- Abstractions are important.
- In order to think in terms of "trees" and "birds" instead of raw retinal activation rates, human minds need to form abstractions.
- In order to keep Nature red in tooth and claw, organisms must first evolve abstractions like "tooth" and "claw".
- Neural networks can learn human abstractions.
- Figuring out abstraction is possibly "the main foundational piece" of successful AI alignment.
- Abstractions are functions that map a high-dimensional space to a low-dimensional space. They have more possible inputs than possible outputs, so abstractions have to shed some information.
- Abstractions filter out useless information, while keeping useful information.
- In order for there to be such a thing as "useful information", there must be some goal(s) being pursued.
You might argue that "abstraction" only means preserving information used to predict faraway observations from a given system. However, coarse modeling of distant objects is often a convergent subgoal of the kind of organisms that Nature selects for.
The scout does not tell the general about the bluejays he saw. He reports the number of bombers in the enemy's hangar. Condensation of information always selects for goal-relevant information. Any condensation of information implies that the omitted information is less goal-relevant than the reported information; there is no abstraction without a goal.
"Who owns the land" has influences on many far away variables, as those who own the land can implent policies about what to do with the land. Similarly, "Are the buildings intact?" has influences on many far away variables, because it determines whether the people who live on the land continue to live on the land, and people who live in a place are the ones who influence the place the most.
If I wanted to understand the long-term future of an area that was currently at war, I'd want to know the information relevant for who wins the war and how destructive the war is, as that has a lot of effects. Meanwhile I don't know of any major effects of bluejays.