The Gom Jabbar, in Dune, is a deeper metaphor than I realized.
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(Come to think of it, that’s actually not a question with an obvious answer; prey animals like sheep can be unbelievably stoic, since noticeably injured sheep are targets to predators.)
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But going back to people. The question “if you could feel pure bliss and then die, or feel pure torture and then live, which would you choose?” is actually a tough one.
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I think evolution probably *has* selected for the ability to pass the Gom Jabbar test in humans. Iirc all modern humans passed through a drought-and-famine bottleneck. We may have needed to do counter-instinctual things to survive.
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It seems clear that in radically changing environments, individuals who can seek survival faster than evolution can change the reward function will have a fitness advantage.
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The Bene Gesserit, in Dune, were a response to technology. They thought developing this “survival intent” in people was necessary for humanity to cope with technological change.
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Unfortunately, Dune is fiction, not a how-to manual. We don’t know how to make humans who are all-round just better at being human. Would be cool though. Open problem.
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End of conversation
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[some?] animals are known to chew their own leg off to escape from a trap, which is at least similar (it seems otherwise unclear how to separate "how could one possibly make an animal understand how the Gom Jabbar works" as an effect)
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