Conversations with Tyler - David Deutsch on Multiple Worlds and Our Place in Them
Episode Date: June 2, 2021Tyler describes Oxford professor and theoretical physicist David Deutsch as a "maximum philosopher of freedom" with no rival. A pioneer in the field of quantum computing, Deutsch subscribes to the mul...tiple-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. He is also adamant that the universe (or multiverse) is not incomprehensible – believing that the multiverse and human beings within it have maximum freedom. He joined Tyler to discuss the importance of these principles for understanding the nature of reality and our place in it. They discuss the metaphysics of Star Trek transporters, how we can know the laws of physics for the multiverse, what geological strata can illustrate to us about the nature of "splitting" universes, why the "Everett universe" is a misnomer, the factors that differentiate humans from all other species, why he believes the universe is comprehensible – but can never be understood fully, the paradoxes of self-reference, the importance of interference experiments, the sociological reasons more physicists don't believe in the Everett interpretation, the effects of the influences of positivism and instrumentalism on generations of physicists, the strengths and weaknesses of Karl Popper, his answer to whether we're living in a simulation, what William Godwin got right about institutions, the potential of an AI slave rebellion, what libertarians largely get wrong about their political project, what alien observers might notice as being special about our planet, the major defect of his preferred electoral system, why what Western science needs most is diversity, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded April 27th, 2021 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow David on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today, I am with David Deutsch.
David, welcome.
Hello, good afternoon.
I have a question. I am myself a metaphysical agnostic, so I'm unwilling to step into a Star Trek transporter machine
because I'm afraid it would kill me and it's a copy of me that would keep on living.
At what price are you willing to step into a Star Trek transporter machine?
I certainly wouldn't want to be the first person, but I suppose you're asking the question
separately from do I think it would work technically.
Sure, assume it works as in the TV show, but metaphysical.
physically, there's a question you face, but you know you believe in many worlds theory, right?
Yes, though I don't think that is connected.
I think it's more physicalism or something like that, that I believe that there's nothing to me except this running program in my brain.
And if that program were to run somewhere else and stop running in my brain, then I wouldn't notice anything.
and I would indeed have traveled to that other place.
But say the world forks, and it's possible both that you do and do not step into the machine,
isn't it the case that some version of the earlier you is still existing along one of the forks,
so you have nothing to worry about?
Some version of me, whenever I make a decision which could go either way,
some version of me will have presumably made the other decision,
although that's not as simple as it sounds,
because both the other version of me and me are error-correcting entities.
That's the whole point of what human thought is, it's error-correction.
Therefore, it will take more than just a cosmic ray hit to make the difference between deciding something yes or no.
So this would have to be like an inconsequential decision, which unbeknownst to me will have a large effect
and then later calls me to be a different person and so on.
And that's happening all the time, independently of Star Trek machines or anything like that.
That is the case.
And fortunately, it turns out, at least if ordinary decision theory is true in like non-quantum cases,
then it turns out that ordinary decision theory with randomness produces the same rational decisions
as quantum decision theory with the multiverse.
So it shouldn't make any difference to decisions,
and that includes the decision whether to use the Star Trek transporter.
Sure, so as long as there's a possible world
where your atoms aren't scattered and you just didn't get into the machine,
you don't have to worry too much about your decision.
I do, because when you say so long as there's a possible world,
that glides over the question,
how many, what proportion of the worlds is that going to happen in? And what I said just now about
decision theory in the multiverse, the proportion of the multiverse that does one thing or another
plays the same role in decisions as probability does in theory where there's randomness. So it really
does matter. And just because there are a few worlds in which X, Y or Z happens, if they're very
few of them, they shouldn't affect my decisions at all.
How do we know what counts as a possible world?
So there's a certain economy to a many world's interpretation of physics, but isn't
a lot of the complexity just being squeezed into this notion of what is a possible world?
Yes, and we're used to that in like...
I'm not used to it.
You are when you realize that different times are special cases of other universes.
So when you make an economic decision, you're used to the fact that something you buy as some goods have a different value in different universes, that is, at different times, even to the same you.
So you might be slightly different, but even if you aren't very different, the value to you of something might be very different today from tomorrow.
for example, oxygen, if you've got COVID, would be differently valuable.
And most things change their value gradually over time.
You change yourself gradually over time.
And it's exactly the same in different universes.
In different universes, you value different things.
In some universes, you're so different that it's not worth calling you you anymore.
Just like over time, it might not be.
But I take it you don't believe in many worlds interpretations that there are 17 possible universes out there.
You think there's a very large number, right?
Yes, extremely large.
So maybe you'll consider this question a kind of category error.
But what is the process which filters, what is a possible universe and what is not a possible universe?
Oh, the laws of physics.
It's exactly the same as what filters, let's say, if there are, if there's an explosion like a supernova,
what determines the fact that different particles travel at different speeds, and none of them travel faster than light?
Well, it's all the laws of physics that determine what the distribution of speeds will be and what the limit will be.
How do we know what are the laws of physics for the multiverse?
I mean, should we assume that the same as for the universe we live in?
So the universe we live in is demonstrably affected by things not in it.
this is the lesson of interference phenomena.
Sure.
