitious.Having spent some time reading David Pearce on the Transhumanism thread, which ended not long ago, I notified myself of a tendency of Transhumanists or individuals seeking to extend their lifespan, as simply not accepting death as a forgone conclusion or brute fact about existence. What a stark difference from the antinatalist threads that I have seen around and about on this forum. — Shawn
fdrake, thank you. And good heavens – you're right about time!You've been talking with us for two months! Time flies. Very many thanks for all you've done. — fdrake
Baden, very many thanks.Second this — Baden
Creativesoul, you are very kind. It's much appreciated.Kudos for actually engaging. I appreciate you keeping the implicit promise that many others did not. — creativesoul
Current scientific evidence does not support the therapeutic benefit of prayer:Do you really think you knew the world as it was when you were 6? What about when you were 12? Or 20? Or now? The answer has always been the same. A resounding yes. Why do you limit yourself to further knowledge and potential. The answer is the same as why you did when you were 6. Ignorance. Pray some. — Outlander
Where in this chronology would you call a halt:Life sucks. You wish to make it better. That's admirable. However. "The road to hell is paved with good intentions" .. and no that doesn't mean what others think it does. More of a Pandora's Box, better the devil you know, such and such is a double-edged sword, one step forward two steps back, etc.. — Outlander
Recall I'm an antinatalist:So. The real question is, David. Will you use your wealth and influence to purchase a large enough area where, your own and this is the most important, your own offspring can participate in these trials and we all can watch from a distance and see how they fare over time — Outlander
Please forgive me if I've missed a post / point you'd like to see addressed. If you let me know, I'll do my best!Magnifique! Superb! Excelente! Carry on. Just ignore me! — TheMadFool
Remediation is harder than prevention. Preimplantation genetic screening and counselling are available now. By contrast, the gene-repressing strategy I cited above for pain reduction has been invesigated only in "mouse models". I hope human trials can begin soon.The question I asked is quite simple: why do you advocate genetic interventions - which are passed on through germ cells to subsequent generations - when, epigenetic therapies are not passed on to subsequent generations, but merely effect the expression of genes in the individual? — counterpunch
Apologies, I've done my fallible best to respond, and cited your comments verbatim in my replies. Possibly the conceptual gulf that separates us is too large. Either way, I promise I'm as keen on fostering education as you are – just not by means of suffering:If I too ignore everything you say — counterpunch
"Responsible" adults are engineered by evolution to maximize the inclusive fitness of their genes, not impartially to weigh whether it's ethical to generate more pain-ridden Darwinian malware. I coo over babies as much as anyone. But on an intellectual level, I recognise they are the victims of our evolutionary psychology.Children can't consent to be born - because they don't exist, and for a long time after they are born, are not deemed responsible enough to give consent. Consent is the purview of responsible adults — counterpunch
If I (or transhumanists in general) advocated getting "blissed out", thereby robbing people of their ability to learn, then you might have a point. However, you may recall we urge intelligence-amplification. Sentient beings with a hedonic range of +70 to +100 can learn as well as savages with a hedonic range of -10 to 0 to +10.I do not regard causing suffering as inherently unethical. Suffering allows us to navigate the world by teaching us to avoid that which is harmful. The fact that a child born is destined to suffer - is just part of the learning process. Depriving the child of the ability to suffer is harmful. — counterpunch
Children don't consent to be born. If lack of prior consent is the key issue, one should stay child-free.epigenetic engineering - that could be performed on the adult individual with their consent — counterpunch
If one believes that antinatalists are wrong to condemn baby-making as inherently unethical, then one must show that genetic experimentation can and will be conducted responsibly. I'm not convinced that responsible experimentation is yet feasible. But we now at least know enough to mitigate the harm of coming into existence in a Darwinian world.Nor, apparently, necessary to address the problem. — counterpunch
Germline interventions are not irreversible. They merely change the genetic default. Might a future hyperthymic civilisation revert to creating babies with high-pain, low-mood (etc) alleles and allelic combinations? It's technically feasible. Likewise breeding babies with alleles for cystic fibrosis and other nasty genetic disorders. But such scenarios lack sociological credibility.Interfering in the human genome, so altering every subsequent human being who will ever live, is a risk that's not justified by depression — counterpunch
