SMBC comic: poorly programmed average-utility-maximizing AI
It's a total-utility maximising AI.
if it was a total utility maximizing AI it would clone the utility monster (or start cloning everyone else if the utility monster is super linear) edit: on the other hand, if it was average utility maximizing AI it would kill everyone else leaving just the utility monster. In any case there'd be some serious population 'adjustment'.
Felix means happy (or lucky), and is the origin of the word felicity. It took me a while to realize this, so I thought I would note it. Is it obvious for all native English speakers?
The latest SMBC comic is now an illustrated children's story which more or less brings up parallel thoughts to Cynical about Cynicism.
Everyone's talking about this as if it was a hypothetical, but as far as I can tell it describes pretty accurately how hierarchical human civilizations tend to organize themselves once they hit a certain size. Isn't a divine ruler precisely someone who is more deserving and more able to absorb resources? Aren't the lower orders people who would not appreciate luxuries and indeed have fully internalized such a fact ("Not for the likes of me")
If you skip the equality requirement, it seems history is full of utilitarian societies.
Felix is 3^^^3 units happy. And no dust speck in his eyes. What is torturing millions for this noble goal?
I, of course, reject that "sequence" which preaches exactly this.
That's because your brain doesn't have the ability to imagine just how happy Felix is and fails to weigh his actual happiness against humanity's.
Look. You have one person, under terrible torture for 50 years on one side and a gazillion of people with a slight discomfort every year or so on the other side.
It is claimed that the first is better.
Now, you have a small humanity as is, only enslaved for pyramid building for Felix. He has eons of subjective time to enjoy this pyramids and he is unbelievably happy. More happy than any man, woman or child could ever be. The amount of happiness of Felix outweights the misery of billion of people by a factor of a million.
What's the fundamental difference between those two cases? I don't see it, do you?
The only similarity between those cases is that they involve utility calculations you disagree with. Otherwise every single detail is completely different. (e. g. the sort of utility considered, two negative utilities being traded against each other vs. trading utility elsewhere (positive and negative) for positive utility, which side of the trade the single person with the large individual utility difference is on, the presence of perverse incentives, etc, etc).
If anything it would be more logical to equate Felix with the tortured person and treat this as a reductio ad absurdum of your position on the dust speck problem. (But that would be wrong too, since the numbers aren't actually the problem with Felix, the fact that there's an incentive to manipulate your own utility function that way is (among other things).)
Be specific about what you are asking, please. What does the "what if" mean here? Whether these thing should be considered good? Whether such things should be considered "wireheading"? Whether we want an AI to do such things? What?
I'm trying to make you think a little deeper about your distinction between wireheading and non-wireheading. The point is that your choice of the dividing line is entirely arbitrary (and most people don't agree where to put dividing line). I don't know where you put the dividing line, and frankly I don't care; i just want you to realize that you're drawing arbitrary line on the beach, to the left of it is the land, to the right is the ocean. edit: That's how maps work, not how territory works, btw.
This claim doesn't seem to make much sense to me. I've already been made non-objectionably happy by people more intelligent than me from time to time. My parents, when I was child. Good writers and funny entertainers, as an adult. How does it become authomatically "really objectionable" if it's "something more intelligent than human" as opposed to "something more intelligent than you, personally?"
I'd say, they had a goal to achieve something other than happiness , and the happiness was incidental.
I'm trying to make you think a little deeper about your distinction between wireheading and non-wireheading.
Don't assume you know how deeply I think about it. The only thing I've effectively communicated to you so far that I consider it ludicrous to say that "achieving happiness by anything other than reproduction, is already wireheading"
We can agree Yes/No, that this discussion doesn't have much of anything to do with the Felix scenario, right? Please answer this question.
...The point is that your choice of the dividing line is entirely arbit
I laughed: SMBC comic.