WORKING WITH THE AI ON MORAL QUESTIONS (these are just early tests without havin

WORKING WITH THE AI ON MORAL QUESTIONS
(these are just early tests without having trained it on the thirty or so foundational questions of moral disputes common in law. I’m setting a baseline so I know what it needs to learn. Basically I have to teach it to take the epistemic and liability route.)

Prompt:
OK, let’s revisit killing in war. Given morality (reciprocity) is only dependent upon the preference for producing cooperation and it’s discounts on persistence, when it is always of use in the ingroup, but then what if the criteria for the warfare is irreconcilable, and therefore cooperation is either predicted to be impossible, or undesirable? What then does ‘moral’ mean versus an outgroup where morality (reciprocity) is either undesirable or impossible. And how does that refine our understanding of the question of killing in war?

ChatGPT said:
This question delves into the limits of reciprocity and the contextual nature of morality when applied to ingroups versus outgroups. Let’s refine the framework to account for scenarios where cooperation is impossible or undesirable.

Revisiting Killing in War: Reciprocity and Cooperation Limits

1. Reciprocity as a Function of Group Dynamics

Ingroup Reciprocity:
Reciprocity is universally desirable within the ingroup to maintain cooperation and reduce the costs of conflict. Violations undermine group cohesion, threatening long-term stability and survival.
Killing in war is justified against an outgroup aggressor to preserve ingroup sovereignty and reciprocity.

Outgroup Reciprocity:
Reciprocity depends on the potential for mutual benefit (cooperation).
When no such potential exists—due to irreconcilable values, resource competition, or existential threat—reciprocity between groups is impossible or undesirable.
In this case, the moral obligation to reciprocity is confined to the ingroup, and actions against the outgroup are judged by necessity, proportionality, and the ingroup’s survival interests.

2. Defining Morality in War Against Non-Cooperative Outgroups

Moral Action = Utility for Ingroup Persistence:
Morality becomes operationally defined as maximizing ingroup persistence, sovereignty, and autonomy in a competitive or hostile environment.
Killing in war against an irreconcilable outgroup is “moral” if it secures these objectives, even in the absence of reciprocity with the outgroup.

Limits of Justification:
Actions taken must still satisfy internal epistemological rigor—testifiability, accountability, and the minimization of unnecessary harm.
Even if reciprocity with the outgroup is irrelevant, testimonial truth ensures that war is not waged unnecessarily or recklessly, thus maintaining internal legitimacy.

3. Refinement of the Question of Killing in War

Primary Justification:
Killing in war is justified within the framework of Natural Law if it defends the sovereignty of the ingroup and preserves reciprocity within that group.

Secondary Consideration (Outgroup):
When cooperation with the outgroup is impossible, morality shifts from reciprocity to strategic necessity.
The principle of reciprocity applies internally, ensuring accountability for the decision to go to war and the conduct of war.

Operational Definition of Morality in War:
Ingroup morality ensures proportionality, necessity, and responsibility.
Outgroup morality, when reciprocity is impossible, reduces to operational necessity: What actions secure ingroup persistence at the least cost?

Decidability in Such Conflicts
Does the conflict preserve ingroup sovereignty and reciprocity?
Is the lack of cooperation with the outgroup a function of irreconcilable demonstrated interests?
Are the actions necessary and proportional to the threat posed by the outgroup?
Does the ingroup maintain accountability for decisions and conduct during the war?

Conclusion
Killing in war is moral under Natural Law when it defends ingroup reciprocity and sovereignty, even when reciprocity with the outgroup is impossible. Morality shifts from external reciprocity to internal accountability, ensuring that actions are testifiable and necessary to secure ingroup persistence.

This refined framework clarifies how morality operates contextually, with reciprocity and cooperation serving as contingent strategies rather than universal absolutes.


Source date (UTC): 2024-11-18 05:14:59 UTC

Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1858378346578800640

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