An intelligence of level 1 acts on innate algorithms, like a bacterium that survives using inherited mechanisms.
This suggestion seems disengaged from the biological literature. It has become known in recent years, for instance, that bacteria live very complicated social lives. From The Social Lives of Microbes:
...It used to be assumed that bacteria and other microorganisms lived relatively independent unicellular lives, without the cooperative behaviors that have provoked so much interest in mammals, birds, and insects. However, a rapidly expanding bod
I have the sense that this may be too simple.
Are humans structurally distinguishable from paperclip maximizers?
Are "innate algorithms" and "finds new algorithms" really qualitatively different?
I sometimes consider this topic. I would phrase it "How can intelligence generally be categorized?" Ideally we would be able to measure and categorize the intelligence level of anything; for example rocks, bacterium, eco-systems, suns, algorithms (AI), aliens that are smarter than humans.
Intelligence appears to be related to the level of abstraction that can be managed. This is roughly what is captured in the OP's list. Higher levels of abstraction allow an intelligence to integrate input from broader or more complex contexts, to model and to res...
It looks for goals and algorithms to achieve the goald.
What criterion should it use to choose between goals?
(also, there's a typo)
Depends in which sense you mean a moral system to be "absolute".
I would agree that there is probably an "absolute moral system" that all humans would agree on, even if we may not be able to precisely formulate it right now (or at least, a system that most non-pathological humans could be convinced they agree with).
However, that doesn't mean that any intelligence (AI or alien) would eventually settle on those morals.
But I believe that there is one single right answer. Otherwise, it becomes quite confusing.
That doesn't sound like a very good reason to believe something.
(I would agree that there is probably a single right answer for humans)
Well, the absolute moral system I meant does encompass everything, incl. AI and alien intelligence. It is true that different moral problems require different solutions, that is also true to physics. Objects in vacuum behave differently than in the atmosphere. Water behaves differently than ice, but they are all governed by the same physics, so I assume.
A similar problem may have a different solution if the situation is different. An Edo-ero samurai and a Wall Street banker may behave perfectly moral even if they act differently to the same problem due to...
Level 1: Algorithm-based Intelligence
An intelligence of level 1 acts on innate algorithms, like a bacterium that survives using inherited mechanisms.
Level 2: Goal-oriented Intelligence
An intelligence of level 2 has an innate goal. It develops and finds new algorithms to solve a problem. For example, the paperclip maximizer is a level-2 intelligence.
Level 3: Philosophical Intelligence
An intelligence of level 3 has neither any preset algorithms nor goals. It looks for goals and algorithms to achieve the goal. Ethical questions are only applicable to intelligence of level 3.