Hi there, my background is in AI research and recently I have discovered some AI Alignment communities centered around here. The more I read about AI Alignment, the more I have a feeling that the whole field is basically a fictional-world-building exercise.
Some problems I have noticed: The basic concepts (e.g. what are the basic properties of the AI that are being discussed) are left undefined. The questions answered are build on unrealistic premises about how AI systems might work. Mathiness - using vaguely defined mathematical terms to describe complex problems and then solving them with additional vaguely defined mathematical operations. Combination of mathematical thinking and hand-wavy reasoning that lead to preferred conclusions.
Maybe I am reading it wrong. How would you steelman the argument that AI Alignment is actually a rigorous field? Do you consider AI Alignment to be scientific? If so, how is it Popper-falsifiable?
The field of AI alignment is definitely not a rigorous scientific field, but nor is it anything like a fictional-world-building exercise. It is a crash program to address an existential risk that appears to have a decent chance of happening, and soon in the timescale of civilization, let alone species.
By its very nature it should not be a scientific field in the Popperian sense. By the time we have any experimental data on how any artificial general superintelligence behaves, the field is irrelevant. If we could be sure that it wasn't possible to happen soon, we could take more time to probe out the field and start the likely centuries-long process to make it more rigorous.
So I answer your question by rejecting it. You have presented a false dichotomy.
In my experience, doing something poorly takes more time than doing it properly.