In our discussion, I've glossed over the role of transgenerational epigenetic inheritance (cf.what about epigenetic engineering? — counterpunch
The question to ask is: What should be the "default settings" of new life? Should we continue to create people genetically predisposed to a ghastly range of unpleasant experiences they will only later be able to palliate? Or should we design healthy people:because arguably, epigenetic engineering could bypass many of the moral dilemmas associated with germ-line genetic alteration foisted on subsequent generations — counterpunch
I absolutely respect your devotion to mitigating clearly-defined evils (to say you're doing much more than me to help others would be a wild understatement) - but how do you sustain your pinpointing of (biologically based, and so capable-of-being-engineered-out) evil against, say, the knocking-down-chesterton's-fence argument? What I'm trying to get at is, it feels to me you have full faith in the current scientific framing (an end of scientific framing ala the much discussed political 'end of history') Is that fair? — csalisbury
we've both touched the harsh nerve of pain, really touched it, and realized how frame-shatteringly painful real pain is. — csalisbury
The worst source of severe and readily avoidable suffering in the world is simply remedied. Without slaughterhouses, the entire industrialized apparatus for exploiting and murdering sentient beings would collapse. What's needed isn't Zen-like calm, but a fierce moral urgency and vigorous political lobbying to end the animal holocaust. By contrast, reprogramming the biosphere to eradicate suffering is much more ambitious in every sense. Yes, the "regulative idea" of ending involuntary suffering should inform policy-making and ethics alike. And society as a whole needs to debate what responsible parenthood entails. People who choose to create babies "naturally" create babies who are genetically predisposed to be sick by the criteria of the World Health Organization's own definition of health. By these same criteria, most people alive today are often severely sick. Shortly, genetic medicine will allow the creation of babies who are predisposed to be (at worst) occasionally mildly unwell. A reproductive revolution is happening this century; and the time to debate it is now.I agree that reducing suffering (and increasing flourishing) is the best orienting, regulative idea, for our ethics, but implementation will have to unfold gradually (or at least in tandem with our understanding) - and because of that, I think our best bet is to cultivate a focus - really cultivate a focus - on the here-and-now, and only then tentatively venture out toward widening time horizons (and how far out can we really see?) — csalisbury
A "genetic arms race" sounds sinister. It's not. Even inequalities in hedonic enhancement aren't sinister. Consider a toy example. Grossly over-simplifying, imagine if pushy / privileged parents arrange to have kids with a 50% higher hedonic set-point compared to the 30% boost of less privileged newborns. Everyone is still better off. Contrast getting a 30% pay increase if your colleagues get a 50% increase, which will probably diminish your well-being. OK, this example isn’t sociologically realistic. Any geneticists reading will be wincing too. But you get my point. Alleles and allelic combinations that predispose to low mood and high pain-sensitivity will increasingly be at a selective disadvantage as the reproductive revolution unfolds, but there won't be "losers" beyond some nasty lines of genetic code. To quote J.B.S. Haldane,However, what I'd be more concerned about is a genetic arms race. Once you start down this path, how do know when to stop? — counterpunch
A nonhuman animal who suffers a grisly death at the hands of a shooter might well have experienced more suffering in the course of a lifetime if allowed to live unmolested. But killing (human or nonhuman) sentient beings for fun should be prohibited. A world of "high-tech Jainism" where life is sacred will be a happier world. I often use the language of deontology, but my reasoning is entirely consequentialist.We are both operating from the foundation that suffering is the moral priority. So do you disagree with the premise that the animals would have more suffering if left to live? The consequentialism comes in, as the normalisation of hunting (killing of our fellow sentient beings) leads to more suffering? Or is there some principle/s that take precedence over the consequences? — Down The Rabbit Hole
