Ghatanathoah comments on In Praise of Boredom - Less Wrong
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Eliezer never literally referred to the word "maximize," but the thrust of his essay is that a society that purposefully maximizes, or at least greatly increases novelty, is far more interesting than one that doesn't. He claimed that, for this reason, a paperclip maximizing civilization would be valueless, because paperclips are all the same.
You said:
In this instance you are using "maximize" to mean "Has a statistical tendency to increase something." You are claiming that everything humans do is uninteresting because it has a statistical tendency to increase entropy and destroy entropy gradients, and entropy is uninteresting. You're ignoring the fact that when humans create, we create art, socialization, science, literature, architecture, history, and all sorts of wonderful things. Paperclip maximizers just create the same paperclip, over and over again. It doesn't matter how much entropy gets made in the process, humans are a quadrillion times more interesting because there is so much diversity in what we do.
Claiming that all the wonderful, varied, and diverse things humans do is no more interesting than paperclipping, just because you could describe it as "entropy maximization" is ridiculous. You might as well say that all events are equally uninteresting because you can describe all of them as "stuff happening."
So yes, Eliezer never used the word "maximize" but he definitely claimed that creatures that didn't value novelty would be boring. And you did attempt to refute his claim by claiming that our civilization's statistical tendency to increase entropy means that creating art, conversation, science, etc. is no different from paperclipping. I think my objection stands.