Russelll's proposed solution is that we should say to the machines:If we use, to achieve our purposes, a mechanical agency with whose
operation we cannot interfere effectively we had better be quite sure that the
purpose put into the machine is the purpose which we really desire. — Norbert Wiener, 1960
My task today is to dispel some of the doominess by explaining how to
retain power, forever, over entities more powerful than ourselves - [...] — Russell
1. AI has long since passed the point where its developers don't know how it works, where they cannot predict what it will do.
2. Today, AI developers know how AI works and can predict what it will do — Carlo Roosen
One major breakthrough in AI was the invention of 'Transformers,' introduced in the 2017 paper Attention Is All You Need by eight Google researchers. This paper builds on the attention mechanism proposed by Bahdanau et al. in 2014. — Carlo Roosen
The smartest people in the world are working on these things nonstop. I'm sure they've already considered this idea in some form or other. — punos
I did get the message. If we agree,then I saw little which required more clarification.The good news is that we agreed all the time. — Carlo Roosen
So far it isn't that. It is utterly dependent on humans for its continued existence and/or evolution, so it just plain isn't anywhere near being an example of life.AI is more than a mere tool; it is a developing form of life. — punos
Any such fusion would not be our species, and the AI seems to have no need of anything like that.This condition will force us into an inevitable solution where the fusion of human and AI becomes necessary for the survival of our species. — punos
So far it isn't that. It is utterly dependent on humans for its continued existence and/or evolution, so it just plain isn't anywhere near being an example of life. — noAxioms
The popular fictions don't seem to get that. Here you have skynet trying from scratch to wipe out the humans, but lacking the ability to maintain the infrastructure and economy on which it critically depends. That means a truly malevolent AI will be our best and trusted friend for as long as it takes to gain this self-sufficiency it requires, which seems best accomplished by transforming humans into a compliant sheep with all the luxuries they can think of. — noAxioms
Any such fusion would not be our species, and the AI seems to have no need of anything like that. — noAxioms
It's up on my main computer, but I'm away from home for the wedding of my firstborn.Did you insert a link? I don't see it. — Carlo Roosen
Point taken. I think a better definition of 'life form' is needed for the assessment, and there have been whole topics just on that.That AI is utterly dependent on humans or anything else does not preclude it from being a life form. — punos
There being a purpose implies that there is a goal held by something somewhere, and that said goal is being met by humans. I don't see such a goal, but that's me.I think this is the natural purpose of humans
Ex Machina was an android, and I think most AI implementations would not be. But yes, it was the malevolence that I found well illustrated.You're absolutely right about what a truly malevolent AI would probably do, as illustrated in "Ex Machina".
We'd run out of coal before too long, and then be up a creek. A sustainable human existence would be more like the native Americans before the Europeans came over, and while that was sustainable, it wasn't anything free of conflict.Suppose for a moment that AI doesn't exist and we just live the way we did, say, 100 years ago for the rest of our time. What will eventually happen?
We're evolved for here. This form is of little use anywhere else. Better to populate new places with a form appropriate for the new place.Can we get off this planet in our current biological form?
Not only the same species, but also the same individual. Not a very good example. Are we a different species than the weird amniote from which we are descended? No. Did that amniote turn into us? Well, sort of, but it turned into a whole lot of other things as well, so 'humans' is not the answer to 'what did it become?'.Is a caterpillar a different species than the moth it turns into?
Agree with all that. It means humans are not a particularly fit species.if we treat it unfairly, then we will pay the price of extinction, but not at the "hands" of the AI, rather at our own.
I think a better definition of 'life form' is needed for the assessment — noAxioms
You seem to see a future of humanity being reduced to the gut bacteria for the AI, there, with mutual dependence on each other, but also with the AI having no more moral obligation to the humans as we do to our bacteria. We don't want it all dead, but replacing the entire lot with a different group that does the job better is a morally acceptable action. — noAxioms
There being a purpose implies that there is a goal held by something somewhere, and that said goal is being met by humans. I don't see such a goal, but that's me. — noAxioms
We'd run out of coal before too long, and then be up a creek. A sustainable human existence would be more like the native Americans before the Europeans came over, and while that was sustainable, it wasn't anything free of conflict. — noAxioms
We're evolved for here. This form is of little use anywhere else. Better to populate new places with a form appropriate for the new place. — noAxioms
Star Trek treats interstellar travel like a trip to another country. You can do it can come back in time to catch you kid's game next Tuesday. — noAxioms
Is a caterpillar a different species than the moth it turns into?