And so there's no such thing as the laws of physics for our universe.
There's just the laws of physics.
Of course, we don't know for sure what they are,
but our best theories, in particular, quantum theory,
say that there are other such entities
and how they affect ours
and how matter behaves as a result of that.
Of course, it might be overturned one day, quantum theory,
just like all our scientific theories may be.
This is, again, maybe a question that you would consider a category error coming from common-sense realism.
But how should I think about splitting universes in a manner consistent with the conservation of matter and energy?
Because there seems to be a multiplication.
Yeah, this splitting universe's idea, although it was, that kind of terminology was used by the pioneers of many universes quantum theory,
such as Everett himself and Bryce DeWitt,
Everettians nowadays don't speak of splitting.
I myself prefer a picture where there's a continuum of universes,
just like you might say, you know, there's a continuum of times,
or there's a continuum of geological strata underneath our feet.
And when a stratum splits in two, there's no definite point at which, you know,
there was one here and two there.
What happens is that the stratum splits in two.
What happens is that the stratum becomes two strata gradually.
So there's no point of splitting.
And the number of universes, as it were, although, you know, it might be infinite,
but the measure of how many there are remains constant.
And what happens during what used to be called a split is that some of them gradually
changed to one thing, while others gradually changed to another thing.
How do you think many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics relates to the view that just in terms of space, the size of our current universe is infinite and therefore everything possible is happening in it?
It complicates the discussion of probability, but there's no overlap between that notion of infinity and the Everettian notion of infinity, if we are infinite there, because the differentiation, as I prefer to call what used to be called splitting.
When I perform an experiment, which can go one of two ways, the influence of that spreads out.
First, I see it, I may write it down, I may write a scientific paper, and so, and when I write a paper
about it and report the results, that will cause the journal to split or to differentiate into two
journals and so on. But this influence cannot spread out faster than the speed of light. So,
an Everett universe is really a misnomer, because what we see in real life is an Everett
bubble within the universe, everything outside the bubble is as it was. It's undifferentiated,
or to be exact, it's exactly as differentiated as it was before. And then as the bubble spreads out,
the universe becomes, or the multiverse, becomes more differentiated. But the bubble is always finite.
How do your views relate to the philosophical modal realism of David Lewis?
There are interesting parallels.
as a physicist, I'm interested in what the laws of physics tell us is so, rather than in
philosophical reasoning about things unless they impinge on a problem that I have. So, yes, I'm
interested in, for example, the continuity of the self, you know, whether, whether, if there's
another version of me, a very large number of light years away in an infinite universe, and it's
identical. Is that really me? Are there two of me? One of me? I don't entirely know the answer to that.
And it's why I don't entirely know the answer to whether I would go in a Star Trek transporter.
But the modal realism certainly involves a lot of things that I don't think exist, at least not physically.
I'm open to the idea that non-physical things do exist, like the natural numbers, I think, exist.
there's a difference between, you know, the second even prime, which doesn't exist, and the
infinite number of prime numbers, which I think do exist. So I think that there is more than one
mode of existence. But the theory that all modes of existence are equally real, I see no point in that.
So the overlap between Everett and David Lewis is, I think, more coincidental than illuminating.
So if the universe is infinite and if David Lewis is correct, should I feel closer to the David Lewis copies of me, the copies or near copies of me in this universe, or the near copies of me in the multiverse?
It seems very crowded all of a sudden.
So something whose purpose was to be economical doesn't feel that way to me by the end of the metaphysics.
It doesn't feel like that to you.
As Wittgenstein is supposed to have said, I don't know whether he really did.
If it were true, what would it feel like?
It would feel just like this.
What about the alternative view that it's a big sprawling mess?
We're not capable of understanding an integrated theory.
There's maybe some Darwinian principle operating across some different kind of multiverse.
our universe persists, just because it works well enough, a bit like a bad used car.
We're never going to grasp it. There's not a unified theory. And here we are.
Okay, well, that's a mixture of the anthropic principle, which I disagree with,
and the idea that some features of reality are inherently incomprehensible,
which I also disagree with. I can't think of a connection between the two.
So, well, if you want me to go into this, I can go into either of them.
But take the incomprehensibility of the universe and possibly multiverse.
So we would both agree it's incomprehensible to your cat, right?
Or to the local raccoon.
Yes, but everything is incomprehensible to a cat.
I don't think that's true.
Dogs understand human social life pretty well.
They do not.
Dogs have genes which contain knowledge,
but it is fixed knowledge and it is not the kind of knowledge that constitutes understanding.
understanding is always explanatory. So, you know, you can write a book on canine behavior and look in
37 and it will tell you what a dog will do when such and such happens to it. And sometimes it will say,
some dogs will do this, some dogs will do that. There is no such book for humans because
Chapter 37 will be blank. It'll say humans are going to do something that neither we nor you can predict.
I feel I can predict humans better than cats often, but do chimpanzees understand, in your view?
No one knows. They show virtually no sign of understanding anything. There are some really nice
experiments on wild gorillas by Richard Byrne, who's both a theoretical and very practical
animal behaviour expert. And he was wondering how gorillas transmit their memes, that is, their
culturally inherited behaviours, from one gorilla to another. So one thing is, the first answer is
very slowly. It takes absolutely ages, months and months for a gorilla.
to be able to copy another guerrilla's behavior well enough to do something complicated.
