No, I'm not saying anything at all about temperature or the model; I was talking about the social effects, eg 'positive effect on society'.
Positive and negative in this day and age is dominated by public opinion and is very different than what it was back then. His view back then could have been as simple as "fewer people will freeze to death and there will be more arable land and better crops". Ours view today marginalizes those effects and seems almost entirely based on the idea that change of any sort is negative.
Oh, I’msure he gave different weights to different things in his utility function than say…well pretty much anyone other human…but there are plenty of models that show a disaster for any “typical” human utility function. The ones showing disaster: venus and disaster: new ice age…are not exactly rare, though I’m not exactly sure how seriously to take them myself.
"Positive and negative in this day and age is dominated by public opinion"
Relying on Public Opinion is a cheap and dirty variant of Auffman's agreement theorem; it gives plenty of bad res...
In Intelligence Explosion analysis draft: introduction, Luke Muehlhauser and Anna Salamon wrote
As a part of the project "Can we know what to do about AI?", I've summarized my initial impressions of Arrhenius's predictions and the impact that they might have had. The object level material is all draw from Wikipedia, and I have not vetted it.
Taking this all together, based on my surface impressions, I think that this case study gives evidence against attempting to predict the far future being useful: