EDIT: The full post is now up
Oh boy do I have a response for you.
I think it may be possible to significantly enhance adult intelligence through gene editing.
The basic idea goes something like this:
- There are about 20,000 genetic variants that influence fluid intelligence
- Most of the variance among humans is determined by the number of IQ-decreasing minor alleles someone has.
- If you can flip a significant portion of those IQ-decreasing alleles to their IQ increasing counterparts, you can likely significantly increase someone's intelligence
- The effect size is going to be smaller than it would be if you made those same edits in an embryo because some of the genes you're targeting are only active during development. But my best guess at the moment is that we would still expect a gain of several standard deviations. However I am not very certain about this because I have not yet gotten access to SOTA genetic predictors of intelligence.
There are a million little details to get into, especially those related to the delivery of an editing vector, avoiding a negative immune response and avoiding off-target edits. But after researching this with a couple of collaborators for the last month and a half, I am starting to think this is going to be possible.
What's more, there are already several clinical trails underway right now that plan to use the same gene editing delivery platform that I have in mind for this kind of adult intelligence enhancement.
IF one could get this protocol to work, the actual experience of the procedure would be kind of magical: you'd literally get an intravenous injection (and possibly some medication to temporarily suppress your immune system) and your fluid intelligence would improve by a couple of standard deviations within about a week. I suspect it would take further months to years for the full benefits of the change to become clear, since crystallized intelligence is what really determines outcomes.
It's difficult to predict how long it will take to roll out something like this in an actual human trial, but I think it's plausible we could have something working within 5 years, which might be soon enough to significantly impact the trajectory of AI.
I'm working on a longer post about this, so I'll ping you when it goes up.
This comment was assuming causal variants are known, which I admit is a big gimme. More of a first-principles type eye-balling.