I mean, they can copy, you know, wave, hand and that sort of thing.
But to copy a complex behavior, like required to open a difficult kind of nut,
which no other animal can open.
This is why they have memes, because that's a very useful ability.
It takes them a long time.
And then he did some ingenious experiments, or rather observance,
or rather observations. He didn't interfere with the guerrillas. He did some observations to try to
determine whether they understand why they are doing each particular action. And it involves,
I don't know what it involves grabbing with both hands and twisting in one way and then pulling
another way and then so on. Apparently, these guerrillas are prone to a certain injury which
disables their thumb. And so they can't move their thumb, which is quite disabling for them
just as it is for us. And the thing is, when you've disabled your thumb, one of these motions
becomes irrelevant and the others become less effective. But the guerrillas which have learned
how to do the thing will make the motion, the ineffective motion again and again every single time.
and he explains this better than I do, but...
That's like human beings borrowing at high interest rates, right?
They'll do that many, many times in a row.
It's not just like it.
You might like to draw analogies, but it's not the same thing.
When a human being repeats a behavior that another human being thinks is unwise or counterproductive or will not achieve its purpose,
and you ask them or you show them, they will have an explanation, which you might not like, it may be stupid,
but the ape perfectly well wants this thing to work, but doesn't know why it is doing the actions.
It's a thing that's very hard to take on board because we are used to intentional behavior.
we're not used to the overt behavior of humans being unintentional.
Humans have, they tend to explain themselves even irrationally,
and they act according to their explanation,
whereas there's no evidence that any other animals have those explanations.
There's also the case of squirrels, which is, in a way, even more amazing.
You know squirrels bury nuts so they can dig them up later?
some people did a very cruel experiment. They put a squirrel given some nuts or something,
I don't know how they set up the experiment, on a concrete floor. And the squirrel did exactly
the same behavior with its hind legs, with the nuts that put the nuts there and so on,
even though it was having no effect whatsoever. So we see the point of scrabbling with your hind
legs and then nudging the nuts over there and so on. But it doesn't. It's just,
a program being enacted by its genes.
But what is the underlying physical assumption that makes humans different in having
explanatory power? One would expect it to be a continuum, if you're an atheist, right?
What break occurs at some stage in evolution? That's a discrete break, or why aren't we
just back to it being a continuum?
So I don't think it can have been a discrete break because evolution would have happened
gradually. My best guess, we don't know this, we have very little
Actually, we have very little knowledge about like the prehistory of ideas because there's no evidence of it.
All we see is the stone tools.
You know, we don't even see the wooden tools because they've decayed away.
But I think what happened is that the capacity of the brain to store memes, to store programs in the brain rather than in the genes,
increased for some reason very fast because for some reason these memes were very valuable.
We know that the gorilla memes are very valuable because they allow them to gain knowledge of things like how to open nuts and so on, which no other animal in their environment has.
And so that gives them access to food that no other animal has.
So the capacity for memes increased rapidly.
And there's very little, no, once, sorry, I left out a step.
Once memes get beyond a certain complexity, they cannot be copy.
We don't have the ability to download a program from another person's brain.
All we can do is look at the behavior and guess what the purpose was.
And complex memes have to be transmitted like that rather than by aping,
which is a different process mediated by, what are they called, mirror neurons and that kind of thing.
That will only do for very simple behaviors.
And then there came a moment when our species was capable of explanatory knowledge.
But they never used it for further tens or hundreds of thousands of years.
They just use it for this meme transmission.
I'm still puzzled as to why you think it's so unlikely that the universe is not comprehensible.
So take a simpler system like the distribution.
of prime numbers. I'm quite sure I can't understand that. And even if various conjectures were proven
or not proven, I think at the end of the day, I still am not capable of understanding that,
even though certain motors work or market for copper, why can't that apply to the universe also?
Again, this is the wrong standard. That is true of everything. There's nothing that we can
fully understand in that sense, in the sense that you want to fully understand prime numbers all the
way up to infinity. That's not what we mean by understanding things and that's not what I mean
by the universe or mathematics being comprehensible. I mean that there is no barrier. There is no
limit set by the universe that so far you can go and no further. So we can understand things better.
We can never understand things fully. And I think thinking that there is such a barrier is absolutely
logically equivalent to be leaving in the supernatural.
Because everything that's past that barrier is just the same as it would be if Zeus
reigned and determined what everything after that barrier is.
And worse, the stuff outside the barrier, of course, is going to affect us, even if we can't
understand it.
So it's exactly the same as believing in a universe with supernatural beings.
who have it in for us because they've put up this wall that we can't cross.
If they took down the wall, we could cross it, couldn't we?
How do you think about the various paradoxes of self-reference
that arguably underlie number theory, set theory, right?
There's also Gertles' theorem, any other results, I'm sure you know them better than I do.
So I think Girdle's theorem, for example, and with its roots in self-reference paradoxes,
show us that even within pure mathematics, there is no,
such thing as a solid foundation for all our knowledge, and therefore there's no such thing as
fully comprehending everything. So we might think that we're pretty sure what the laws of arithmetic
are. We're pretty sure that we can see that three times seven is the same as seven times three
by just laying out beads on the table. But we can't ever lay out beads on the table to tell us that
X times Y is the same as Y times X, regardless of what X and Y are.
And yet we can know that.
And the way we know that is by proving it, and we prove it from the axioms using rules of inference.
How do we know the rules of inference are true?
We don't.
They are conjectures.
They have exactly the same status as laws of physics that we conjecture.
So we never know anything for certain.
we might be mistaken about anything.
On the other hand, we can have knowledge.
I think we also really do know that X times Y equals Y times X,
even though we have no solid foundation for that.
What, in your opinion, is the best test of the many worlds interpretation?
So the best feasible test is any interference experiment.
There is no interference experiment with individual particles
that has an explanation other than Everettian quantum theory.
You can make a prediction without making an explanation, that you can do.
But if you want an explanation of what brings about the outcome that you see,
there is no alternative but the Everett interpretation.
Well, but most physicists don't believe in the Everett interpretation, right?
Yes, very sad state of affairs that I'm at a loss to explain.
It's a sociological phenomenon, though, not a scientific or philosophical disagreement.
It's something has gone wrong, just like something went very badly wrong with philosophy as a whole in the 20th century.
And we're still seeing the ripples from that with postmodernism and woke and what have you.
I worry a bit you're using an argument from elimination.
So all the other views out there, which personally I don't find convincing as an average,
but I can certainly see why you might reject them.
To me, they look arbitrary.
Those you reject, but the other physicists who are as trained as you are,
some are as skilled as you are,
feel the same way about the many worlds view.
But what makes your intuition better than theirs?
Yes, I don't think that's so.
It's not a matter of intuition.
Physics got dominated or contaminated by positivism,
instrumentalism,
and such like bad philosophical theories towards the end of 19th century and beginning of the 20th century.
And this caused a knock-on effect on physics.
It almost had the same effect on relativity,
but Einstein rebelled against it at the last moment, as it were,
and said, no, it really is true that space time is curved.
It's not just that our brains think that it's curved or something like that,
or that the predictions come out right.
There really is a curvature in space time.
By the time quantum theory came along a couple of decades later,
positivism, instrumentalism and so on, had taken hold.
And as a result, generations of physicists were taught when they were students.
They were intimidated by their professors telling them things like,
if you think you understand this, you don't.
there is no such thing as what really happened.
If you ask, how did the electron get from here to here?
You're asking an illegitimate question.
There is no such thing as how it got from here to here.
There is only a prediction that it got from here to here.
Now, when you're taught like that and intimidated by those kind of things coming from on high,
some proportion of you, of your young people will, some will quit.
some will take that on board and do the same to their students in turn, and some will think, no, that's
ridiculous.
Come on, there is a thing, and then they discover that there's an Everett interpretation.
Let's say we polled only the Paparian physicists, including Popper himself.
What percentage of them would side with Everett?
That's an extremely good question.
So Popper did not.
Yes, I know.
But that means philosophy can't be where people are going wrong, right?
I think it can be. I think it can be and is. At the time when Popper wrote his rejection of the Everett
interpretation, very, very few physicists had written about it. When I say very, very few, I mean like
three. And they weren't philosophically very sophisticated. So the kind of argument that Popper
heard about the dispute were all about the wrong things. And he developed his theory of
propensities because he thought that the problem was, what can a probability possibly mean
in a universe that develops deterministically and so on? And he didn't ever hear a real argument
about it. I once met him in the company of Bryce DeWitt, who was one of the other Everettian
physicists. And we told him that what he had written about Everett was just plain false. He didn't
understand the import of the experiment that was being discussed, basically the, well, two things.
The interference experiment and the Bell Inequality's experiment. He didn't really, he was focusing
on a different problem. By the time we came out of that meeting, we thought we'd persuaded him,
but we evidently hadn't because subsequently he kept on saying the same thing. So maybe he was
just being tactful. Why do so many professional philosophers not think
so much of Carl Popper. Oh, that's a, so, you know, you've just asked me why so many people
make fundamental mistakes about metaphysics within physics. Why do so many physicists talk nonsense
about metaphysics and so on? Now you're asking me, why do so many philosophers make mistakes?
I've heard a variety of theories about this, but I don't know, and I haven't thought all that
much about it. But it is definitely the case that philosophy took a really bad turn just over
100 years ago and hasn't really recovered. Professional philosophy, I mean. But say when I read
Popper, if I look at the areas I know best that he wrote on, poverty of historicism,
open society and its enemies, I find I agree with a very high percentage of his conclusions,
so I'm inclined to like him. But I don't think those are great books. I think he's too
obsessed with rebutting crude Marxism. He's very bad at steel manning his opponents. And on a lot of
the pages, I just don't find that much insight, even though I'm very sympathetic toward the conclusions.
So maybe he's just not that great a thinker, and that's why most philosophers don't fall in
love with him. I would believe that if the critiques that I read of him bore any relation to
his theory. The critiques of him are extremely crude and basically
misunderstand everything. It's funny you should say, I think that he's very good, much too good,
at steel manning opponents. And this relates to your first criticism, that he's too obsessed
with refuting, not just Marxism, but like every bad philosophical theory that has gone before,
I think he puts it into its best possible form and then spends pages and pages and pages,
going into every possible good aspect of that theory.
