See this recent discussion with Yvain:
Xixidu:
I am not sure how much I have read. Maybe 30 posts? I haven't found any flaws so far. But I feel that there are huge flaws.
Vladimir (not Yvain, my mistake):
Given the amount of activity you've applied to arguing about these topics (you wrote 82 LW posts during the last 1.5 years), I must say this is astonishing!
This is a reply to a comment by Yvain and everyone who might have misunderstood what problem I tried to highlight.
Here is the problem. You can't estimate the probability and magnitude of the advantage an AI will have if you are using something that is as vague as the concept of 'intelligence'.
Here is a case that bears some similarity and might shed light on what I am trying to explain:
The use of 'intelligence' is as misleading and dishonest in evaluating risks from AI as the use of 'tech' in Star Trek.
It is true that 'intelligence', just as 'technology' has some explanatory power. Just like 'emergence' has some explanatory power. As in "the morality of an act is an emergent phenomena of a physical system: it refers to the physical relations among the components of that system". But it does not help to evaluate the morality of an act or in predicting if a given physical system will exhibit moral properties.