This is our monthly thread for collecting arbitrarily contrived scenarios in which somebody gets tortured for 3^^^^^3 years, or an infinite number of people experience an infinite amount of sorrow, or a baby gets eaten by a shark, etc. and which might be handy to link to in one of our discussions. As everyone knows, this is the most rational and non-obnoxious way to think about incentives and disincentives.
- Please post all infinite-torture scenarios separately, so that they can be voted up/down separately. (If they are strongly related, reply to your own comments. If strongly ordered, then go ahead and post them together.)
- No more than 5 infinite-torture scenarios per person per monthly thread, please.
In the comment section of Roko's banned post, PeerInfinity mentioned "rescue simulations". I'm not going to post the context here because I respect Eliezer's dictatorial right to stop that discussion, but here's another disturbing thought.
An FAI created in the future may take into account our crazy desire that the all the suffering in the history of the world hadn't happened. Barring time machines, it cannot reach into the past and undo the suffering (and we know that hasn't happened anyway), but acausal control allows it to do the next best thing: create large numbers of history sims where bad things get averted. This raises two questions: 1) if something very bad is about to happen to you, what's your credence that you're in a rescue sim and have nothing to fear? 2) if something very bad has already happened to you, does this constitute evidence that we will never build an FAI?
(If this isn't clear: just like PlaidX's post, my comment is intended as a reductio ad absurdum of any fears/hopes concerning future superintelligences. I'd still appreciate any serious answers though.)
Given the Mathematical Universe/Many-Worlds/Simulation Argument everything good and bad is happening to you, i.e. is timeless.
I can't follow all the fear-mongering about potential multiple-infinite-hyper-effective torture scenarios here. It's a really old idea called 'hell'. It'll be/is an interesting experience, at least you won't be dead. Get over it, it's probably happening anyway.