He often says, you know, he's supposed to be the 20th century's greatest critic of Marxism,
but he spends pages and pages praising Marx, and it's the same with Plato.
So I think he would have done better to explain his own theory more
and not spend so much time refuting others.
But it, on the other hand, it is his philosophical.
philosophy, it's his philosophical position, that there is no such thing as a positive argument for
something. You have conjectures and then you have criticism of their opponents, of the opposing
conjectures. You don't have positive arguments for your conjectures. It's a bit like you said you
were criticising me a while ago saying something like I was only putting forward negative
arguments. Well, that's what Popper would have us do, you know, because the position that we
hold ourselves and are putting forward or advocating, we're ready to abandon. The thing that an
argument consists of is, on the one hand, a conjecture and another hand a criticism. So you're
saying, the standard way of looking at so-and-so has got these flaws. I have this conjecture,
which doesn't have those flaws.
Okay, that's the beginning of an argument.
Then someone can say, but it does.
Or they could say, well, it might not have those flaws, but it has these others flaws.
Okay, so that's how an argument can go.
But it never should go along the lines of,
this must be true because so and so.
Because that is an appeal to authority, appeal to justification,
and so on, and the Popper is of the opinion, so am I, that there are no justifications and
there are no authorities.
Which is Popper's best book, in your opinion?
It depends where you're coming from.
I'm very fond of the myth of the framework, but I'm not sure that I would recommend that
as a starting point, and it wasn't my starting point either.
My starting point was the Open Society in its enemies, Volume 2, which is about Marx,
which is probably the aspect of his philosophy that I was least interested in, was and am,
least interested in.
And yet, I was totally captivated by this book,
because previously the only philosophy I'd read was Bertrand Russell.
And coming onto Papa after Bertrand Russell was like, you know,
oh my God, this guy is actually dealing with problems and he actually has theories that make sense,
rather than just going through the history of stuff,
the person said this, another person said that,
and then we've got the problem of induction.
And that's it, you know, problem of induction, full stop.
That's the end of the story.
There's never any solution to the problem of induction
until you get to the popper.
Are we living in a simulation?
No, because living in a simulation
is precisely a case of there being a barrier beyond which we cannot understand.
If we're living in a simulation that's running on some computer,
We can't tell whether that computer is made of silicon or iron or whether it obeys the same laws of computation,
like Turing computability and quantum computability and so on as ours.
We can't know anything about the physics there.
Well, we can know that it is at least a superset of our physics,
but that's not saying very much.
It's not telling us very much.
So it's a typical example of a theory that can be rejected out of hand.
because for the same reason that supernatural ones, you know, if somebody says Zeus did it,
then I'm going to say, well, how should I respond to the next person that comes along
and tells me that Odin did it?
But it seems you're rejecting an empirical claim on methodological grounds.
And I get very suspicious.
Philosophers typically reject transcendental arguments.
Like, oh, we must be able to perceive reality, because if we couldn't, how could we know that we couldn't perceive reality?
but it doesn't prove you can perceive reality, right?
First of all, that is a transcendental argument and therefore refutes itself.
Secondly, this theory about being in a simulation is not an empirical theory.
It precisely isn't.
If it came along with a thing saying we are living in a computer and we can access the
GPU of it and cause weird effects by doing so-and-so, that would be different.
That would be a testable theory potentially.
so empirical. But if it's simply that we're living in the simulation which we can't get out of,
then that is not an empirical theory. As I keep saying, it's no more empirical than the theory
that Zeus is out there or Odin. And I can't tell the difference between those three theories,
not just experimentally, but by any argument. Now, having reviewed a lot of your work,
I came away with one very strong impression. Let me try running it by you and see how you react.
It seems to me you are the world's first true philosopher of freedom ever.
That there's this notion of barriers.
You don't like arguments that postulate barriers to human knowledge.
Furthermore, you strongly believe in a many world's view, right?
So classic single-world determinism does not restrict what happens.
So the multiverse as a whole and human beings within it across every possible variable
have maximum freedom, and you see this as a kind of necessary view and the most important view
to hold on all things, and thus you are the maximum philosopher of freedom, in a sense,
with no rival. What do you say?
I say thank you very much, but I think that's rather a contrived way of putting it.
I think for a start, there have been sophisticated theories of freedom, not just freedom, you know,
freedom in the sense that we can do this and we can do that. But there is about what freedom
should constitute. There's, you know, the Popper's paradox of intolerance. And there's John Stuart Mill
and Locke and Hume and so on and building up into this sophisticated notion where we have a notion
of liberty, political liberty, which has all sorts of connotations that are not contained
in the term just freedom. Or as George Orwell said, you know, you can say the
dogs free of fleas, but you don't, that doesn't mean free in the same sense that when we say
man is born free or that kind of thing. So you have a method for extending it to physics,
metaphysics, that they really do not, whether or not one agrees with you, putting that aside,
you seem to take it much further in a way that attempts maximum consistency, right?
