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AI Alignment Podcast: On Becoming a Moral Realist with Peter Singer

Published
18 October, 2018

Are there such things as moral facts? If so, how might we be able to access them? Peter Singer started his career as a preference utilitarian and a moral anti-realist, and then over time became a hedonic utilitarian and a moral realist. How does such a transition occur, and which positions are more defensible? How might objectivism in ethics affect AI alignment? What does this all mean for the future of AI?

On Becoming a Moral Realist with Peter Singer is the sixth podcast in the AI Alignment series, hosted by Lucas Perry. For those of you that are new, this series will be covering and exploring the AI alignment problem across a large variety of domains, reflecting the fundamentally interdisciplinary nature of AI alignment. Broadly, we will be having discussions with technical and non-technical researchers across areas such as machine learning, AI safety, governance, coordination, ethics, philosophy, and psychology as they pertain to the project of creating beneficial AI. If this sounds interesting to you, we hope that you will join in the conversations by following us or subscribing to our podcasts on Youtube, SoundCloud, or your preferred podcast site/application.

If you're interested in exploring the interdisciplinary nature of AI alignment, we suggest you take a look here at a preliminary landscape which begins to map this space.

In this podcast, Lucas spoke with Peter Singer. Peter is a world-renowned moral philosopher known for his work on animal ethics, utilitarianism, global poverty, and altruism. He's a leading bioethicist, the founder of The Life You Can Save, and currently holds positions at both Princeton University and The University of Melbourne.

Topics discussed in this episode include:

  • Peter's transition from moral anti-realism to moral realism
  • Why emotivism ultimately fails
  • Parallels between mathematical/logical truth and moral truth
  • Reason's role in accessing logical spaces, and its limits
  • Why Peter moved from preference utilitarianism to hedonic utilitarianism
  • How objectivity in ethics might affect AI alignment
In this interview we discuss ideas contained in the work of Peter Singer. You can learn more about Peter's work here and find many of the ideas discussed on this podcast in his work The Point of View of the Universe: Sidgwick and Contemporary EthicsYou can listen to the podcast above or read the transcript below.

Transcript

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