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Why we must not act like Galactic Overlords

The other external support for morality is a feature of rationality itself: that it cannot depend on the egocentric vantage point of the reasoner. If I appeal to you to do anything that affects me — to get off my foot, or tell me the time or not run me over with your car — then I can’t do it in a way that privileges my interests over yours (say, retaining my right to run you over with my car) if I want you to take me seriously. Unless I am Galactic Overlord, I have to state my case in a way that would force me to treat you in kind. I can’t act as if my interests are special just because I’m me and you’re not, any more than I can persuade you that the spot I am standing on is a special place in the universe just because I happen to be standing on it.

Not coincidentally, the core of this idea — the interchangeability of perspectives — keeps reappearing in history’s best-thought-through moral philosophies,
including the Golden Rule (itself discovered many times);

  • Spinoza’s Viewpoint of Eternity; 
  • the Social Contract of Hobbes, 
  • Rousseau and Locke; 
  • Kant’s Categorical Imperative; 
  • and Rawls’s Veil of Ignorance. 
  • It also underlies Peter Singer’s theory of the Expanding Circle
  •  — the optimistic proposal that our moral sense, though shaped by evolution to overvalue self, kin and clan, can propel us on a path of moral progress, as our reasoning forces us to generalize it to larger and larger circles of sentient beings

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