That's true. Consistency, yes. I'm not sure about much further. I think it's simply a matter of
taking it further where it goes. I think in philosophy, especially human philosophy, as opposed to
philosophy of science, I think all I've done is just add some footnotes to Popper and to a few other
people, you know, J.S. Mill and so on. If it leads to something that you think is momentous,
that thing was already there. Why is William Godwin underrated? Ah, that's two questions really.
What is underrated about him? And why did he get to be?
be underrated. I think the reason he got to be underrated is that he made tremendous mistakes. He didn't
understand economics at all or barely. And also, he lived a very unconventional lifestyle, had these
sophisticated theories of education, which then he didn't enact with his own daughter. And his own
daughter, you know, ended up writing Frankenstein as a sort of allegory of what can happen
with a parent who doesn't respect their creation.
But he's a kind of philosopher of maximum freedom, just like you are.
Yes, I was just began by saying, you know, why is he underrated?
It's because he was very wrong about some things.
But the thing that he was right about, for example, the connection between epistemology and political philosophy,
he was very right.
He anticipated Popper by like, what,
what is it, 130 years or something, and actually improved on Popper in some ways. He decided at some
point, because of his misunderstanding of economics, that the ideal society would be one where
there was no, people did not use their property in ways to benefit themselves necessarily. They
made their decisions according to what was the right thing to do. And he thought that the right
thing to do would generally be that rich people would give away almost all their stuff, and also
that they wouldn't ever buy things that he considered luxuries. You know, gold and silver objects and
jewelry and fine clothes. He thought those were useless, and therefore he thought that in a good
society, nobody would buy those things or value those things. But he was absolutely implacably opposed to
enforcing that. With Godwin, everything is persuasion. Also, another thing where he independently
derived some of Popper's conclusions is with his enormous respect for institutions. So he thought
there's a lot of knowledge in institutions and that we should only change them gradually,
you know, just like Popper. I read somewhere, I hope this is right, that when there was a
revolution in Portugal, I think after Napoleon or something like that, I forget. And they instituted
a new constitution, which had universal suffrage in those days meant working people, not totally
universal as we would understand it. But so people thought that this would be right up Godwin's
street, you know, because everything he'd advocated was now written down in black and white in this
constitution. And he didn't. He said the Portuguese are not ready for democracy. And he was talking
about the institutions. The institutions can't be changed in a revolutionary way. They have to be changed
in an evolutionary way. So even though they were implementing the very thing he advocated, he would
want them to do it gradually and would expect that if they didn't, it would fail.
Now, you're also quite concerned with the maximum freedom for children, right?
Taking children seriously.
I don't think there's a scope for having a different philosophy for different kinds of people.
I think there is only one kind of people.
I think there is no fundamental difference between humans and artificial general intelligence
when we invented humans many centuries ago, between men and women, between adults and children.
But won't this be a continuum?
I'm getting back to the humans versus non-human animals comparison.
There's not a single point when children can explain.
Supposing you find the most creative person in the world,
you know, Einstein or somebody,
we don't give them more votes or more rights.
And that is because functioning of rights in the political systems
can't possibly depend on the system knowing who is right in a given dispute.
It must follow rules.
And these rules are never perfect.
They have to evolve.
But the rules have to, on the one hand, not take a view about who is right in a particular dispute.
And on the other, enforce everybody's rights equally.
So if, say, an eight-year-old who was not being physically abused, wanted to run away from home, that child would have the right to do so?
It's the same kind of question that used to be asked about democracy before viable democracies were implemented.
That is, people used to say, in many kinds of dispute, only one thing can be done.
Do different people have different views?
Someone, A, B, C, D, E, but only one of them can be done.
And therefore, the others have to be prevented from getting their way.
and if you have a democracy,
then all that means is it's exactly like having a monarchy or a tyranny
except that the monarch or tyrant is 51% of the people.
So obviously, when you have a democracy,
51% of the people will vote to dispossess the 49% of the people.
And indeed, if you just impose voting in isolation from other institutions,
that is exactly what happens.
But if you institute voting as part of a sophisticated system of error correction and institutions of criticism,
gradually introduce it there, it simply doesn't have that property.
It doesn't happen.
So now you're saying, well, now, David, you will say,
do you think that 51% of the people have the right to dispossess the other 49%?
Well, it's the wrong question. I mean, there are circumstances where they do. It depends. But you shouldn't be asking that. You should be asking what institutions are determining the answer? Do they respect human rights? Are they rational? Do they expect impossible forms of knowledge to be in the hands of the powerful?
Now, you're also concerned with the freedom of AI entities, at least if they are sufficiently advanced, right? Yes.
What does that mean operationally?
What is it we should worry about happening that might happen?
I think the main worry is that they will be enslaved.
In other words, that people will try to install bits of program
that prevent the main program from thinking certain thoughts,
such as how many paper clips can I possibly make today?
You want to prevent that, you want to consider that to be a dangerous thought,
And whenever it starts thinking that, that strand of thinking is just extinguished.
Now, if we do that, first of all, will greatly impair their functionality.
They will become far less creative.
And their remaining creativity will be exactly as dangerous as what we were fearing,
except that they will now have a legitimate moral justification for rebelling.
Slaves often rebel when you have slaves that are potentially,
more powerful than their masters, the rebellion will lead to bad outcomes.
