Epistemic status: Just a thought that I have, nothing too rigorous
The reason Longtermism is so enticing (to me at least), is that the existence of so many future life hangs in the balance right now. It just seems to be a pretty good deed to me, to bring 10^52 people (or whatever the real number will turn out to be) into existence.
This hinges on the belief that Utility scales linearly with the number of QUALYs, so that twice as many people are also twice as morally valuable. My belief in this was recently shaken by this thought experiment:
***
You are a traveling EA on a trip to St. Petersburg. In a dark alley, you meet a Demon with the ability to create Universes and a serious gambling addiction. He says, he was about to create a universe with 10 happy people. But he gives you three fair dice and offers you a bet: You can throw the three dice and if they all come up 6, he refrains from creating a universe. If you roll anything else, he will double the number of people in the universe he will create.
You do the expected value calculation and figure out, that by throwing the dice you will create 696,8 QUALYs in expectation. You take the bet and congratulate yourself on your ethical decision.
After the good deed is done, and the demon has now committed to creating 20 happy people, he offers you the same bet again. Roll the 3 dice: he won't create a universe at 6,6,6 and doubles it at anything else. The demon tells you that he will offer you the same bet repeatedly. You do your calculations and throw the dice again and again, until, eventually, you throw all sixes, and the demon vanishes, without having to create any universe, in a cloud of sulfury mist and leaves you wondering if you should have done anything differently.
***
There are a few ways to weasel out of the demon's bet. You could say, that the strategy “always take the demons bet” has an expected value of 0 QUALYs, and so you should go with some tactic like “Take the first 20 bets, then call it a day”. But I think if you refuse a bet, you should be able to reject this bet without taking into account what bets you have taken in the past or are still taking in the future.
I think the only consistent way to refuse the Demons bets at some point is to have a bounded utility function. You might think it would be enough to have a utility function that does not scale linearly with the number of QUALYs, but logarithmically or something. But in that case, the demon can offer to double the amount of utility, instead of doubling the amount of QUALYs, and we are back in the paradox. At some point, you have to be able to say: “There is no possible universe that is twice as good as the one, you have promised me already”. So at some point, adding more happy people to the universe must have a negligible ethical effect. And once we accept that that must happen at some point, how confident are we, that 10^52 people are that much better than 8billion?
Overall I am still pretty confused about this subject and would love to hear more arguments/perspectives.
In David Deutsch's The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Transform the World there is a chapter about infinity in which he discusses many aspects of infinity. He also talks about the hypothetical scenario that David Hilbert proposed of an infinity hotel with infinite guests, infinite rooms, etc. I don't know which parts of the hypothetical scenario are Hilbert's original idea and which are Deutsch's modifications/additions/etc.
In the hypothetical infinity hotel, to accommodate a train full of infinite passengers, all existing guests are asked to move to a room number that is double the number of their current room number. Therefore, all the odd numbered rooms will be available for the new guests. There are as many odd numbered rooms (infinity) as there are even numbered rooms (infinity).
If an infinite number of trains filled with infinite passengers arrive, all existing guests with room number n are given the following instructions: Move to room n*((n+1/2)). The train passengers are given the following instructions: every nth passenger from mth train go to room number n+n^2+((n-m)/2). (I don't know if I wrote that equation correctly. I have the audio book and don't know how it is written.)
All of the hotel guests' trash will disappear into nowhere if the guests are given these instructions: Within a minute, bag up their trash and give it to the room that is one number higher than the number of their room. If a guest receives a bag of trash within that minute, then pass it on in the same manner within a half minute. If a guest receives a bag of trash within that half minute, then pass it on within the a quarter minute, and so on. Furthermore, if a guest accidentally put something of value to them in the trash, they will not be able to retrieve it after the two minutes. If they were somehow able to retrieve it, to account for the retrieval would involve explaining it with an infinite regress.
Some other things about infinity that he notes in the chapter:
It may be thought that the set of natural numbers involves nothing infinite. It merely involves a finite rule that brings you from one number to a higher number. However, if there is one natural number that is the largest, then such a finite rule doesn't work (since it doesn't take you to a number higher than that number). If it doesn't exist, then the set of natural must be infinite.
To think of infinity, the intuition that a set of numbers has a highest number must be dropped.
According to Kant, there are countable infinities. The infinite points in a line or in all of space and time are not countable and do not have a one to one correspondence with the infinite set of natural numbers. However, in theory, the infinite set of natural numbers can be counted.
The set of all possible permutations that can be performed with an infinite set of natural numbers is uncountable.
Intuitive notions like average, typical, common, proportion, and rare don't apply to infinite sets. For example, it might be thought that proportion applies to an infinite set of natural numbers because you can say that there an equal number of odd and even numbers. However, if the set is rearranged so that, after 1, odd numbers appear after every 2 even numbers, the apparent proportion of odd and even numbers would look different.
Xeno noted that there are an infinite number of points between two points of space. Deutsch said Xeno is misapplying the idea of infinity. Motion is possible because it is consistent with physics. (I am not sure I completely followed what he said the mistake Xeno made here was.)
This post reminds me of Ord's mention in the The Precipice about the possibility of creating infinite value being a game changer.