With funding, creation of artificial self-contained "happy biospheres" could begin today using small fast-breeders. The more ambitious pan-species project I discuss on https://www.gene-drives.com sounds science fiction. But the biggest obstacles are ethical-ideological, not technical.This is something we can and should do immediately? Or more research is required? — Down The Rabbit Hole
The first step towards a hyperthymic civilisation is ensuring universal access of all prospective parents to preimplantation genetic screening and counsellng (Cue for "Have you seen Gattaca?!" Yes.) The second step is conservative editing, i.e. no creation of novel genes or allelic combinations that don't occur naturally within existing human populations. The third step, true genetic innovation and transhuman genomes, will be most radical – but the idea that germline editing is irreversible is a canard.Do you believe you can reliably make germline alterations to human DNA, without possibly, making subsequent generations susceptible to disease, or other malady that you haven't foreseen? — counterpunch
Do you believe that existing people with high hedonic set-points indirectly cause more suffering? Why exactly do you believe that a whole world of temperamentally happy people would lead to more suffering rather than less?Messing with human psychology via genetics? That strikes me as several steps too far. You have to understand, there's a very real chance that you would create far greater suffering than you intend to remedy. — counterpunch
Humans should actively be helping non-human animals, not terrorising them and then rationalising their bloodlust. On consequentialist grounds, we should uphold in law the sanctity of sentient life.An argument used by hunters (like Joe Rogan) is that they are doing the animals a favour, as otherwise their lives and deaths can be horrific. I take it you agree that it would lead to worse lives if they were left to live on, but you disagree with the consequentialist approach? — Down The Rabbit Hole
For large slow-breeders, cross-species fertility-regulation via immunocontraception is feasible. For small fast-breeders, we can use remotely tunable synthetic gene drives:What do you think of methods to reduce wild animal fertility? — Down The Rabbit Hole
One of the risks of ethical advocacy is losing one's critical detachment and turning into a propagandist. There are forms of propaganda more obnoxious than a plea for paradise engineering and a pan-species welfare state. When these ideas go mainstream, policy initiatives will need to be rigorously critiqued.I believe his theory and mission is far more of a Pandora's Box then the sort of panacea he wishes to promote — Outlander
What's in contention isn't whether humans should or shouldn't intervene in Nature. Humans already do so on a massive scale:Weeping buckets over the fact animals eat each other shouldn't blind you to the complexities of the system — counterpunch
Evolution via natural selection is a cruel engine of suffering, not a performance art.Evolution is not a crapshoot. It's ballet, — counterpunch
I tiptoe far more gingerly than, say, Freeman Dyson (“In the future, a new generation of artists will be writing genomes the way that Blake and Byron wrote verses”). Exhaustive research, risk-benefit analysis and pilot studies will be essential. But whether eradicating smallpox or defeating vector-borne disease, human interventions will have far-reaching ecological implications. Should we have conserved Variola major and Variola minor because the disappearance of smallpox leads to much larger human population sizes? Should we allow Anopheles mosquitoes to breed unchecked because the long-term ecological ramifications of getting rid of malaria are unknown? What about the biology of involuntary pain and suffering? By all means urge extreme vigilance and exploration of worse-case scenarios. But an abundance of caution shouldn't involve placing faith in a mythical wisdom of Nature.and you blunder onto the stage in your hobnail boots — counterpunch
As a "soft" antinatalist, I'm not planning any personal genetic experiments – with the possible exception of some late-life somatic gene-editing when the technology matures. But for evolutionary reasons, most people don't believe in exercising such restraint. Humanity should plan accordingly. I'm urging a world in which natalists conduct genetic experiments more responsibly. One day natalism can even be harmless.That's the risk you take upon yourself, not for you personally - but for every subsequent generation of human being. — counterpunch
Both a genetic crapshoot and targeted germline interventions carry risks. Antinatalists refuse to gamble; but they won't inherit the Earth. So instead we must weigh risk-reward ratios when creating new life. Is the deliberate choice of "low pain" genes for our future children likely to create more or less suffering in the long-term than the traditional genetic casino?Genetic engineering carries a huge risk of unintended consequences, — counterpunch
