I see. I thought you were more in tune with Eliezer on this issue. I was simply trying to see what would make me take the MIRI research much more seriously. I am fascinated by the mathematical side of it, which is hopefully of high enough quality to attract expert attention, but I am currently much more skeptical of its effects on the odds of humanity surviving the next century or two.
I changed specifics to variables because I was interested more in the broader point than the specific case.
Asteroid tracking involved spending ~$100MM to eliminate most of the expected losses from civilization-wrecking asteroids. Generously, it might have eliminated as much as a 10^-6 extinction risk (if we had found a dinosaur-killer on course our civilization would have mobilized to divert it). At the same tradeoff, getting rid of a 9% extinction risk would seem to be worth $9T or more. Billions are spent on biodefense and nuclear nonproliferation progra...
I'm currently working on a research project for MIRI, and I would welcome feedback on my research as I proceed. In this post, I describe the project.
As a part of an effort to steel-man objections to MIRI's mission, MIRI Executive Director Luke Muehlhauser has asked me to develop the following objection:
In Luke's initial email to me, he wrote:
Luke and I brainstormed a list of potential historical examples of people predicting the future 10+ years out, and using the predictions to inform their actions. We came up with the following potential examples, which I've listed in chronological order by approximate year: