A unified mind can always simulate separate agents.
To within its available resources, sure. But that's under the assumption that there's a categorical difference between multiple agents instantiated on separate hardware and multiple agents instantiated on a single piece of hardware.
Separate agents cannot simulate a unified mind.
Actually, that's the entire notion behind the Society of the Mind: there's no such thing as a "unified mind". Only separate agents that operate as a wholistic system.
If the separate agents all have simultaneous access to the same information that the unified mind would, then they cease being separate agents. In my book, there is no longer a distinction.
I believe there is a significantly false assumption here: that the agents present in human minds are operating with "simultaneous" (or otherwise) access to "the same information".
Furthermore -- the entire concept of stigmergy rests upon the notion that each of these independent agents would produce effects that alter the behaviors of the other independent agents, thus creating an operationally unified whole.
There's a big difference between separate agents all running in one brain (e.g., possibly humans) and separate agents in separate brains (ants).
I submit to you that the differences are more of distance (proximity of computational units) and magnitude ( overall level of currently manifested intellect), and far less of category. That is; I see nothing about the behaviors of siphonophores and ants -- as eusocial collectives -- which prevents in principle a eusocial collective from manifesting tool-making level intellect and/or sentience.
...I find it quite hard to believe you couldn't do even better if you were a single mind perceiving what the ants did and controlling them (which is how you are set up in this game).
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If the separate agents all have simultaneous access to the same information ... then they cease being separate agents ... .
There's a big difference between separate agents all running in one brain (e.g., possibly humans) and separate agents in separate brains (ants).
I believe there is a significantly false assumption here: that the agents present in human minds are op
Aichallenge.org has started their third AI contest this year: Ants.
I mentioned this in the open thread, and there was a discussion about possibly making one or more "official" LessWrong teams. D_Alex has offered a motivational prize. If this interests you, please discuss in the comments!