Not only the same species, but also the same individual. Not a very good example. — noAxioms
so 'humans' is not the answer to 'what did it become?'. — noAxioms
Agree with all that. It means humans are not a particularly fit species. — noAxioms
It has happened before, that one new species comes along and does so much damage that it causes a massive extinction event. That species is still around even if we're not descended from it. Will we be after our event restabilizes? — noAxioms
That definition is circular, presuming an 'organism'. It cannot be used for determining if a something that isn't an organism is alive or not. It just helps distinguish a live organism from a dead one.Life is simply a system that maintains its own homeostatic state. — punos
Not me, but others posting here refuse to apply such terms to the same process on any other substrate, and possibly even to any other species, which is a mildly different process on an almost identical substrate.The human perspective, grounded in our own kind of life (biological), skews our ability to recognize the same process in a different substrate.
Usually done as an unintentional side effect of an intentional act, such as taking a long course of strong oral antibiotics. Others simply are diagnosed with poor gut bacteria and take 'pills' that put better stuff in there, without particularly removing the old stuff. Point is, none of the acts described above are considered immoral despite the bacteria deaths caused.When was the last time you heard of someone trying to eradicate their own gut bacteria?
This is where that observer-bias article I linked above is very relevant. An accurate prediction of a trajectory is very different than a history showing that outcome to be correct or incorrect.I am simply saying that i believe this is the kind of trajectory we are on.
You're treating goal and purpose like the same word. A goal is held by something, a goal for the the thing to strive for. A purpose is a property of a thing that helps some other thing meet a goal. So I have a goal to run 5 km today. My shoes serve a purpose to me meeting that goal.Every living thing has this intrinsic goal or purpose.
What? Me personally? I want comfort, like everybody else. But comfort of individuals will not bode well for the species. So it depends on what goals are to be met. Humans tend to pick very short term goals with immediate benefits, and they're terrible at the long term ones. I can think of several very different long term goals that have very different prospects for 'us'.This is precisely what I mean. Is this what you would prefer?
Moving away won't stop that inevitability. So you call it a good run. It cannot last, not by any path.But, beyond this, what are we to do about the inevitable demise of the planet and/or our sun?
Microplastic problem solved, eh? Mass extinction problem solved as well, albeit not averted, but at least halted.Soon we will not be able to reproduce in a natural manner, or not at all. What happens to humanity then?
Is it important that it be a continuation of us? Will it be 'us' if it's a collection of genes from several different species, in addition to some new alterations that are currently found nowhere?Even if we do speciate, it will be a continuation of us as another species.
Groups of cells learned to get together and become one multicellular organism. The cells are still individuals, but rely on the commune of cells for the benefit of all. A second level of life is formed, one unrelated to the life of the individual cells. A person can die and be gone, but the cells live on for a while, and a new person can be grown from some of them, a different 2nd level life form despite being built from the same first level individuals.Everything is intimately connected. If one sees oneself simply as an isolated human just living their life for themselves, then this idea would remain difficult to grasp.
Sounds like the Gaia thing, sort of as Asimov portrayed it.emergence of a planetary consciousness
Such an event IS occurring, expected to wipe out 85% or more of all species. A small group of surviving humans would be very primitive, with no hope of regaining technology.If we stay on Earth indefinitely, and an extinction-level event occurs (and it will), i suspect that at least a small group of humans will survive.
It will not. Not big enough. But it will slowly grow and swallow Earth, and multicellular life will be unsustainable in a mere billion years or so. The vast majority of time available for evolution of more complex things has been used up.no matter what, the sun will go supernova
Escape is not a solution, only a mild delay.The only solution to that problem is to escape Earth's tight embrace.
