How do human beings produce knowledge? When we describe rational thought processes, we tend to think of them as essentially deterministic, deliberate, and algorithmic. After some self-examination, however, Alkjash came to think that his process is closer to babbling many random strings and later filtering by a heuristic.
I'm really confused, we must not be watching the same films or television because almost by virtue of being a hallucination scene it is inherently depicted as different, or more stylized than the rest of the film as a way of telegraphing to the audience that what they are watching is a hallucination and not real. Not realistic, in fact they often make a point of making them less "realistic" than the surrounding film.
Crisp? Depends on what you consider crisp - the negative space and white in Miss Cartiledge's scene certainly makes the colours "pop" more. Bu...
When talking about why the models improve, people frequently focus on algorithmic improvements and on hardware improvements. This leaves out improvements in data quality.
DeepResearch provides a huge quantity of high quality analysis reports. GPT5 will almost certainly be trained on all the DeepResearch requests (where there are no reason to believe they are wrong like bad user feedback) of users that haven't opted out of their data being used for training. This means that when users ask GPT5 questions where no human has written an anlaysis of the question, GPT5 might still get facts right because of past DeepResearch reports.
This means that the big companies who do have a massive amount of users that produce a massive amount of DeepResearch requests will have a leg-up that's hard...
Note: This is a linkpost from my personal substack. This is on a culture war topic, which is not normally the focus of my blogging. Rationalist friends suggested that this post might be interesting and surprising to LW readers.
None of the things you saw as being in that comment (“I will always have food and a house without any work or bosses” or “privilege of the top 1%”) are actually in the comment.
They are, though.
"No force in the world can take from me my five hundred pounds. Food, house, and clothing are mine for ever. Therefore not merely do effort and labour cease..."
"by some luck and hard work made it to the top, but they had to hustle for it, and it did not come naturally to them; it was not their birthright" -- which I described as "being at the top is my birthright".
To quickly transform the world, it's not enough for AI to become super smart (the "intelligence explosion").
AI will also have to turbocharge the physical world (the "industrial explosion"). Think robot factories building more and better robot factories, which build more and better robot factories, and so on.
The dynamics of the industrial explosion has gotten remarkably little attention.
This post lays out how the industrial explosion could play out, and how quickly it might happen.
We think the industrial explosion will unfold in three stages:
Downvoted the post because it considers neither the Amdahl's Law nor the factors of production, which is Economics 101.
Fully automated robot factories can't make robot factories out of thin air, they need energy and raw materials which are considered secondary factors of production in economics. As soon there appears a large demand for them, their prices will skyrocket.
These are called so because are acquired from primary factors of production, which in classical economics consist of land, labor and capital. Sure, labor is cheap with robots but land and ca...
(A response to this post.)
If you use prediction markets to make decisions, you might think they’ll generate EDT decisions: you’re asking for P(A|B), where you care about A, and B is something like “a decision … is taken”.
Okay, so say you want to use prediction markets to generate CDT decisions. You want to know P(A|do(B)).
There’s a very simple way to do that:
Now, 99.9% of the time, you can use freely use market data to make decisions, without impacting the market! You screened off everything upstream of the decision from the market. All you need...
You can anti-correlate it by running 1000 markets on different questions you're interested in, and announcing that all but a randomly chosen one will N/A, so as to not need to feed an insurer. This also means traders on any of your markets can get a free loan to trade on the others.
For the sake of argument, I'll at least poke a bit at this bullet.
I have been in an advanced math class (in the US) with high school seniors and an 8th grader, who was probably the top student in the class. It was totally fine? Everyone learned math, because they liked math.
From what I can tell, the two key factors for mixing ages in math classes is something like:
So let's imagine that you have a handful of 17-year-olds learning multivariate calculus, and one 7-year-old prodigy. My prediction is t...
There was what everyone agrees was a high quality critique of the timelines component of AI 2027, by the LessWrong user and Substack writer Titotal.
It is great to have thoughtful critiques like this. The way you get actual thoughtful critiques like this, of course, is to post the wrong answer (at length) on the internet, and then respond by listening to the feedback and by making your model less wrong.
This is a high-effort, highly detailed, real engagement on this section, including giving the original authors opportunity to critique the critique, and warnings to beware errors, give time to respond, shares the code used to generate the graphs, engages in detail, does a bunch of math work, and so on. That is The Way.
So, Titotal: Thank you.
I note...
Hmm, interesting. I was surprised by the claim so I did look back through ACX and posts from the LW review, and it does seem to back up your claim (the closest I saw was "Sorry, I Still Think MR Is Wrong About USAID", note I didn't look very hard). EDIT: Actually I agree with sunwillrise that "Moldbug sold out" meets the bar (and in general my felt sense is that ACX does do this).
I'd dispute the characterization of this norm as operating "within intellectual online writing circles". I think it's a rationalist norm if anything. For example I went to Slow Bo...
If probability is in the map, then what is the territory? What are we mapping when we apply probability theory?
"Our uncertainty about the world, of course."
Uncertainty, yes. And sure, every map is, in a sense, a map of the world. But can we be more specific? Say, for a fair coin toss, what particular part of the world do we map with probability theory? Surely it's not the whole world at the same time, is it?
"It is. You map the whole world. Multiple possible worlds, in fact. In some of them the coin is Heads in the others it's Tails, and you are uncertain which one is yours."
Wouldn't that mean that I need to believe in some kind of multiverse to reason about probability? That doesn't sound...
When I go to the supermarket and think about whether there is milk there or not, I imagine an empty shelf
Yes, you indeed imagine it. And people also imagine a world that macroscopically looks just like ours on a human-scale, but instead follows the laws of classical mechanics (in fact, for centuries, this was the mainstream conception of reality among top physicists).
The problem is that such a world cannot exist. The classical picture of a ball-like electron orbiting around a proton inside a hydrogen atom cannot happen; classically, a rotating electr...
(Note: This is NOT being posted on my Substack or Wordpress, but I do want a record of it that is timestamped and accessible for various reasons, so I'm putting this here, but do not in any way feel like you need to read it unless it sounds like fun to you.)
We all deserve some fun. This is some of mine.
I will always be a gamer and a sports fan, and especially a game designer, at heart. The best game out there, the best sport out there is Love Island USA, and I’m getting the joy of experiencing it in real time.
Make no mistake. This is a game, a competition, and the prizes are many.
The people agree. It is...
Episode 22 Update
They went with option two, except they didn’t differentiate between bombshells and original islanders. Everyone wrote down their choice. And then they had the saves.
Having seen it play out, the producers were clearly right not to make the distinction. And I think this was clearly the correct way to do the recoupling once you bring everyone back from Casa Amor, and you’ve already reintroduced Nic and Taylor.
I had two worries at the time.