This post is shameless self-promotion, but I'm told that's probably okay in the Discussion section. For context, as some of you are aware, I'm aiming to model C. elegans based on systematic high-throughput experiments - that is, to upload a worm. I'm still working on course requirements and lab training at Harvard's Biophysics Ph.D. program, but this remains the plan for my thesis.
Last semester I gave this lecture to Marvin Minsky's AI class, because Marvin professes disdain for everything neuroscience, and I wanted to give his students—and him—a fair perspective of how basic neuroscience might be changing for the better, and seems a particularly exciting field to be in right about now. The lecture is about 22 minutes long, followed by over an hour of questions and answers, which cover a lot of the memespace that surrounds this concept. Afterward, several students reported to me that their understanding of neuroscience was transformed.
I only just now got to encoding and uploading this recording; I believe that many of the topics covered could be of interest to the LW community (especially those with a background in AI and an interest in brains), perhaps worthy of discussion, and I hope you agree.
I agree there aren't currently good arguments for why "one can factorize intelligence from goals", at least not in a strong sense, but what about Eliezer's thesis that value is complex and fragile, and therefore:
I'm curious what you think of this line of argument.
Does that mean you're familiar with Robin Hanson's "Malthusian upload" / "burning the cosmic commons" scenario but do not think it's a particularly bad outcome?
I'd guess that's been tried already, given that Ben was the Director of Research for SIAI (and technically Eliezer's boss) for a number of years.
I think the statement is essentially true, but it turns on the semantics of "human". In today's world we probably haven't wound up with something close to 50,000BC!human values, and we certainly don't have Neanderthal values, but we don't regret that, do we?
Put another way, I am skeptical of our authority to pass judgement on the values of a civilization which is by hypothesis far more advanced than our own.
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