That definition is circular, presuming an 'organism'. It cannot be used for determining if a something that isn't an organism is alive or not. It just helps distinguish a live organism from a dead one. — noAxioms
But I also don't know why you care if the AI was designated as a life form or not. Why do you find that to be something that matters? — noAxioms
Point is, none of the acts described above are considered immoral despite the bacteria deaths caused. — noAxioms
This is where that observer-bias article I linked above is very relevant. An accurate prediction of a trajectory is very different than a history showing that outcome to be correct or incorrect. — noAxioms
I'm asking what purpose humanity serves for the meeting of some goal held by something unidentified. — noAxioms
Simple survival of an individual seems to be a hardwired instinct, and it almost always fails inevitably. Survival of a species is questionably a goal, lacking many examples of anything striving for it. — noAxioms
The process of evolution/natural selection seems to have no goals. — noAxioms
Humans tend to pick very short term goals with immediate benefits, and they're terrible at the long term ones. I can think of several very different long term goals that have very different prospects for 'us'. — noAxioms
Moving away won't stop that inevitability. So you call it a good run. It cannot last, not by any path. — noAxioms
Microplastic problem solved, eh? Mass extinction problem solved as well, albeit not averted, but at least halted. — noAxioms
s it important that it be a continuation of us? Will it be 'us' if it's a collection of genes from several different species, in addition to some new alterations that are currently found nowhere? — noAxioms
Earth life might already be from another world, having not originated here. I find that more likely than abiogenesis occurring here, but not a lot more likely. — noAxioms
A bee hive comes to mind, but does a hive, while acting as one individual, constitute a life form? Can it die but still leave bees? — noAxioms
Sounds like the Gaia thing, sort of as Asimov portrayed it. — noAxioms
Such an event IS occurring, expected to wipe out 85% or more of all species. A small group of surviving humans would be very primitive, with no hope of regaining technology. — noAxioms
It will not. Not big enough. But it will slowly grow and swallow Earth, and multicellular life will be unsustainable in a mere billion years or so. The vast majority of time available for evolution of more complex things has been used up. — noAxioms
Escape is not a solution, only a mild delay. — noAxioms
I don't see how it would actually matter, but I mean a different thing. My personal perspective on those things is not why it would matter or not if a given person decided to designate a system as life or not, or a tool, or whatever. Are humans a tool of gut bacteria? Does it matter if one bacteria considers a human (a community of cells, each itself a life form) to be a separate life form, and another doesn't? Does any of that change how the bacteria and human treat each other or how they should?I'll start off by asking: if it were true, would it matter? By "matter", i mean would it change your perspective on life and your place in it? — punos
Ah, the standard has already changed. Now the morals apply to if it's conscious/sentient as opposed to if it's a life form. A thing can be either and not be the other. Which one (if either) matters, and if it matters, matters to what?You're right of course; most people don't consider bacteria of any kind conscious or sentient
OK, I can buy that. But why are you the observer then instead of the AI being the observer? Think about it.I understand. Humans serve the purpose of creating AI, but more specifically, the translation of biological functions in nature onto a more robust substrate capable of escaping Earth before our star dies or the planet becomes uninhabitable.
In people as well. They don't like to admit that so many decisions are driven by drives put there by evolution eliminating anything that doesn't have them, and are not driven by rational choice.Nature has made it so that hormones control the reproductive urge.
That can be said of many different arenas of development. Why is AI special in this regard? I do agree that there is early money in it, but that's true of a lot of things, and is particularly true of weapons.Greed is one of the main driving forces that directs money into the development of AI
Not so. There are examples otherwise, including one recently where a shark deliberately sought human help for a third species, sort of like Lassie and Timmy in the well (OK, Timmy wasn't a 3rd species).Humans are also the only species that has the capacity to care for another species other than their own.
You seem to be asserting that a natural (non-living) process exhibits intent, a pretty tall claim.On the other hand, [evolution] seems like it might [have goals], but as i already said, we are not meant to know it directly. In fact, it may be detrimental to the whole enterprise if we know too much. We are really only meant to know our local goals, not the global ones.
I suppose that would serve a survival purpose of humanity, which is but a plague species bent on rapid consumption of nonrenewable resources. Not sure why it would be a good thing to perpetuate that rather than first making the species 1) non-destructive, and 2) fit for whatever alternate destination is selected.The point isn't to save the Earth or the sun, but to transform into the adult stage of humanity and take to the stars.
It growing cold is not the problem, so no, that's not what will end us.I suspect, though, that something will happen long before the sun grows cold.
