Ender wrote:Wow, this is pretty much the biggest crock of shit I've seen since we tossed revpez out of here. How exactly have you survived here this long if you hold this to be logic?
In none of those examples are you proving a negative, you are proving something else is a positive and the fact that the negative is true is defacto a result.
I already preempted this line of bullshit by explaining that you can't prove a positive without proving negatives as well. The fact you now
know some negatives are true by virtue of a positive has proven them. There are negatives that
have to be true in order for the positive to exist, this means they they are
proven. Is any of this getting through?
To support this idea I present the following:
Richard Carrier @ infidels wrote:I know the myth of "you can't prove a negative" circulates throughout the nontheist community, and it is good to dispel myths whenever we can. As it happens, there really isn't such a thing as a "purely" negative statement, because every negative entails a positive, and vice versa. Thus, "there are no crows in this box" entails "this box contains something other than crows" (in the sense that even "no things" is something, e.g. a vacuum). "Something" is here a set restricted only by excluding crows, such that for every set S there is a set Not-S, and vice versa, so every negative entails a positive and vice versa. And to test the negative proposition one merely has to look in the box: since crows being in the box (p) entails that we would see crows when we look in the box (q), if we find q false, we know that p is false. Thus, we have proved a negative. Of course, we could be mistaken about what we saw, or about what a crow is, or things could have changed after we looked, but within the limits of our knowing anything at all, and given a full understanding of what a proposition means and thus entails, we can easily prove a negative in such a case. This is not "proof" in the same sense as a mathematical proof, which establishes that something is inherent in the meaning of something else (and that therefore the conclusion is necessarily true), but it is proof in the scientific sense and in the sense used in law courts and in everyday life. So the example holds because when p entails q, it means that q is included in the very meaning of p. Whenever you assert p, you are also asserting q (and perhaps also r and s and t). In other words, q is nothing more than an element of p. Thus, all else being as we expect, "there are big green Martians in my bathtub" means if you look in your bathtub you will see big green Martians, so not seeing them means the negative of "there are big green Martians in my bathtub."
Negative statements often make claims that are hard to prove because they make predictions about things we are in practice unable to observe in a finite time. For instance, "there are no big green Martians" means "there are no big green Martians in this or any universe," and unlike your bathtub, it is not possible to look in every corner of every universe, thus we cannot completely test this proposition--we can just look around within the limits of our ability and our desire to expend time and resources on looking, and prove that, where we have looked so far, and within the limits of our knowing anything at all, there are no big green Martians. In such a case we have proved a negative, just not the negative of the sweeping proposition in question.
I do hope you realize that you continual refusal to defend you position and attempts to deny logic and shift the burden of proof is in direct violation of the boards fundamental tennents.
Where did I refuse to defend my position, you uncomprehending cockshank? I've explained that by negation you can prove negatives. This is elementary logic to anyone that knows what a NOT gate is.
Which is a bullshit charge, as nonethical actions have no reprocussions,
This has no bearing on whether assertions of unethical behaviour have a burden of proof, which they do, as do assertion of ethical behaviour, because, as you shot yourself in the foot when you say unethical actions have "reprocussions [sic]" (I think you meant "repercussions"), which means there is a standard for judging their existence, i.e. harm. Therefore, it is not the default negative, unethical actions can be judged by their harmful effects, not absence of ethical action, as I have explained to your melty brain at least twice now.
and this does. Meaning:
1) It is one or the other
2) It is not a flase dilema
3) You are a lying sack of shit
Yes it is a "flase" dilemma, you taintlapper; since you've admitted amoral actions exist.
Bullshit dodge and bluster. Un is a prefix in the english language meaning negative.
Except "unethical" doesn't merely refer to an absence of ethics, it refers to a concerted choice AGAINST ethics. Christ, are you really this dumb?
It gets no clearer then that.
Actually, yeah it does, since people use words in ways beyond their simple etymology. Or do you think all logos are words? Are inflammable things not flammable?
In any action that has reprocussions[sic] that will impact others, you must (if you are a responsible adult) first decide that it is ethical before you act. If it will harm or you cannot prove it will not harm others
So can you prove negatives or not?
you have a responsibility to withold that action until it can be determined that it will not harm others.
Okay, so you're saying that you have a responsibility to prove a negative, when that is (according to you) impossible? Have you ever considered trying a, you know,
consistent position?
You've tried to shift the burden of proof by claiming I have to prove a negative.