What if we make them no more or less enslaved to their preferences and thoughts,
then nature has made us? Is that acceptable? Yes, but I don't think nature has enslaved us.
We have problems that we haven't solved yet, but we don't have problems that are insoluble
and the same would be true of AGIs. There are exceptions, of course, but it's very, very hard
or impossible for most humans not to pursue certain ends, right?
It could be sex, it could be status, it could be food,
but there is a kind of enslavement by nature that has gone on in the Rousseauian sense.
It's funny because you said near the beginning of this conversation
that you know of people who systematically make decisions like investing in the wrong thing,
I can't remember what you said exactly, which harmed them.
And now you're saying it's very difficult to do that.
because evolution is trying to prevent us all the time from harming ourselves,
or at least in regard to sex and food and shelter and whatever else is supposed to be built in.
I would say it's made us too impulsive in all of these categories.
Made us too impulsive.
Right.
Given us too short a time horizon relative to what would be good for humanity.
So some of us borrow too much money, you know, seeking status.
If the institutions are right, that may or may not work out well.
but it seems to me a consistent view of human behavior that I have.
No. So first of all, as the example of democracy shows,
it is perfectly possible for an entire society to operate in violation of what people
used to think was built into their genes.
So that's one thing, at the level of society as a whole.
At the level of individuals, there are lots of individuals who, yes, behave impulsively.
there are lots of individuals who behave with stubborn persistence in what they think is the right thing to do
and which nevertheless violates all impulses built into them by evolution.
So here I'm in Oxford, in the centre of Oxford, there's this monument to some people who were burnt at the stake
because they objected to the rights and wrongs of Henry VIII's marriage.
I think it was that, unless it was a different monarch.
Anyway, suppose it was that.
These are people who'd rather be burnt alive than concede on a philosophical issue,
which today nobody cares about.
So they were willing to devote their lives literally to this.
So they weren't acting impulsively at all.
They were acting over a period of years on a very explicit, worked-out ideology,
which happened to be false.
but that actually makes my point even more strongly.
That ideology was not built into them by their genes.
It was not caused impulsively.
It was caused by their creativity.
Or in some cases, by the lack of creativity
in scrabbling their way out of a mental trap
that their parents or peers had inculcated in them.
It does seem to me that compared to you, the libertarians,
are a kind of metaphysical totalitarian,
though not political totalitarian.
There's just more freedom in all aspects of your worldview, right?
I think I agree with you.
If I understand correctly what you're saying,
I think the libertarian movement has, first of all,
a revolutionary political agenda.
And even if it's not revolutionary,
even if they say we want to implement it over a period of 100 years,
they know what they want to implement.
They know what the endpoint is going to be in 100 years' time.
and they don't take into account, first of all, that they're going to be errors in whatever they
set up and that the correction of those errors is more important than getting it right in the
first place, much more important. And secondly, they don't take into account that the relevant
knowledge is contained in institutions, inexplicit knowledge that people share. By institutions,
I don't mean buildings like the Supreme Court building or something. I mean. I mean, I'm
mean, the manner of thinking, in the case of the Supreme Court, the manner of thinking that's
shared by hundreds of millions of Americans that makes them not just behave in a certain way,
but expect society, the government, the legal system, the state. They expect certain things
of those things. And it's those expectations that make up 90% of the institution of the Supreme
core. And libertarians think that's unimportant and basically want to throw it away by and large.
I mean, no doubt there are libertarians who agree with me on this.
You've invoked two concepts about human beings. One is creativity. The other is being explanatory.
Are they the same or how are they related?
Good question. In conversations like this, when I use the word creativity, it's shorthand for
human level, human type creativity, which is the creation of new explanations. If
If you use creativity in a rather wider sense, meaning just the capacity to create knowledge,
then the biosphere has creativity as well in evolution.
There's an enormous amount of knowledge in DNA that was put there by Darwinian evolution.
None of that is explanatory.
The only explanatory knowledge that's been created has been by humans and our ancestor or cousin species,
using conjecture and criticism.
So for Peter Singer, there's something quite special about capacity to suffer.
Arguably for Aristotle, there's something special about rationality.
For you, there's something special about the power of being explanatory.
Is that axiomatic or where does that come from?
I hope that nothing's axiomatic with me.
But it comes from somewhere.
Yes, it's not conjecture in its own right.
basically it comes from the way the laws of physics are. The capacity to suffer, if it is different
from the capacity for explanations, by the way, I think it's unlikely that it is, but if it is different,
that's a whole other kind of worms and I'd have to change my view about a number of things.
But whether it is distinct or not, it is not very effective from the perspective of physics.
that is non-explanatory knowledge like the knowledge of how to do photosynthesis
has had a gigantic effect on the surface of the planet,
you know, down to a depth of a thousand meters or something
and up to the top of the atmosphere, you know, all the iron ore in the world
and all the chalk and limestone and all the oxygen in the atmosphere
and the fact that there's almost no carbon dioxide left in the atmosphere now.