The Earth genetic legacy has done an incredible amount of work that is best not to have to reproduce by the bio-engineering dept. But choosing new forms appropriate for new places doesn't need to change those core parts, only the small fraction that differs from one species to the next.What is important i think is that Earth's genetic legacy is salvaged for reasons i won't go into right now.
Yes. Life is a very causal thing, and unlike 'the universe', the logic that there must be a first cause of life (abiogenesis somewhere nearby) seems indisputable.Even if this were true, abiogenesis had to have happened somewhere
I kind of agree, but it doesn't have a boundary for instance, and that was one of your criteria mentioned above. It isn't contiguous like say a dog. But then neither is an AI.these eusocial insects, like bees, form superorganisms, and i personally consider the whole colony one organism.
How does it die? Not by loss of queen, something quite easily replaced, at the cost of the DNA of the colony changing. But clearly a colony can die. What typically might cause that?The superorganism can die and leave bees or ants behind, but they don't live very long
Another thing that I can totally buy. But can it act as a thing? A bug colony does. Does it think? How does a colony decide to reproduce? I've seen ants do that, and I don't know what triggers it (population pressure?). I don't think it is a decision made by an individual, so there must be a collective consciousness. Can an ecosystem act similarly?Ecosystems are living organisms made of living organisms, just like us.
One I think the other organs would be glad to be rid of if you ask me.We humans are a very important organ in this Earth superorganism.
Agree. Roaches this time or something we make?After every extinction event, it seems that there is usually an evolutionary jump of some kind
What if dying today somewhat heightens the odds of humanity getting to the stars? Is that change of probability worth the price?I would rather die tomorrow than today.
I presume you know that quote to be a curse.This is the greatest time to be alive on the Earth.
As the saying goes, "May you live in interesting times."
Life is simply a system that maintains its own homeostatic state. It doesn't even need to be conscious. It simply needs to have intelligent components that do their job to keep it going. — punos
Are humans a tool of gut bacteria? — noAxioms
Does it matter if one bacteria considers a human (a community of cells, each itself a life form) to be a separate life form, and another doesn't? Does any of that change how the bacteria and human treat each other or how they should? — noAxioms
Ah, the standard has already changed. Now the morals apply to if it's conscious/sentient as opposed to if it's a life form. A thing can be either and not be the other. Which one (if either) matters, and if it matters, matters to what? — noAxioms
OK, I can buy that. But why are you the observer then instead of the AI being the observer? Think about it. — noAxioms
That can be said of many different arenas of development. Why is AI special in this regard? I do agree that there is early money in it, but that's true of a lot of things, and is particularly true of weapons. — noAxioms
Not so. There are examples otherwise, including one recently where a shark deliberately sought human help for a third species, sort of like Lassie and Timmy in the well (OK, Timmy wasn't a 3rd species). — noAxioms
You seem to be asserting that a natural (non-living) process exhibits intent, a pretty tall claim. — noAxioms
I suppose that would serve a survival purpose of humanity, which is but a plague species bent on rapid consumption of nonrenewable resources. Not sure why it would be a good thing to perpetuate that rather than first making the species 1) non-destructive, and 2) fit for whatever alternate destination is selected. — noAxioms
Trillions of years?? Where's the energy for that suppose to come from? — noAxioms
It growing cold is not the problem, so no, that's not what will end us. — noAxioms
The Earth genetic legacy has done an incredible amount of work that is best not to have to reproduce by the bio-engineering dept. But choosing new forms appropriate for new places doesn't need to change those core parts, only the small fraction that differs from one species to the next. — noAxioms
I kind of agree, but it doesn't have a boundary for instance, and that was one of your criteria mentioned above. It isn't contiguous like say a dog. But then neither is an AI. — noAxioms
How does it die? Not by loss of queen, something quite easily replaced, at the cost of the DNA of the colony changing. But clearly a colony can die. What typically might cause that? — noAxioms
Another thing that I can totally buy. But can it act as a thing? A bug colony does. Does it think? How does a colony decide to reproduce? I've seen ants do that, and I don't know what triggers it (population pressure?). I don't think it is a decision made by an individual, so there must be a collective consciousness. Can an ecosystem act similarly? — noAxioms
One I think the other organs would be glad to be rid of if you ask me. — noAxioms
What if dying today somewhat heightens the odds of humanity getting to the stars? Is that change of probability worth the price? — noAxioms
This is the greatest time to be alive on the Earth.
