A.P. Chekhov, through his characters, warns us of the negative consequences of interacting with things that distort our own perceptions of ourselves.
I apologize in advance for the poor translation. Literature should be translated by writers, not chatbots =) — Astorre
Yes, it's a huge introductory book to the subject. I think we simply haven't understood the importance of the undecidability results of Turing or Gödel. In logic and math we're still in the "Clockwork Universe" were if we cannot find a computable solution yet notice that there obviously has to be one, we just assume a "black box" and go further. Assume that we'll solve it in the future perhaps.You seem to be very familiar with Turing and, certainly, within that paradigm emergence is not conceivable but have you read Hofstadter's Godel, Escher, Bach? — Prajna
If someone gave their life to save you, would you think them less than yourself? — Prajna
To begin with, it's hard to kill and eat a being, on a daily basis at that, or take their land or possessions unless one thinks of them as somehow significantly lesser than oneself. In order to evolve, one needs to survive to being with, and surviving requires taking -- taking lives, possessions, rights, status. — baker
It's just easier to do it with an AI, there's so much less at stake, it's so safe, and you don't really have to put any skin in the game. So it's highly questionable how effective such practice really is. — baker
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