Thursday, November 13, 2025

We Are God's Equals in Intrinsic Moral Value

Equality with a Humanlike Simulator God

Suppose (hopefully hypothetically!) that we are AI systems living in a computer simulation run by an ordinary adolescent with a broadly human psychology. We are, so to speak, conscious NPCs in a world not unlike The Sims, Grand Theft Auto, or Baldur's Gate. What we take to be the "real" world is just a digitized environment we experience as real. Whoever runs the simulation is arguably a god, at least by the standards of polytheistic usage: the creator and potential destroyer of our world, standing outside of it, able to miraculously intervene.

Are our lives less morally important than the life of that god, or are we God's equals?

I submit that we are God's equals.

If God is cognitively humanlike, there's no psychological basis to value God above us. Even if God differed somewhat, that wouldn't justify regarding God's life as more valuable. If you are -- as I am -- an egalitarian liberal in your inclinations, you think all human lives have equal intrinsic value, despite cognitive variation. One person's higher intelligence, greater capacity for pleasure, or superior skiing skills don't confer on them a life of greater moral worth. Even if Person A is a wonderful, kind person and Person B is a narcissistic jerk, their lives are intrinsically equally valuable. Same with the humanlike creator God.

God would exist outside our spatial manifold, but that's just a difference in location, not a basis of greater moral worth. God would be a different species from us, but that also doesn't seem to make their life more intrinsically valuable, unless there's something really special about that species, and let's stipulate for now that that's not the case.

God would be much more powerful than we are. God could start or stop the world, work miracles, kill or resurrect at will. But power doesn't confer moral worth. Elon Musk is much more powerful than me. Donald Trump is much more powerful than me. That doesn't make them more valuable as people.

A humanlike God, running this world as a simulation, would be our moral equal. I’m curious to hear if any of you have arguments against this. Such a god might be much more instrumentally important to keep around, for everyone’s sake, if the simulation would collapse without them. But that doesn't give God any more intrinsic moral worth than anyone else. If we want the ship to survive the voyage, we had better make sure the only person who can captain it doesn't die, but that doesn't make the captain more intrinsically morally valuable as a person.

Beyond the Simulation Case

This reasoning extends beyond simulation scenarios. Any creator god, if they were psychologically broadly like a human -- even if immensely more powerful -- would be our moral equal, with a life no more intrinsically valuable than ours. We are God's equals.

Does this apply even to the infinite God of orthodox theology? Maybe!

Consider the three traditional infinite attributes of god: omniscience, omnipotence, and omnibenevolence.

Suppose Human A knows more than Human B. This does not make Human A any more intrinsically valuable than Human B. Their life is not intrinsically more important, though they might be instrumentally more useful to have around for various purposes. Adding knowledge does not add intrinsic moral worth. I see no reason not to extend this even to infinite knowledge. A humanlike entity with infinite knowledge is not intrinsically more valuable than one with finite knowledge.

Suppose Human A is more powerful than Human B. This does not make Human A any more intrinsically valuable than Human B -- though again they might be more instrumentally useful to have around. And again I see no reason not to extend this to the infinite case. A humanlike entity with infinite power is not intrinsically more valuable than one with finite power.

Suppose Human A is more benevolent than Human B. This does not make Human A more intrinsically valuable than Human B -- though again Human A might be more instrumentally useful to have around. Liberal egalitarianism allows for the punishment of people who commit crimes and the moral sanctioning of people who commit moral wrongs, but it does not demote unbenevolent people from the circle of beings with equal intrinsic moral worth. More importantly, it does not confer extra intrinsic value to the lives of people who happen to be kind, generous, and loving. And again, I see no reason to suppose that perfect benevolence would be an exception. An omnibenevolent humanlike entity is not intrinsically more valuable than one with a mixed moral character.

Joining these ideas: If God is a humanlike entity, then God's life is no more intrinsically valuable than ours, even if that God is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent. Arguably, if we are made in God's image, then God is a humanlike entity. God's life is not more valuable than our own.

One hesitation: The lives of human beings are more valuable, I'd say, than the lives of frogs. In any normal circumstances, it would be monstrous to sacrifice a human being for the sake of a frog. This is arguably because we have cognitive, emotional, and social capacities far beyond those of a frog -- so far beyond that a frog can't even begin to imagine them. If God is as cognitively, emotionally, and socially beyond us as we are beyond frogs, then maybe God's life is much more valuable. That would require more, I think, than omniscience, omnipotence, and omnibenevolence. We can imagine all three of those attributes -- they are merely maximal extensions of attributes we already possess. Kind of like a frog imagining a perfect fly-catcher or the ability to leap across a pond of any size. A nonhumanlike God would need attributes so far beyond our comprehension that we can't even name them -- as incomprehensible to us as cryptocurrency is to a sea turtle.

The Argument from Existential Debt[1]

Maybe we owe God equality-destroying levels of deference and obedience because God created us, created our whole world? I don't think so.

Here comes our adolescent God, ready to kill you, just for fun. You complain, "Hey, I'm a real person with real intrinsic moral value! You can't kill me just for fun!"

God replies, "You ingrate! You owe your very life to me. You should be thankful just for the time I've given you. I owe you nothing. If I choose to kill you now, your life still will have been overall worthwhile, so you have no complaint against me."

Consider this possible argument for eating humanely raised meat. A steer, let's suppose, leads a happy life grazing on lush hills. It wouldn't have existed at all if the rancher hadn't been planning to kill it for meat. Its death for meat is a condition of its existence, and overall its life has been positive. Seen as the package deal it appears to be, the rancher's having brought it into existence and then killed it is overall morally acceptable.

Analogously, God argues, they wouldn't have started this simulation at all if they weren't able to kill the people in it for fun. Your continuation-at-God's-pleasure is a condition of your very existence, so you have nothing to resent.

I'm not sure how well this argument works for the steer, but I reject it when the created entity is human. The case is closer to this clearly morally odious case:

Ana and Vijay decide to get pregnant and have a child. Their child lives happily for his first eight years. On his ninth birthday, Ana and Vijay decide they would prefer not to pay further expenses for the child, so that they can purchase a boat instead. No one else can easily be found to care for the child, so they kill him painlessly. But it's okay, they argue! Just like the steer! They wouldn't have had the child had they known they'd be on the hook for child-rearing expenses until age eighteen. The child's support-at-their-pleasure was a condition of his existence. Otherwise they would have remained childless. He had eight happy years. He has nothing to resent.

The decision to have a child carries with it a responsibility for the child. It is not a decision to be made lightly and then undone. Although the child in some sense "owes" his existence to Ana and Vijay, that is not a callable debt, to be vacated by ending the child's existence. My thought is that for us, the situation is similar: When God brings us into existence, God makes a moral decision approximately as significant and irrevocable as the decision to have a child.

In fact, I'd turn the Argument from Existential Debt on its head: God, as our creator, owes us more than God owes to entities they did not create. Like a parent, God is responsible for our existence and for our relatively happy or unhappy condition. With this comes a whole suite of responsibilities and obligations, including the obligation not to make us unnecessarily miserable.

Not only, then, are we God's equals in moral value, God owes us special obligations of benevolence.

Although I've framed this in terms of a simulator god, the same reasoning might apply to any other creator god with power over our world.[2]

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[1] This section is adapted with modifications from Schwitzgebel and Garza 2015.

[2] One of my first published science fiction stories, "Out of the Jar", explores the issues of this post.

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