Stonewalling?Animals eat each other, and suffer far worse in nature than on a well run farm. I've explained this repeatedly, but everything I say falls on stoney ground. I don't want to be rude to our guest by using ever greater rhetorical force to break through this stonewalling. — counterpunch
Tracing the historical antecedents of one's ideas is very different from appealing to religious authority. In this case, I was simply noting how the vegan transhumanist idea of civilising Nature is prefigured in the Book of Isaiah. The science is new, not the ethic.Your answer was an appeal to religious authority. — counterpunch
The disvalue of suffering is built into the experience itself. Sadly, it's not some idiosyncratic opinion on my part. If you are not in agony or despair, then you may believe that the problem of suffering isn't morally urgent. One's epistemological limitations shouldn't be confused with a deep metaphysical truth about sentience.Your belief that the problem of suffering is morally urgent, is your opinion — counterpunch
Nutritionists would differ. So would e.g. vegan body-builders:A vegetarian diet - with all the necessary supplements, is probably fine for an office worker, or an academic philosopher - i.e. the middle class to whom vegetarianism appeals. But it's simply not adequate to the needs of a manual labourer. — counterpunch
An ethic of not harming others doesn't involve trumpeting one's moral superiority; rather, it's just basic decency. Also, technology massively amplifies the impact of even minimal benevolence. This amplifying effect is illustrated by the imminent cultured-meat revolution. Commercialised cultured meat and animal products promise an end to the cruelties of animal agriculture:There's no need for moral superiority. — counterpunch
You're not serious?! Since the age of ten or eleven, I've been a secular scientific rationalist. My reason for alluding to the "peaceable kingdom" of Isaiah was to disclaim originality for the vision of a vegan biosphere. Molecular biology provides the tools to turn utopian dreaming into practical policy.I suspect that's because your real purpose is to horrify people with science; to trash science on behalf of religion. — counterpunch
All genetic experimentation is risky; the very nature of sexual reproduction involves gambling with the life of a sentient being.risky genetic experimentation. — counterpunch
My core value is suffering-minimisation. "Hard" antinatalism is hopeless (cf. https://www.hedweb.com/quora/2015.html#arguments); transhumanism gives us a fighting chance of defeating suffering for ever.You say you value a sustainable future, but you're anti-natalist before you're transhumanist, — counterpunch
I support such initiatives. One comparatively minor argument for ending animal agriculture is that feeding grain and soya products directly to humans is more energy-efficient than feeding them to factory-farmed nonhuman animals whom humans then butcher.and therefore harness magma energy for limitless clean electricity, carbon sequestration, desalination and irrigation, recycling - and so on, because if we don't, the suffering is going to be unimaginably worse than that of a factory farmed pig. — counterpunch
Missionaries believed they were morally superior to cannibals. Their moral self-righteousness is not an argument for eating babies. Likewise, the foibles of individual vegans are not a moral argument for harming nonhuman animals.vegan moral self righteousness — counterpunch
If we were discussing some academic question of art or literature, fair enough. But the problem of suffering is morally urgent – and calls for radical solutions.Let's agree to differ! — counterpunch
The prospect of ending the cruelties of Nature isn't a madcap scheme some philosopher just dreamed up in the bathtub. It's a venerable vision: the "peaceable kingdom" of Isaiah. Biotech lets us flesh out the practical details.So you "modestly assume" you have the wisdom and technological ability to genetically alter all life on earth that doesn't meet your ethical standards? — counterpunch
What exactly is this "productive end"? If I may quote Dawkins:This is the basis for the apparent design in nature - how everything works together to a productive end — counterpunch
Evolution has been clever enough to create creatures smart enough to edit their own source code. Now that the level of suffering on Earth is an adjustable parameter, what genetic dial-settings should we choose?and you would presume to take this process on yourself? You should consider Orgel's Second Rule: "Evolution is cleverer than you are. — counterpunch
On some fairly modest assumptions, a world where all sentient beings can flourish is ethically preferable to a world where sentient beings hurt, harm and kill each other. Biotech makes the well-being of all sentience technically feasible. So let's civilise Darwinian life, not glory in its depravities:There are predators and prey. I'm a predator. — counterpunch