“When one advances claims, one must first establish a standard of assessment. To make claims in the absence of such a standard is like trying to establish on the surface of a spinning potter’s wheel where the sun will rise and set. Without a fixed standard, one cannot clearly ascertain what is right and wrong, or what is beneficial and harmful.”

-Mozi, ‘A Condemnation of Fatalism’


Meta-Note

I am constantly editing this framework, and it is tedious to keep it updated here as well. For the latest version, see here.

Confidence: “Firmly Tentative”

This is my attempt to "codify" the things I have learned from the Rationalist and Effective Altruism communities. I affectionately refer to it as "Neo-Mohism", because Mohism resonates with me and it seems ripe to be given an update for the modern age.

High Concept (TL;DR)

Neo-Mohists aspire to be kind to both themselves and others (including all sentient beings), but also the type of person who spurs themselves and others to greater heights. They are financially prudent, including in their charitable giving and retirement. When they acquire influence they do not waver on their ideals, and they seek out dissenting opinions to make sure they are held accountable. They do not make an effort to be seen as special, nor do they resent taking a back seat and allowing others to take charge when appropriate, but they do wish to make the world a better place.

The 10 Neo-Mohist Tenets

The main tenets of Neo-Mohism are 5 couplets of intertwined concepts.

“The Void” and “Bayesian Rationality” 

(inspired by the classical Mohist tenets of “Heaven’s Intent” and “Understanding Ghosts”)

This can rightly be called a “meta-tenet”, as it rules the formation and revision of all other tenets.

  1. “The Void” is a stand-in for “everything we are trying to accomplish with Neo-Mohism, and everything we would try to accomplish if we had more information and consistent values”. Never let Neo-Mohism get in the way of what Neo-Mohism is trying to accomplish.
  2. Bayesian Rationality is the epistemology of choice for Neo-Mohism. Neo-Mohism does not make certain proclamations of true/false; all beliefs are required to have a confidence interval assigned to them (including all moral conclusions). As per Bayesian Rationality, the ultimate arbiter of Neo-Mohist tenets is the ability to make advance, falsifiable predictions, allowing the universe to judge between competing ideas. As such, a Cardinal Sin of Neo-Mohism is to assume a conclusion and work backwards to try and prove the conclusion is true. Additionally, argumentation and collaboration are Neo-Mohist virtues; no matter how rational an individual is, their map will always have gaps where someone else doesn't..


“If X is true, I desire to believe that X is true. If X is not true, I desire to believe that X is not true. Let me not become attached to beliefs I may not want.” 
-The Litany of Tarski

“Raising the Sanity Waterline” and “Tsuyoku Naritai!”

(inspired by the classical Mohist tenets of “Promoting the Worthy” and “Aspiring Upward”)

  1. We should be exhorting each other to always be a little bit stronger every day; a better thinker, a more effective human, in order to increase the average level of rationality and eudaimonia of the human race. This is the only way to truly impose order on a chaotic world and assure the continued prosperity of our species. It is foolish to think that a particular type of government or economic system is the key to this.
  2. Instead of appealing to government or ancient sages as a standard by which to judge yourself, Neo-Mohism points you to your future self, the best version of you that you can be. 

“Sentientism” and “Wellbeing”

(inspired by the classical Mohist tenets of “Impartial Care” and “Condemning Aggression.”)

  1. Neo-Mohism takes the classical Mohist concept of “impartial care” and explicitly applies it to all sentient creatures (where "sentience" is defined as "anything that can suffer or reflect on the concept of suffering".) as the promotion of well-being. 
  2. Well-being is defined as "Suffering is bad (you are not well if you are suffering), and death is bad (you are not being if you are dead)", and only applies to conscious creatures who exist or who we are confident will exist (creatures that neither exist nor will ever exist do not have a "being" in any meaningful sense). Aggression is to be heavily discouraged, and shall never be used in response to ideas or words. When we conclude aggression to be justified, we should treat that conclusion with skepticism, as we are often biased towards that answer.

“Effective Altruism” and “Minimalism”

(inspired by the classical Mohist tenets of “Moderation in Use”, “Moderation in Burial”, and “Condemning Music”).

  1. While Mohism does not decry hedonism or music, we should be mindful about how we spend our efforts and money. Everything we do has an opportunity cost, and that cost can all-too-often be measured in lives. Because of that cost, we should strive to maximize the good that we can do; not all good is created equal. 
  2. Furthermore, consumerism is one of the great poisons of the modern age, and this poison will make it very difficult to Become Stronger or to Raise the Sanity Waterline. Be the master of your possessions, don’t let them become the master of you.

“Condemning Lies” and “Responsibility”

(the latter is inspired by the classical Mohist tenet of “Condemning Fatalism”)

  1. Deception is a hostile act that deprives people of the ability to have a relationship with you based on fully informed consent. As such, any deception (including lies of omission) are immoral acts (although sometimes immoral acts must be performed to avoid more immoral outcomes, similarly to aggression in self defense or in defense of others). The closer your relationship, the more important honesty is.
  2. Whether we live in a deterministic universe or not is irrelevant to the role of motivation and choices in our everyday lives. When we see injustice in the world, such as harm being inflicted on other sentient beings, it is our personal responsibility to fix it.

