Jinnetic Engineering, by Richard Stallman

1 Post author: MBlume 28 April 2010 01:24AM

Thought the community might enjoy this:

Jinnetic Engineering

Comments (10)

Comment author: CronoDAS 28 April 2010 11:35:06PM 2 points [-]

I was kind of unimpressed...

Comment author: Vladimir_Nesov 28 April 2010 03:41:24AM 15 points [-]

A top-level post should include at least a description or representative quote.

Comment author: brian_jaress 02 May 2010 06:29:06PM *  0 points [-]

I agree, but I upvoted it anyway because I thought it was interesting and funny.

I read it as a commentary on how, when we daydream about "breaking the rules" (or discovering a fundamental rule that changes the way we live) all the myths have trained us to think selfishly. She wants to use her three wishes to end disease for everyone, and it's like she asked to accept an Academy Award in a clown suit.

EDIT: grammar

Comment author: mattnewport 28 April 2010 01:59:02AM 6 points [-]

I like this link but I'm afraid I don't feel it is worth 10 points so I have upvoted a random comment instead.

Comment author: RobinZ 28 April 2010 02:03:39AM 4 points [-]

As it stands, it would be an excellent Open Thread comment.

Comment author: GreenRoot 04 May 2010 06:22:17PM 0 points [-]

Nice link, but would be better as on open thread comment.

Comment author: vizikahn 28 April 2010 11:17:05AM 0 points [-]

Thanks for this! I recently tried to find this story, but couldn't remember who wrote it or what the title was.

Comment author: humpolec 28 April 2010 10:02:51AM 0 points [-]

What, no bad ending?

Comment author: [deleted] 01 May 2010 06:45:24PM *  2 points [-]

"First, I want to become much smarter. I want to be far better at solving any kind of puzzle or problem than anyone who has ever lived. Of course, I should not lose any of my other mental abilities (or physical abilities) when I gain this one."

To be perfectly hones being far smarter than anyone who has ever lived may not be that smart. I mean what's the competition? Francis Galton, Issac Newton perhaps Neumann? They didn't build superweapons on their own.

I suppose, and this will be a contraversial statment, the ability to manipulate people due to high inteligence should be our real concern. Analyzing and replicating the speaking abilties and charisma of Hitler or the transeferable skill and tactis of Napoleon/Julius Caesar/Alexander dosen't seem that hard and is a more realistic threat.

Comment author: RolfAndreassen 28 April 2010 06:30:52PM 5 points [-]

Stallman apparently believes that all intelligent people are also ethical and altruistic. We can fill in the bad ending for ourselves. Although, to be fair about it, since practically everyone will catch the superintelligence virus, things would probably even out pretty shortly. Let's just hope nobody with suicidal depression and a mean desire to make others feel as bad as they do has their intelligence increased to the point where they can build a depression-vibe broadcaster, or some other destroy-the-Earth machinery.