Post Singularity Ethics – Ethical Decision Making tools in an unknown environment

Ethical Decision making tools: are Anything we use to make ethical decisions. Examples include, but are not limited too, laws, the golden rule, personal values, asking WWJD, parents values, religion, duty, Peer pressure or Culture.

We use all sorts of ethical decisions making tools in day to day life. One of the biggest questions in ethics is what tool should we use as an overarching principle. What if two or more Ethical Decision making tools tell us to act in a different manner? Which one is correct? What if the world changes drastically and one that we used in the past no longer helps us survive and thrive.


Ethical Decision-Making Tools: Useful But Not Universal

We possess a wide array of ethical decision-making tools shaped by cultural norms, biology, religion, and personal experiences. These tools offer guidance for navigating everyday ethical dilemmas. They promote positive behaviors, minimize harm, and facilitate trust and cooperation within societies.

While valuable for everyday life, traditional ethical tools often falter in extreme or complex situations. Thought experiments, such as the classic ‘torture to save innocents’ scenario, expose their limitations. Even seemingly absolute rules, like ‘never hit an innocent child,’ can be challenged in extremely improbable contexts. These thought experiments emphasize the need for more foundational ethical principles that remain valid even in drastically different environments. Why would most people say it is both true you should “never hit an innocent child” but you would if the outocme of not doing it was so bad. The fact that we would hit an innocent child if the outcome of not doing so was bad enought shows we have some other factor bigger than this

False bottom lines

Ethical Decision-Making Tools tools often serve as false bottom lines – rules that generally promote good consequences but might need to be transgressed in rare situations. In a world where change is gradual, traditional ethical tools maintain much of their utility over time.

The Challenge of Rapid Change
The potential challenge arises in a world of accelerating change, like the post-singularity environment. Such a world might feature drastically different minds and environments, rendering traditional ethical tools inadequate or even harmful.

The post-singularity world is inherently unknowable. We can’t predict what it will hold, and we recognize the need for an ethical framework that can adapt to the unpredictable. Something much more vauge than what we generally think of absolute right now. The Existing norms and principles may no longer be reliable guides if the world and its inhabitants change significantly.

Traditional ethical tools offer valuable guidance in the world we know. However, their limitations lie int the fact they are not capable of guiding us even when faced with the completely unknown.

The usefulness of traditional rule-based frameworks in a completely unknown (post singularity) world is questionable. Here’s a breakdown of why that’s the case:

  • Limited Context: Our existing moral rules evolved within a specific context – that of human interactions on Earth. They’re designed to address familiar situation given our understanding of human preferences and the environments we interact with. This may be completely irrelevant when facing minds and environments that are completely different from those these rules sprung from.
  • Unforeseen Consequences: Even ethical decision making tools that have served us well within our own experience could have wildly unpredictable or even disastrous consequences in a drastically different context. We lack the knowledge base to assess whether a rule would lead to positive or negative outcomes. We would not expect the ways ethical decision making tools come into being with current minds and environment to be helpful in a completely different world.

    When we have no reliable way to predict consequences of a rule, norm or other ethical decision making tool, it might be wiser to admin that while they may useful and necessary in specific situations, no day to day ethical tool that provides utility now will be able to also be a first principle that we want to always rely on.

So, what does this mean?

  • Acknowledging Limits of ethical decision making tools: It’s crucial to recognize that existing ethical frameworks aren’t inherently designed or evolved for universally unknown scenarios.
  • Focus on the Goal: This highlights the importance of keeping the ultimate goal in mind: maximizing the well-being of sentient beings within this unknown context. We might need a new set of starting principles for ethical action in truly alien worlds

What could we want.

Traditional Consequentialists understand that if the world changes the ethical decision making tool will give us drastically different results and the results are what matter. But by useing consequences as the day to day ethical decision making tool, we often get worse results than if we just used an ethical decision making tool that is not consequences based.

good consequences are what we want …
but
aiming for them is not how we get to them

So using consequences as a north star does not always get you good consequences as reliably as non consequence based ethical decision making tool. We can see the value of these ethical decision making tool because they work for the goal, and aiming for the goal reliable does not get us to the goal.

That said, these ethical decision making tool are not the thing we want to optimise for, good outcomes are what we care about. So we sould use ethical decision making tool but change the ones we use as the environemtn chagnes.

We make guesses about the minds.

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