Surely not ... Does Greg Egan understand how "a small chance every year" can build into "almost certain by this date"? Because that was convincing for me:
I can easily see humans building work-arounds or stop-gaps for most major problems, and continuing business mostly as usual. We run out of fossil fuels, so we get over our distrust of nuclear energy because it's the only way. We don't slow environmental damage enough, so agriculture suffers, so we get over our distrust of genetically modified plants because it's the only way. And so on.
Then some article somewhere reminded me that business as usual includes repeated attempts at artificial intelligence. And runaway AI is not something we can build a work-around for; given a long enough timespan and faith in human ingenuity, we'll push through all the other non-instant-game-over events until we finally succeed at making the game end instantly.
Does Greg Egan understand how "a small chance every year" can build into "almost certain by this date"?
If independent.
Link: johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com/2011/04/24/what-to-do/
His answer, as far as I can tell, seems to be that his Azimuth Project does trump the possibility of working directly on friendly AI or to support it indirectly by making and contributing money.
It seems that he and other people who understand all the arguments in favor of friendly AI and yet decide to ignore it, or disregard it as unfeasible, are rationalizing.
I myself took a different route, I was rather trying to prove to myself that the whole idea of AI going FOOM is somehow flawed rather than trying to come up with justifications for why it would be better to work on something else.
I still have some doubts though. Is it really enough to observe that the arguments in favor of AI going FOOM are logically valid? When should one disregard tiny probabilities of vast utilities and wait for empirical evidence? Yet I think that compared to the alternatives the arguments in favor of friendly AI are water-tight.
The problem why I and other people seem to be reluctant to accept that it is rational to support friendly AI research is that the consequences are unbearable. Robin Hanson recently described the problem:
I believe that people like me feel that to fully accept the importance of friendly AI research would deprive us of the things we value and need.
I feel that I wouldn't be able to justify what I value on the grounds of needing such things. It feels like that I could and should overcome everything that isn't either directly contributing to FAI research or that helps me to earn more money that I could contribute.
Some of us value and need things that consume a lot of time...that's the problem.