Neo-Mohist musings

A summary of ‘Cultivating the self’ from ‘The Mozi’

This named section of ‘The Mozi’ includes some claims about what Mohist Sage looks like. I summarize that section here, to hopefully glean some useful insights for Neo-Mohism.

  • In warfare, although there is strategy, courage is fundamental.
  • In office, although there is learning, integrity (right conduct) is fundamental.
  • If the root is not made secure, there is no way for the branches and leaves to flourish. In the same way, if one is not sympathetic to those who are near, one cannot induce those from afar to come. If one does not cherish one’s own family, one cannot devote oneself to outsiders.
  • If one does not have an end and a beginning in the conduct of affairs, one cannot complete many undertakings.
  • If one is obscure in raising something, one cannot be widely heard.
  • A gentleman (sage?) is one who examines the near and cultivates the self.
  • If a sage sees conduct that is not cultivated, or if they are vilified, they reflect on their own mistakes. In this way, resentment is minimized and right conduct is cultivated. If slanderous and vilifying words do not enter his ears, if critical and offensive sounds do not issue from his mouth, if thoughts of killing and maiming others are not harboured in his heart, then even if there are people who would slander and accuse him, they would have nothing to stand on.
  • One who is wise discriminates in his mind, but does not complicate his words.
     

Truth

“Truth” is defined as "that which comports with external reality", or "that which exists regardless of what one believes". There is an objective reality that we experience, and we can learn about this reality through Science and Rationality. Neo-Mohists desire to know what is true for its own sake, and want everyone to believe true things.

Morality

The word "morality" within Neo-Mohism is defined as "[X action] is that which ought to be done/not done, given the goal of well-being." As such, Neo-Mohism does not concern itself with any is/ought problem, and uses Consequentialism as a meta-ethic. The only problem to solve is whether wellbeing is a shared goal. Neo-Mohists argue that most everyone cares about this, and that there are objective facts to be known in pursuit of this goal.

Transhumanism

Everyone has the right to use technology to be whatever they wish to be, including *not dead*.

On Eudaimonia

Defined as "Hedonic Enjoyment" (the good feeling I get from drinking a glass of Boba Tea, the warmth I feel when I bask in the sun, the entertainment I get from watching a good movie, etc) and "Emotional Fulfillment" (having an intellectually-stimulating relationship, doing hard work aligned with one’s values, being mindful in the present moment, and self improvement). Neo-Mohists want themselves and everyone to achieve Eudaimonia. Especially, they do not want anyone to suffer, as suffering is a problematic barrier to happiness in a way that lesser pleasure is not.

Humor is good, and should be used generously.

Sentientism and Wellbeing

Neo-Mohism concerns itself primarily with how we interact with other sentient agents, where "sentience" is defined as "anything that can suffer or reflect on the concept of suffering". Sentience provides meaning to an otherwise meaningless universe. All sentient creatures have moral weight (humans, animals, AI, aliens, etc), including ones far away from you (distance does not matter). Because all sentient beings have moral weight, it is immoral to subjugate, kill, or eat them.

In particular, "sapience" is of special concern; a word here which includes everything under "sentience", as well as "the ability to be aware of one’s awareness, assign meaning to things, and make moral judgments (which also requires something like a Theory of Mind)". Humanity is the only known species to have sapience, and therefore the loss of humanity would be a terrible thing indeed, reducing our universe to a meaningless machine. Misanthropy is misguided at best, dangerous and immoral at worst.

Condemning Lies

Premise:

Deception is a hostile act that deprives people of the ability to have a relationship with you based on fully informed consent. As such, any deception (including lies of omission) are immoral acts (although sometimes immoral acts must be performed to avoid more immoral acts). The closer your relationship, the more important honesty is.

Guidelines:

  1. Tell the truth in all circumstances (with the exceptions listed below). The importance of telling the truth increases with the amount of trust the other person is giving, and how much you care about your relationship with this person.
  2. Volunteer your thoughts liberally, but only when you have reason to believe that your audience wants to know them, or if your relationship would benefit from knowing them.
  3. If you wish to keep something private, say so explicitly.

Exceptions:

  1. Avoid telling the truth when you have confirmed that dishonesty is the least harmful alternative. Situations like this in social relationships are very rare, and should be exited as quickly as possible.
    1. Where exiting is not a meaningful option, long-term dishonesty may be the best policy, though we should be highly skeptical of this option as we are all biased to favor it.
  2. Where a person explicitly does not want honesty, there is no need to be honest with them.
  3. Since this is a practice meant for personal relationships, and is premised on consent and power dynamics, there is no significant requirement in this framework to be honest to entities that have power over you, such as governments and corporations.
  4. Sarcasm and friendly pranks are also acceptable, but do not harm others or allow them to labor under falsehoods.

