The goal was to make a Singularity Summit post you can show to smart people who haven't heard of the intelligence explosion.
The story points out the two previous times that a new and much better type of optimization process appeared. There's no particular reason to think that there will never be another one, and it seems plausible that a sufficiently good optimization process that works on itself (1) could be the third and (2) could run on a computer.
Agreed. I'll leave the original main comment, but after this, creationism (called ID or otherwise) is cause for comment removal.
Disagreed. -16 vote is sufficient to inform readers of how worthy the content is of their attention. If Vladimir doesn't heed the warning, it's his problem.
What's the downside? The problem is that you have to vote it down first, and some people won't stop posting, thus adding more and more noise to sort out, furthermore some people will answer, etc. It's more robust this way, in uncontroversial cases.
Maybe there should be a more general rule: people have to stop posting (at least for a few days) on a topic if their comments on these topics receive consistent significant negative votes.
Voting down the root comment of the offending comment tree is enough to hide it entirely regardless how big it is.
Mind you, repeatedly posting out of context top level comments to subvert the tree structure would constitute spam which is another matter entirely.
Why no discussing creationism/ID on relevant topics? Do you have a justification for this policy like "politics is the mind-killer" or are there some ideas we just don't want to have to argue? Is it really enough noise to kill the channel?
The goal was to make a singularity Summit post you can show to smart people who haven't heard of the intelligence explosion.
DS3618: "Have you ever considered that naturalistic explanations cannot explain DNA, or the Cambrian explosion... I challenge you to explain how through naturalistic processes you can form even the simplest bacteria (which by the way has ~160 kilobases)"
My formula for the origin of life is "RNA world plus micelles".
A micelle is a self-organized sphere of hydrophobic molecules. "RNA world" refers to a stage when you don't have the division of labor between DNA (information) and protein (structure), with RNA instead doing double duty (information from sequence, structure from conformation). Lipids and RNA polymers are capable of forming spontaneously in abiotic circumstances. So the idea is that the lipids mechanically self-organized into populations of micelles, which in turn contained different populations of RNA polymers. RNAs can both reproduce (in that one RNA strand can serve as a template for the formation of a second) and catalytically interact with each other (thus increasing or decreasing the reproduction rate of the other RNA species in a population). Finally one supposes a physical process, such as turbulence, which keeps breaking up these RNA-loaded micelles. Voila, you have a population of protocells subject to natural selection.
This is just a sketch of how biological evolution might get underway, by someone who is not even a biologist. But I don't think it's that hard to understand.
And as for the Cambrian explosion, if you know anything about how tissue differentiation and embyronic development work, I don't see how you could regard it as fundamentally mysterious. Sponges are the primordial multicellular lifeform and they already have the relevant genetic regulatory networks. Once that level of genetic complexity exists, it's not that amazing to see how it could lead to the diversity of multicellular life that we have now. So in a way the question is just, how did we get sponges. I am fond of the theory (promoted by John Mattick and others) that the essential new step involved in the transition to complex multicellularity is the development of a new level of genetic regulation involving transcribed intronic RNAs which never become protein but which do play a regulatory role controlling other genes. The idea is that this extra level of regulatory complexity permitted the transition from homogeneous colonies of single-celled organisms to multicellular organisms with differentiated tissues. But again, the bottom line is that this stuff does not look fundamentally mysterious. There's plenty to discover about how it might have happened and how it did happen, but it's not baffling, let alone naturalistically impossible.
As you know, the Singularity Summit 2009 is on the weekend of Oct 3 - Oct 4. What is it, you ask? I'll start from the beginning...
An interesting collection of molecules occupied a certain tide pool 3.5 to 4.5 billion years ago, interesting because the molecule collection built copies of itself out of surrounding molecules, and the resulting molecule collections also replicated while accumulating beneficial mutations. Those molecule collections satisfied a high-level functional criterion called "genetic fitness", and it happened by pure chance.
If you think about all the possible arrangements of atoms that can occupy a 1-millimeter by 1-millimeter by 1-millimeter cube of space, most of them are going to suck at causing the future universe to contain copies of themselves. Genetic fitness is a vanishingly small target in configuration-space.
And if you studied the universe 5 billion years ago, you would not see a process capable of hitting such a small target. No physical process could create low-entropy collections of atoms satisfying high-level functional criteria. The second law of thermodynamics thus ensured that mice, as well as mousetraps, were physically impossible.
Then a mutating replicator randomly emerged, and suddenly Earth was home to something special: the process of Natural Selection. Natural Selection optimizes for genetic fitness. It squeezes the space of possible futures into a tiny subspace -- the space of universes that contain self-replicators which are very good at self-replicating. And it remained a flickering candle of optimization in a dark, random universe for three billion years.
An interesting product of Natural Selection occupied a certain region of savannah 100 thousand to 2 million years ago, interesting because it could form internal representations of the world around it and predict the consequences of its own actions. By pure chance, Natural Selection had created its successor.
Thought is a more powerful process than Natural Selection. Thought can optimize atom configurations much faster than Natural Selection can. It takes much less time to think of a big design improvement for an organism, than to breed it for as many generations as it takes for a specimen to manifest one.
Now remember, Natural Selection emerged by coincidence -- not by Natural Selection. Processes that optimize for genetic fitness were previously not to be found in the universe. And remember, Thought was evolved by coincidence -- not by Thought. Organs that represent the world around them and make predictions were previously not to be found among the optimized organisms of Earth.
It is still early in the age of optimization processes. Brains are not very good equipment for doing optimization -- Natural Selection just hacked them together out of cells. Yet, Thought is much more powerful than Natural Selection. So what happens when Thought designs an optimization process more powerful than Thought?
What happens when that optimization process designs an optimization process that is more powerful still?
The Singularity Summit is about the critical transition into the third era of optimization processes, the successor to human Thought. To say we need to be careful about initial conditions is to make the understatement of our own entire era.