#86 – Hilary Greaves on Pascal's mugging, strong longtermism, and whether existing can be good for us

#86 – Hilary Greaves on Pascal's mugging, strong longtermism, and whether existing can be good for us

Had World War 1 never happened, you might never have existed.

It’s very unlikely that the exact chain of events that led to your conception would have happened otherwise — so perhaps you wouldn't have been born.

Would that mean that it's better for you that World War 1 happened (regardless of whether it was better for the world overall)?

On the one hand, if you're living a pretty good life, you might think the answer is yes – you get to live rather than not.

On the other hand, it sounds strange to say that it's better for you to be alive, because if you'd never existed there'd be no you to be worse off. But if you wouldn't be worse off if you hadn't existed, can you be better off because you do?

In this episode, philosophy professor Hilary Greaves – Director of Oxford University’s Global Priorities Institute – helps untangle this puzzle for us and walks me and Rob through the space of possible answers. She argues that philosophers have been too quick to conclude what she calls existence non-comparativism – i.e, that it can't be better for someone to exist vs. not.

Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.

Where we come down on this issue matters. If people are not made better off by existing and having good lives, you might conclude that bringing more people into existence isn't better for them, and thus, perhaps, that it's not better at all.

This would imply that bringing about a world in which more people live happy lives might not actually be a good thing (if the people wouldn't otherwise have existed) — which would affect how we try to make the world a better place.

Those wanting to have children in order to give them the pleasure of a good life would in some sense be mistaken. And if humanity stopped bothering to have kids and just gradually died out we would have no particular reason to be concerned.

Furthermore it might mean we should deprioritise issues that primarily affect future generations, like climate change or the risk of humanity accidentally wiping itself out.

This is our second episode with Professor Greaves. The first one was a big hit, so we thought we'd come back and dive into even more complex ethical issues.

We discuss:

• The case for different types of ‘strong longtermism’ — the idea that we ought morally to try to make the very long run future go as well as possible
• What it means for us to be 'clueless' about the consequences of our actions
• Moral uncertainty -- what we should do when we don't know which moral theory is correct
• Whether we should take a bet on a really small probability of a really great outcome
• The field of global priorities research at the Global Priorities Institute and beyond

Chapters:

  • The interview begins (00:02:53)
  • The Case for Strong Longtermism (00:05:49)
  • Compatible moral views (00:20:03)
  • Defining cluelessness (00:39:26)
  • Why cluelessness isn’t an objection to longtermism (00:51:05)
  • Theories of what to do under moral uncertainty (01:07:42)
  • Pascal’s mugging (01:16:37)
  • Comparing Existence and Non-Existence (01:30:58)
  • Philosophers who reject existence comparativism (01:48:56)
  • Lives framework (02:01:52)
  • Global priorities research (02:09:25)


Get this episode by subscribing: type 80,000 Hours into your podcasting app. Or read the linked transcript.

Producer: Keiran Harris.
Audio mastering: Ben Cordell.
Transcriptions: Zakee Ulhaq.

Avsnitt(324)

#57 – Tom Kalil on how to do the most good in government

#57 – Tom Kalil on how to do the most good in government

You’re 29 years old, and you’ve just been given a job in the White House. How do you quickly figure out how the US Executive Branch behemoth actually works, so that you can have as much impact as poss...

23 Apr 20192h 50min

#56 - Persis Eskander on wild animal welfare and what, if anything, to do about it

#56 - Persis Eskander on wild animal welfare and what, if anything, to do about it

Elephants in chains at travelling circuses; pregnant pigs trapped in coffin sized crates at factory farms; deers living in the wild. We should welcome the last as a pleasant break from the horror, rig...

15 Apr 20192h 57min

#55 – Lutter & Winter on founding charter cities with outstanding governance to end poverty

#55 – Lutter & Winter on founding charter cities with outstanding governance to end poverty

Governance matters. Policy change quickly took China from famine to fortune; Singapore from swamps to skyscrapers; and Hong Kong from fishing village to financial centre. Unfortunately, many governmen...

31 Mars 20192h 31min

#54 – OpenAI on publication norms, malicious uses of AI, and general-purpose learning algorithms

#54 – OpenAI on publication norms, malicious uses of AI, and general-purpose learning algorithms

OpenAI’s Dactyl is an AI system that can manipulate objects with a human-like robot hand. OpenAI Five is an AI system that can defeat humans at the video game Dota 2. The strange thing is they were bo...

19 Mars 20192h 53min

#53 - Kelsey Piper on the room for important advocacy within journalism

#53 - Kelsey Piper on the room for important advocacy within journalism

“Politics. Business. Opinion. Science. Sports. Animal welfare. Existential risk.” Is this a plausible future lineup for major news outlets? Funded by the Rockefeller Foundation and given very little ...

27 Feb 20192h 34min

Julia Galef and Rob Wiblin on an updated view of the best ways to help humanity

Julia Galef and Rob Wiblin on an updated view of the best ways to help humanity

This is a cross-post of an interview Rob did with Julia Galef on her podcast Rationally Speaking. Rob and Julia discuss how the career advice 80,000 Hours gives has changed over the years, and the big...

17 Feb 201956min

#52 - Glen Weyl on uprooting capitalism and democracy for a just society

#52 - Glen Weyl on uprooting capitalism and democracy for a just society

Pro-market economists love to wax rhapsodic about the capacity of markets to pull together the valuable local information spread across all of society about what people want and how to make it. But wh...

8 Feb 20192h 44min

#51 - Martin Gurri on the revolt of the public & crisis of authority in the information age

#51 - Martin Gurri on the revolt of the public & crisis of authority in the information age

Politics in rich countries seems to be going nuts. What's the explanation? Rising inequality? The decline of manufacturing jobs? Excessive immigration? Martin Gurri spent decades as a CIA analyst and...

29 Jan 20192h 31min

Populärt inom Utbildning

historiepodden-se
rss-bara-en-till-om-missbruk-medberoende-2
det-skaver
alska-oss
nu-blir-det-historia
harrisons-dramatiska-historia
sektledare
rss-viktmedicinpodden
johannes-hansen-podcast
not-fanny-anymore
roda-vita-rosen
allt-du-velat-veta
i-vantan-pa-katastrofen
rss-max-tant-med-max-villman
rss-sjalsligt-avkladd
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
rss-basta-livet
sa-in-i-sjalen
rss-om-vi-ska-vara-arliga
rss-relationsrevolutionen