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11 comments, sorted by Click to highlight new comments since: Today at 8:19 AM

You‘ve really put some thought into this, thanks for sharing.

Though I don’t want to make a critique I would like to save you a bit of future trouble as a courtesy from someone who has trodden down the same path.

The issue with basing a philosophy on Mozi is that there are no ‘fixed standards’. All standards, like the rest of the universe, are forever in flux. Universal frameworks can not exist.

For the next stage I found reading Liezi was helpful.

Thanks for the feedback! 

Basing it on Mohism is more of an aesthetic decision than anything; if classical Mohism has an issue then Neo-Mohism should set out to solve it. :)

I think there's a difference between "no fixed standards" and "the ability to update standards in light of new evidence". Neo-Mohism is definitely about "strong opinions, weakly held" kind of thing. The standards it sets forth are only to be overturned by failing a test, and until then should be treated as the best answer so far.

(creatures that neither exist nor will ever exist do not have a "being" in any meaningful sense)

What about those:

  • That did exist
  • Of uncertain existence (especially with regards to the future)?

“Truth” is defined as “that which comports with external reality”, or “that which exists regardless of what one believes”. There is an objective reality that we experience, and we can learn about this reality through observation and reason. Bayesian Rationality is the epistemology of choice for Neo-Mohists, who desire to know what is true for its own sake, and want everyone to believe true things.

And yet this can only be reflected by the knowledge one possesses.

Also, how do you feel about lies of omission? [Answered.]

The first and highest tenet is that all tenets are subject to revision. The ultimate arbiter of this philosophy is the ability to make advance, falsifiable predictions, allowing the universe to judge between competing ideas.

Many philosophies aspire to this, yet somehow we have more than one philosophy. This seems like a good idea in theory, but in practice everything gets anchored on particular ways of looking at the world and are less fluid than we would like. I don't object to the ideal, but it's a weird one because in theory every philosophy that includes it seems like it should converge to become the same thing, yet they don't.

I don't see why they should. Merely holding beliefs to be revisable, doesn't tell you how to revise them....and they are going to be revised by other meta-level beliefs (ie. epistemology), which will vary (and also reviseable!)

So if Alice and Bob start off with a shared object level belief and feel the need to revise it, they are only going to concur if they are revising it the same way.

Aumanns theorem is more or less wrong, at least extremely impractical, for similar reasons.

So if Alice and Bob start off with a shared object level belief and feel the need to revise it, they are only going to concur if they are revising it the same way.

Or if they hit the disagreement with an experiment and concur on the resolution.

That's just a way of assuming they agree on epistemology. In real life there is no firm agreement on what an experiment is, or how to draw a conclusion from one.

In general, what you say may be true. In specific cases, it may still work. (For example, two parties may be able to come up with an experiment they agree on. This may be easier if both parties are more similar to each other.)

Yes, but my claim was not that convergence would never occur, it was that it would not necessarily occur. Of course convergence can occur between parties that have similar epistemology, but in general that's not a given. It's not a refutation to say that it's only true in general.

Are you proposing this as a new thing that few yet believe in, but many should, or as a description of the system that already sorta seems to exist?

I look up Mohism, and... it kinda seems like this is just "how all vaguely liberal nation-states downstream of the the enlightenment already run" basically? 

Or at least if you accused them of NOT running this way (accusing them of being unethical, or not merit-based, or wasteful) they would already experience it as an attack?

Central elements of Mohist thought include advocacy of a unified ethical and political order grounded in a consequentialist ethic emphasizing impartial concern for all; active opposition to military aggression and injury to others; devotion to utility and frugality and condemnation of waste and luxury; support for a centralized, authoritarian state led by a virtuous, benevolent sovereign and managed by a hierarchical, merit-based bureaucracy... Mohist ethics and epistemology are characterized by a concern with finding objective standards that will guide judgment and action reliably and impartially so as to produce beneficial, morally right consequences. The Mohists assume that people are naturally motivated to do what they believe is right, and thus with proper moral education will generally tend to conform to the correct ethical norms. They believe strongly in the power of discussion and persuasion to solve ethical problems and motivate action, and they are confident that moral and political questions have objective answers that can be discovered and defended by inquiry.

Virtually the only thing missing here is voting on who the leader should be, and how that leader should be restricted to roughly a decade of service in the top role.

Also the "..." was to cut out a bit about heaven and ghosts, although descriptively it does seem that the political operators in many modern nation states do give lip service to a confused mishmash of the best/shared parts of many religions, so maybe even that's descriptively accurate?

The primary goal of this document is to articulate my personal moral philosophy, and I use the Mohism branding because it has strong corollaries to said moral philosophy, but otherwise I am reinventing it from scratch.

I do think that a lot of the core tenets are widely (if subconsciously) held. As for the ones that aren't widely held, I personally think they should be. But, like any good Neo-Mohist, I'm willing to be convinced otherwise. ;)

The phrasing of this as a philosophy for others to adopt is mostly an aesthetic decision, a reframing to help me look at it more critically.