ProgrammingGodJordan


Marchesk
ProgrammingGodJordan
As for life in general, I don't see why intelligence is preferable to other strategies. Ants or bacteria may long outlive bigger brained mammals and their technological creations. Despite all our success, bacteria still have us way outnumbered. It's a bit egotistical to think we're the central focus of life. — Marchesk
ProgrammingGodJordan
How do you know the purpose of life isn't to create automobiles or flat screen tv's? — fishfry
ArguingWAristotleTiff
Please, don't solve the aging and death cycle with AGI, not for me, maybe for you but definitely not for humanity.I) Solve many problems, including aging, death, etc.
Reference A: For eg, ai can already do this: "Self-taught artificial intelligence beats doctors at predicting heart attacks"
http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/04/self-taught-artificial-intelligence-beats-doctors-predicting-heart-attacks — ProgrammingGodJordan
ProgrammingGodJordan
Please, don't solve the aging and death cycle with AGI, not for me, maybe for you but definitely not for humanity. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Marchesk
Pertinently, AGI/ASI can theoretically solve any task, given sufficient compute resources, including tasks performed by bacteria! — ProgrammingGodJordan
ArguingWAristotleTiff
Why don't you wish for aging to be solved? — ProgrammingGodJordan
fishfry
I don't detect the relevance of your question. — ProgrammingGodJordan
Marchesk
Because at the age of 47 I am pretty sure one normal lifetime will be enough for me. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
ProgrammingGodJordan
It's not whether AI can solve tasks performed by bacteria, it's the likelihood that bacteria will still be around long after the last machines rust away. All of human civilization is but a tiny blip in the history of life. — Marchesk

tom
1.a) Evolution is optimising ways of contributing to the increase of entropy, as systems very slowly approach equilibrium. (The universe’s predicted end) — ProgrammingGodJordan
Marchesk
As species got more and more intelligent, nature was finding better ways to contribute to increases of entropy. (Intelligent systems can be observed as being biased towards entropy maximization) — ProgrammingGodJordan
ProgrammingGodJordan
How is "optimising ways of contributing to the increase of entropy" selected for by evolution? — tom
ProgrammingGodJordan
As some species get more intelligent. The keyword there is some. Intelligence is a favorable adaptation for some species. But those species aren't even the majority of life on this planet. Bacteria, plants, fungi, viruses and insects vastly outnumber mammals, birds and cephalopods. And they've been around for far longer.
So it's hard to see how intelligence is the end result of evolution. It's not even clear that it's a good long term adaptation for humans. We might go extinct because of our intelligence. — Marchesk
David Solman
WISDOMfromPO-MO
tom
See the source in (1.a). — ProgrammingGodJordan
charleton
charleton
I don't know if it gets any more ethnocentric or anthropocentric than to say that one invention of one human civilization is the purpose of life. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
charleton
1.a) Evolution is optimising ways of contributing to the increase of entropy, as systems very slowly approach equilibrium. (The universe’s predicted end) — ProgrammingGodJordan
niki wonoto
Agent Smith
Life's purpose is to create Artificial General Intelligence. — OP
javi2541997
unenlightened
. — Yohan
Changeling
It's an abuse of language to even suggest that evolution has purpose or direction — unenlightened
Alkis Piskas
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