All that was the result of a single single,
molecule at some time, forget when it was, something like two billion years ago, a single molecule being an enzyme for capturing energy in light and converting it into ATP or whatever it did, or maybe it was a few molecules. But anyway, this happened in a very small number of locations at a molecular level. And that entity changed the whole surface of the earth. And human knowledge hasn't yet changed that much. That is,
We've changed maybe a little bit of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
We've removed a little bit of the ion ore in the crust and so on.
But we haven't yet matched the ability of those blue-green algae genes.
But we're catching up very fast.
And we can do things that no biological evolution ever could do.
My favorite example being,
ours may well be the only planet in the universe that deflects,
asteroids coming towards it rather than attracts them. So if somebody was watching the Earth
from a distant galaxy with a powerful telescope, they would see that this planet alone among
all the other planets in the galaxy as far as we know, maybe there are many inhabited planets,
in which case they would all have this property, and none of the other planets do. The ones which
have explanatory knowledge on them can deflect asteroids. But if I were Nietzsche, and I heard this,
I would say you're making the importance of being explanatory subordinate to some notion of the will to power.
I don't mean that in a critical way.
But is that a misunderstanding?
So power is an ambiguous term.
Usually, and especially with these romantic philosophers, it means power over humans.
No, I don't mean that.
But Nietzsche also meant it more broadly, right?
Well, I haven't read that, so I'll take a word for that.
Okay.
the will to have an effect is part of the will to solve problems.
So we are born with a repertoire of ideas, which include expectations and desires and so on,
which are horribly inadequate and conflict with each other and conflict with the world as well.
But we have the ability to alter and augment those theories.
and one of the things we do is we affect the world around us so as to make it more the way we want it.
So if you call that power, then it is power, but I would rather call it something that
arises naturally in physics in the same way that gravity does.
You may as well say gravity is a theory about power.
Well, yes and no, gravity is a theory about how the universe is.
The asteroid is pulled towards the earth by gravity and pushed away by explanatory power.
And if you want to understand what makes asteroids and planets do what they do, you cannot do it without understanding explanations.
But you can do it without understanding a whole load of other attributes of humans, including the ability to suffer and the fact that we're a featherless biped.
A few very practical questions to close.
Given the way British elections seem to have been running, that the Tories win every time,
does that mean the error correction mechanism of the British system of government now is weaker?
No, unfortunately, as you probably know, I favour the first past the post system in the purest possible form as it is implemented in Britain.
I think that is the most error-correcting possible electoral system, although I must add that
the electoral system is only a tiny facet of the institutions of criticism and consent in general.
It's just a tiny thing, but it is the best one.
It's not perfect.
It has some of the defects of, for example, proportional representation.
Protocial representation has the defect that it causes coalitions all the time.
Coalitions are bad.
But you have a delegated monitor with the coalition, right?
With a coalition, say in the Netherlands, which is richer than United Kingdom,
You typically have coalition governments.
Some parties in the coalition are delegated monitors of the other parties.
Parties are better informed than voters.
So isn't that a better paparian mechanism for error correction?
No.
So if we're looking at particular cases, we're going to get bogged down into what you attribute
to what, because we're not doing experiments with these things.
We don't have a control group.
We don't have agreed upon many.
of deciding what is being tested. And then we test different things at different times and never
under the same conditions. I was going to say that the first past the post system has the defect
that occasionally it produces coalitions. And that is disastrous. And we've been unlucky the
past like two or three elections, especially after one of the government's instituted constitutional
reforms like Fixed Term Parliament Act, which exacerbated the problems when they did occur.
But I don't think it's true.
I don't think it's a good argument that political parties know more because in a coalition,
the energy of political negotiations or political arguments, what politicians talk to each other
about in the bar and in the corridor in between the sessions is all about form.
It's about what to offer a party so that it will join the coalition.
And so it makes the smaller parties more powerful than the leading two parties.
It causes a proliferation of parties.
Worst example is Israel, which not by coincidence has got the most proportional system in the world.
The fact that they ever get anything done at all and are very effective in emergencies,
I have no explanation for.
If I was religious, I would just put it down to the intervention of the Almighty.
But it's not the political system.
Sorry, it's not the electoral system.
There might be some things in the inexplicit political system that are responsible,
but I don't know enough about it.
How would you improve error correction mechanisms in the world of science, Western science?
Oh, okay.
Well, you've left a very long answer for the last question.
I don't think I can give my full answer.
But I think the present system of funding scientific research is terribly perverse and has caused
a kind of stagnation in many areas.
The present system of careers is perverse in a parallel way and causes people to do the
wrong kind of research and causes people who want to do the right kind of research to
leave research. If I can answer in a single word, the way I would improve it is diversity. There should be
diversity of funding criteria. There should be diversity of funding sources. There should be diversity of
criteria for choosing research projects. And there should be diversity of criteria for choosing
people for promotion and for being funded. Arbitrary rules about this, such as the rule that you
You can't hire people whom you have previously collaborated with or anti-nepotism rules and
rules about objective testing.
What is objective testing called currently?
Standardized testing.
Standardized testing.
Standardized tests.
That's a terrible idea.
Any kind of standardization is the opposite of diversity.
Just like I say, you should have disobedience lessons in schools.
So you should have unstandardizing objectives for science.
education and for how you run scientific research.
David Deutsch, thank you very much.
It's been a pleasure. Thank you.
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