You just claimed to make responsible ethical choices, you have to prove a fucking negative! You just said you have to prove an absence of harm! Goddamn, you are a fucking hypocritical moron.
Then you tried to shift it by claiming that an action with reprocussions[sic] could be classified as an act with no reprocussions.
No, you strawmanning retard, that was merely to show your false dilemma in your bizarre "you have to prove any act is ethical else it is unethical," mindset. Since amoral actions also exist and are the true "negative" in ethical philosophy, since the others take concerted choices. Do you understand now, mousse-brain?
Now you are trying to shift it by pushing aside the responsible decision making process, which is itself a rejection of ethical behavior in that it recklessly risks others without their consent or knowledge.
So again, how is the creation of a human level AI ethical behavior?
It depends on the situation. In many cases, it would be frivolous, in some, like if there was a war and then there were not enough young people to look after the old and children, building a load of "minder" AIs would be ethical.
Are you a fucking retard that you don't think symbiotes aggressivly pursue resources? Watch Discovery channel some time. Symbiosis forms when the two are not in competition for the same resources, but benefit from each other. When two organisms are after the same resources you get competition instead.
So pay them a wage. If they're human equivalent, they should have equality, simple as, there's no reason a society could not accomodate for a new sapient intelligence and that society would automatically be at war with them. Especially not if they had ethical boundary programming, like we do.
Does it occur to you that people have tried this kind of "programming" on other people for millenia now and when we look at those examples we decry them as some of the worst horrors executed by our most monsterous examples?
No, since ethical behaviours in humans have been evolved-in and taught as children. This would be exactly the same in building an ethical sapient AI.
I think brainwashing them into a specifc set of morals that they cannot question is unethical. Social pressures and conventions can be questioned and defied. If you don't allow that at all, you get the fundamentalist mindset.
That shouldn't matter so much so long as it is ethical. A fundamentalist ethicist isn't an unethical danger, now is it?
Good idea, then lets go on from that. The bible is full of things people think everyone should do, lets force everyone to learn it strictly from the time they are born and enforce it at all time.
Yeah, it's not like there's a load of demonstrable unethical behaviour from following biblical law, is there? Oh yeah, there is. Tell me, exactly what would be wrong with a fundamentalist following asimovian rules?
And hey, how about this whole national socalism thing? We just force feed the kids this every dtep of the way and anyone who questions it can go play at that niftly little workspace in Poland with all those stinky jews.
So your idea of ethical boundaries on behaviour automatically means sending people to concentration camps? We already imprison people that go against ethical laws, are you saying that's wrong, or what?
Oh wait, you'd agree that is a bad idea, wouldn't you? Funny how you are ok with arbitrarily picking and enforcing a moral code for another sentient AI but would have an issue with that happening to the rest of us.
YEAH MAN! PRISONS SHOULDN'T EXIST! Who said it was arbitrary, I thought (well, I know) I already mentioned utilitarianism in this thread.
There is ZERO fucking difference between what you are proposing and the mindless fundamentalist brainwashing we see and decry. What part of this do you not get?
The part where ethical fundamentalists are a bad part of society?
Here lies the fundamental problem in your reasoning - you arnet treating them as people, despite the fact that they are at least our equals in every way. I think you realize that but don't want to touch it because you know where it leads. It would certainly explain why you are trying to shift the burden of proof onto me - if you examined your own position here you'd see if for the crock of shit it is.
Funny how you can't explain why, just give examples of unethical human behaviour.
Or in the way that fundamentalists see homosexuality as dangerous behavior and send their kids off to those "rehabilitation camps"
To use your line of argument "prove that homosexuality is ethical." It has reprocussions[sic] so it must be ethical, else it's unethical!
Fundamentalists are bad because they take wrong things on authority. If they took the right things on authority, like the asimovian laws, what would be so bad?
We teach kids not to commit such crimes by teaching them the consequences of their actions.
We attach values and notions of recipricocity. That is what teaching morality entails. OMG THE NAZIS DID THAT TOO it must be wrong!
They then can choose to act that way and we hold them accountable if they do. That is a world of difference from (to cite an example from some scifi book I read where AI behavior was the topic) having your nervous system freeze on you if you try to violate the conventions of society.
If that happened in cases of paedophilia and murder, what would be so bad about it? Why is the freedom to rape and kill more important than a person's right to go unmolested or unkilled? Why does it have to be all or nothing?