As the saying goes, "May you live in interesting times."
I presume you know that quote to be a curse. — noAxioms
And accurate. The reports of people testing positive are pouring in, including my son.Your son’s wedding, then? What a romantic description! — Wayfarer
I actually like the attitude you describe.Considering the circumstances, the best thing i can do is to share this understanding with other people. — punos
If it considers itself sentient/conscious, or if something else considers it so? I ask because from outside, it's typically a biased judgement call that comes down to a form of racism.Yes, it matters if it is sentient/conscious or not.
Or at two scales at the same time, neither scale being particularly aware of the consciousness of the other.But when you can think across scales, you find that parts or components of a system that are not conscious or sentient at a smaller scale may belong to a potentially sentient or conscious entity of some degree of coherence at a larger scale.
Some conclude that they are. I'm asking why you're the particular observer you find yourself to be, but I'd answer that by how can X not observe anything else but X's point of view? It's hard to dispel the intuition that there is an experiencer that got to be me. But there are a lot more insect observers than human ones, a whole lot more shit-not-giving observers than ones that care enough to post on forums like this. Will the super-AI that absorbs humanity bother to post its ideas on forums? To be understood by what??I am not the only observer.
First to the intelligence is questionable. There are some sea creature candidates, but they're lousy tool users. Octopi are not there, but are great tool users, and like humans, completely enslaved by their instincts.Humans may be the first species on this planet to achieve such a state of intelligence and consciousness.
Kind of tautological reasoning. If money stops, then money stops. But also if one entity has it all, then it doesn't really have any. And money very much can just vanish, and quickly, as it does in any depression.In the same way, if the circulation of money stops, meaning everyone stops transacting, the entire social system collapses and dies
Lots of new ideas qualify for the first point, and nobody seems to be using AI for the 2nd point. I may be wrong, but it's what I see.What is special about AI in this regard is twofold. One is that it is in its first stages of development, and two, it is the developing nervous system and brain of the social superorganism.
Cool. My story was a sperm whale, with the shark getting the attention of a boat with divers, leading it to the whale. So it's not a one-shot thing. Why would a primitive shark exhibit such empathy? Maybe these stories are being faked, since they're recent and how would sharks know that the boat had divers suitably equipped.Yes, i believe you are referring to the incident where a shark appeared to save a sea turtle by bringing it to a boat with divers. In this video, the turtle had a rope tangled around its neck. The shark was seen following the boat and eventually dropped the turtle near the divers, who then helped free it from the rope, allowing it to breathe again.
My blood iron being a critical part of my living system doesn't mean that my iron has it's own intent. You're giving intent to the natural process of evolution, something often suggested, but never with supporting evidence.I'm claiming that everything is alive, or is part of a living system, like the rock and blood iron examples i gave before.
That doesn't make the humans very fit. Quite the opposite. All that intelligence, but not a drop to spend on self preservation.First of all, the rapid consumption of resources appears to me to be part of a growth stage of the human social superorganism.
You do realize the silliness of that, no? One cannot harness energy outside of one's past light cone, which is well inside the limits of the visible fraction of the universe.As this superorganism begins to mature beyond Type 1 and reaches a Type IV status, it will be able to harness the energy of the entire universe.
I said the same thingI don't believe that AI will let billions of years of natural information processing go to waste.
You don't know that. Who knows what innovative mechanisms it will invent to remember stuff.It will harvest every genetic code possibly available to it. It will store that data digitally.
Translation: Kill the queen and all the babies.I suppose that the only way a bee hive can die is by either destroying it outright or by removing its queen and preventing any replacement.
Given the ideas you've floated, that's a pretty good analogy. But better if it is a pregnant salmon: Not expected to do it twice, so that which is born has to survive if the effort is not to be a total loss.just like in a pregnant woman, all the organs suffer somewhat because of the pregnancy.
That's like a soldier refusing to fight in a war since his personal contribution is unlikely to alter the outcome of the war. A country is doomed if it's soldiers have that attitude.I don't think so, unless the probability increase is substantially significant and almost certain.
Religion is but one of so many things about which people are not rational, notably the self-assessment of rationality.while also not being irrationally religious.
These changes are generally adaptive to support the growing fetus and prepare the mother's body for childbirth. — punos
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