Hmmm, so I am “unable” to understand the “value” of volition? No, I have yet to see an argument to support this postion. All I have seen is the assertion, without any rational argument to support it. And a general disregard to the actual examples I brought up - to wit: the fact that humans do not arbitrarily push away the help coming from non-volitional beings. I see no answer to these examples. Why?
You are unable to see the value because to you, inherent value does not exist and the value of volition/free will is inherent to it’s existence.
You did not receive a specific answer because it is pretty obvious. People value their own lives, and yes, is something helps preserve their life, they do in fact appreciate it. At the same time, a person who risks his/her own life to save another would be more appreciated than if the risk was not as prevalent (lifeguard who swims into the ocean to save a person is at more risk than the dolphin) , and rightfully so. It is that whole “yes” to one thing (I want to help you survive)," as well as “no” (concern for self-preservation) that makes the rescue more meaningful. Animals act through a combination of instinct and training - but just how we do not hold an animal accountable for “bad” actions (we attribute it to instinct or training), we do not hold it’s “good” actions in the same vein as a person a person who acts through free will. Unless you want to place a dog who mauled a person to death because it was trained for dog fights in prison for a couple of years, then release it again into the community, I think we would agree that animal “judgment” is different from human judgment.
R Daneel;6654305:
A simple value judgment does not mean anything more than what it is. And for the umpteenth time, we talk about “entities” who are indistinguishable from humans except for one charateristics, namely: “in a moral dilemma they do not contemplate, but act in a moral fashion”. They cannot be told apart from exceptionally good humans, who do the right thing - either “instinctively” or “after deliberation”.
Okay, I think we adequately addressed the fact that we do not agree on our definition of value. And you seem to think that superficial qualities are grounds for evaluating two “entities” with intrinsically different natures. Another reason why their actions are valued differently is because of the dishonest presentation of the action. If a person were to be very kind to you and say they loved you (or “agaped you” if you want), then you found out that it was not true, your feeling towards the person would change because the person lied to you. Likewise, if you found out it was a robot, and thus did not posses the free will to love you by the fact of the definition of agape, then your feelings would still change. It is a misrepresentation of the situation in both cases. The difference is you do not hold the robot accountable for its actions because it is programed to do so. But if you think it is okay to misrepresent the truth, then I guess you would be fine with everyone lying to you as long as you “perceived” yourself to be living in a happy wonderland.
And one more time, the difference between and “instinctively” good behavior and “deliberately” good behavior is not important - in my eyes. If your assessment is different, then bring up argument to support it.
Okay, ‘and one more time’ for myself as well: “instinct” is simply saying “yes” to natural programing, “deliberate action” is saying “yes” to one thing, as well as “no” to something else. It is the choice that is involved that makes the difference. The choice is inherently more meaningful because of all the other options that the person could have acted upon. Robots do not have this choice, they only act based on their programs, thus there is no meaning behind their actions beyond their program.
Not “using”, rather “appreciating”.
So you do not mind “appreciating” a tool as a human? Are you fine with “appreciating” a person as a tool?