I've been hearing murmurs about a recently formed philosophy called "Effective Accelerationism", described as:[1]
...an ideology that draws from Nick Land's theories of accelerationism to advocate for the belief that artificial intelligence and LLMs will lead to a post-scarcity technological utopia. E/acc communities on Twitter were primarily fostered on Twitter Spaces, with e/acc manifestos being shared using the newsletter platform Substack.
One example of said Substack manifestos, Notes on e/acc principles and tenets, outlines on an object level the thesis motivating e/acc. TL;DR:[2]
- is: life emerged as a principle of a generalized 2nd law of thermodynamics
- is: due to this physical (observed) law, life tends to seek to capture "free energy" (aka the accursed share in terms of Bataille perhaps) to increase its scope/complexity or maintain its existence
- ethical/moral claim - the ought: we should seek to "accelerate" (must mean to intensify, not in the physics sense of acceleration, where acceleration could simply mean constantly changing direction) this process of growth of organisms/meta-orgranisms to achieve greater and greater capture of free energy and thus more complex systems of intelligence (they demarcate this as ultimately being about the imperative that "in order to spread to the stars, the light of consciousness/intelligence will have to be transduced to non-biological substrates"
I don't know enough about complex systems and epistemology to be able to assess these arguments, which is why I'm posting about them here. My outside view is that the majority of e/acc discourse appears to be memes on Twitter, which doesn't give me much hope in the epistemic rigor underlying the philosophy? Reddit user I-am-a-person-
summarizes what was close to my initial reaction after reading the Substack post:[3]
The problem with this argument is that it does a really bad job arguing why “capturing free energy” is actually the goal we ought to strive for.
If I understand the gist of e/acc correctly, I'm very skeptical of the idea that maintaining diversity/competition/entropy by accelerating and open-sourcing AI capabilities research is more likely to result in good outcomes for society than being more cautious and authoritarian.
Some questions to spark conversation
- What are your thoughts on the community behind this philosophy and its bizarre, memetic method for outreach?
- If you know enough about thermodynamics/philosophy/etc and read the whole manifesto, how do the object-level arguments underpinning e/acc hold up?
- Do you think this movement poses a serious risk of accelerating AI capabilities research?
More links
I have not listened to either of the following pieces of content.
- Moment of Zen episode 12: Effective Accelerationism and the AI Safety Debate w/ Bayeslord, Beff Jezoz, and Nathan Labenz
Anonymous founders of the Effective Accelerations (e/acc) movement @Bayeslord and Beff Jezos (@BasedBeff) join Erik Torenberg, Dan Romero, and Nathan Labenz to debate views on AI safety.
- Reason is Fun episode 0: Effective Altruism, X-risk, (e/acc)
Lulie asks physicist David Deutsch about the epistemology of Effective Altruism, how to make progress given the unpredictability of knowledge, and whether we should be concerned about existential risk. In the second half, she asks about Effective Accelerationism (e/acc) – specifically, is its thermodynamic physics legit?
"Teach more faster to younger": We have had such a time in our history before: it was called the Cold War, and especially the decades of the 1960s and 1970s. I studied physics during that era, and it was way too fast with too little reflection. Some of the spirit of that age is captured in Lee Smolin's The Trouble with Physics.
About the thermodynamic basis for e/acc more generally, it always interests me how people ascribe such authority to thermodynamics. The Laws of Thermodynamics are usually framed in an adiabatic regime, i.e., one where the time rate of change is very slow. The "laws" are silent about the rate of reactions. E.g., some people try to frame exhaustion of fossil fuels in thermodynamic terms, as exhaustion of "low-entropy resources," but in fact fossil fuels are renewables -- it just takes a very long time.
Rates of reactions are covered by kinetics, not thermodynamics. I haven't yet seen any e/acc discussion framed in terms of kinetics. Here, too "faster" is not necessarily desirable. In chemistry, too-fast kinetics in an energy-releasing reaction can literally blow up in your faces. I suspect the same will be true at a metaphorical level: "explosions" of creative "energy," too, often have unforeseen and unwelcome results.