2017 Report on Consciousness and Moral Patienthood | Open Philanthropy Project

We aspire to extend empathy to every being that warrants moral concern … “In general, which types of beings merit moral concern?” Or, to phrase the question as some philosophers do, “Which beings are moral patients?”

For this preliminary investigation, I focused on just one commonly endorsed criterion for moral patienthood: phenomenal consciousness, a.k.a. “subjective experience.”

Source: 2017 Report on Consciousness and Moral Patienthood | Open Philanthropy Project, by Luke Muehlhauser
* Notice: approximately 139,000 words, 347 pages, 9 appendices, 422 footnotes *

Let me be clear, then, that I am not a specialist on these topics. This report is long not because it engages its subject with the depth of an expert, but because it engages an unusual breadth of material — with the shallowness of a non-expert.

my more modest goals for this report are to:

  1. survey the types of evidence and argument that have been brought to bear on the distribution question,
  2. briefly describe example pieces of evidence of each type, without attempting to summarize the vast majority of the evidence (of each type) that is currently available,
  3. report what my own intuitions and conclusions are as a result of my shallow survey of those data and arguments,
  4. try to give some indication of why I have those intuitions, without investing the months of research that would be required to rigorously argue for each of my many reported intuitions, and
  5. list some research projects that seem (to me) like they could make progress on the key questions of this report, given the current state of evidence and argument.


I focused on finding out whether I could convince myself of any non-obvious substantive claims about the distribution of consciousness.

Presumably a cognitively unimpaired adult human is a moral patient, and a rock is not. But what about … ?

Such questions are usually addressed by asking whether a potential moral patient satisfies some criteria for moral patienthood. Criteria I have seen proposed in the academic literature include:

  • Personhood or interests. (I won’t discuss these criteria separately, as they are usually composed of one or more of the criteria listed below.)
  • Phenomenal consciousness, a.k.a. “subjective experience.” See the detailed discussion below.
  • Valenced experience: This criterion presumes not just phenomenal consciousness but also some sense in which phenomenal consciousness can be “valenced” (e.g. pleasure vs. pain).
  • Various sophisticated cognitive capacities such as rational agency, self-awareness, desires about the future, ability to abide by moral responsibilities, ability to engage in certain kinds of reciprocal relationships, etc.
  • Capacity to develop these sophisticated cognitive capacities, e.g. as is true of human fetuses.
  • Less sophisticated cognitive capacities, or the capacity to develop them, e.g. learning, nociception, memory, selective attention, etc.
  • Group membership: e.g. all members of the human species, or all living things.

Note that moral patienthood can be seen as binary or scalar, and the boundary between beings that are and are not moral patients might be “fuzzy”.

it seemed that the four most important factors influencing my “wild guess” probabilities were:

  1. evolutionary distance from humans (years since last common ancestor),
  2. neuroanatomical similarity with humans,
  3. apparent cognitive-behavioral “sophistication” (advanced social politics, mirror self-recognition, abstract language capabilities, and some other PCIFs [potentially consciousness-indicating features]), and
  4. total “processing power” (neurons, and maybe especially pallial neurons).

Everybody lies: how Google search reveals our darkest secrets | Technology | The Guardian

What can we learn about ourselves from the things we ask online? Seth Stephens‑Davidowitz analysed anonymous Google search data, uncovering disturbing truths about our desires, beliefs and prejudices

Source: Everybody lies: how Google search reveals our darkest secrets | Technology | The Guardian

Google was invented so that people could learn about the world, not so researchers could learn about people, but it turns out the trails we leave as we seek knowledge on the internet are tremendously revealing.

I have spent the past four years analysing anonymous Google data. The revelations have kept coming. Mental illness, human sexuality, abortion, religion, health. Not exactly small topics, and this dataset, which didn’t exist a couple of decades ago, offered surprising new perspectives on all of them. I am now convinced that Google searches are the most important dataset ever collected on the human psyche.

I can’t pretend there isn’t a darkness in some of this data. … If people consistently tell us what they think we want to hear, we will generally be told things that are more comforting than the truth. Digital truth serum, on average, will show us that the world is worse than we have thought. … This is at times, I admit, difficult to face. But it can also be empowering. We can use the data to fight the darkness. Collecting rich data on the world’s problems is the first step toward fixing them.

DRM Is Toxic To Culture | Meshed Insights Ltd

In pursuit of market control now, deployers of DRM are robbing us of our culture in perpetuity by enclosing the future commons.

Source: DRM Is Toxic To Culture | Meshed Insights Ltd

The problem with technology-enforced restrictions isn’t that they allow legitimate enforcement of rights; it’s the collateral damage they cause in the process. In my personal opinion the problems are (very concisely) that they:

  1. quantise and prejudge discretion,
  2. reduce “fair use” to “historic use”,
  3. empower a hierarchical agent to remain in the control loop, and
  4. condemn content to become inaccessible.

It’s clearly right to “pay the labourer a wage” but is that enough excuse to also condemn culture into the memory hole and enforce an economy of constant repayment for the same stuff? Is there a solution?

If there is, it will surely involve a fundamental rethink of rights legislation – patents and copyrights – that goes back to the social contract on which both are based, giving limited and temporary one-time rights to the producer in exchange for the enrichment of society.

Never-Before-Published Hannah Arendt on What Freedom and Revolution Really Mean | Literary Hub

THOUGHTS ON POVERTY, MISERY, AND THE GREAT REVOLUTIONS OF HISTORY

This manuscript, never before published, is marked “A Lecture” and dated “1966-67.”

Source: Never-Before-Published Hannah Arendt on What Freedom and Revolution Really Mean | Literary Hub
– “A Lecture”, by Hannah Arendt (dated “1966-67”)

A large number of revolutions during the last two hundred years went to their doom, but relatively few were dissipated by superiority in the application of the means of violence. Conversely, military interventions, even when they were successful, have often proved remarkably inefficient in restoring stability and filling the power vacuum. Even victory seems unable to substitute stability for chaos, honesty for corruption, authority and trust in government for decay and disintegration.

it would not only be wiser but also more relevant if, instead of boasting that we are the mightiest power on earth, we would say that we have enjoyed an extraordinary stability since the founding of our republic, and that this stability was the direct outgrowth of revolution. For, since it can no longer be decided by war, the contestation of the great powers may well be decided, in the long run, by which side better understands what revolutions are and what is at stake in them.

The fact that the word “revolution” originally meant restoration is more than a mere oddity of semantics.

what actually happened at the end of the 18th century was that an attempt at restoration and recovery of old rights and privileges resulted in its exact opposite: a progressing development and the opening up of a future which defied all further attempts at acting or thinking in terms of a circular or revolving motion. And while the term “revolution” was radically transformed in the revolutionary process, something similar, but infinitely more complex, happened to the word “freedom.”

Liberties in the sense of civil rights are the results of liberation, but they are by no means the actual content of freedom, whose essence is admission to the public realm and participation in public affairs. …
liberation from oppression could very well have been fulfilled under monarchical though not tyrannical government, whereas the freedom of a political way of life required a new, or rather rediscovered, form of government. It demanded the constitution of a republic.

Revolutions are not necessary but possible answers to the devolution of a regime, not the cause but the consequence of the downfall of political authority.

it is the desire to excel which makes men love the company of their peers and spurs them on into the public realm. This public freedom is a tangible worldly reality, created by men to enjoy together in public—to be seen, heard, known, and remembered by others. And this kind of freedom demands equality, it is possible only amongst peers. Institutionally speaking, it is possible only in a republic, which knows no subjects and, strictly speaking, no rulers.

No doubt, it is obvious and of great consequence that this passion for freedom for its own sake awoke in and was nourished by men of leisure who had no masters and were not always busy making a living.

For us, who owe it to a revolution and the resulting foundation of an entirely new body politic that we can walk in dignity and act in freedom, it would be wise to remember what a revolution means in the life of nations. Whether it ends in success, with the constitution of a public space for freedom, or in disaster, for those who have risked it or participated in it against their inclination and expectation, the meaning of revolution is the actualization of one of the greatest and most elementary human potentialities, the unequaled experience of being free to make a new beginning, from which comes the pride of having opened the world to a Novus Ordo Saeclorum (a new order of the ages).

The men of the first revolutions, though they knew well enough that liberation had to precede freedom, were still unaware of the fact that such liberation means more than political liberation from absolute and despotic power; that to be free for freedom meant first of all to be free not only from fear but also from want.

if violence pitted against violence leads to war, foreign or civil, violence pitted against social conditions has always led to terror.

We have little reason to hope that at some time in the not too distant future such men will match in practical and theoretical wisdom the men of the American Revolution, who became the Founders of this country. But that little hope, I fear, is the only one we have that freedom in a political sense will not vanish again from the earth for God knows how many centuries.

John Roberts’s speech at the Cardigan Mountain School’s commencement wished graduates bad luck and trouble — Quartz

US Supreme Court chief justice John Roberts gave a surprising and wise commencement speech recently.

Source: John Roberts’s speech at the Cardigan Mountain School’s commencement wished graduates bad luck and trouble — Quartz

More: Chief Justice John Roberts Bucks Tradition In Graduation Speech

Video: on Vimeo

 

From time to time in the years to come, I hope you will be treated unfairly so that you will come to know the value of justice. I hope that you will suffer betrayal because that will teach you the importance of loyalty. Sorry to say, but I hope you will be lonely from time to time so that you don’t take friends for granted. I wish you bad luck, again, from time to time so that you will be conscious of the role of chance in life and understand that your success is not completely deserved and that the failure of others is not completely deserved either.