Why expect AGIs to be better at thinking than human beings? Is there some argument that human thinking problems are primarily due to hardware constraints? Has anyone here put much thought into parenting/educating AGIs?
Why expect AGIs to be better at thinking than human beings? Is there some argument that human thinking problems are primarily due to hardware constraints? Has anyone here put much thought into parenting/educating AGIs?
I suspect this has been answered on here before in a lot more detail, but:
Also, specifically in AI, there is some precedent for there to be only a few years between "researchers get ...
I'm getting an error trying to load Lumifer's comment in the highly nested discussion, but I can see it in my inbox, so I'll try replying here without the nesting. For this comment, I will quote everything I reply to so it stands alone better.
Isn't it convenient that I don't have to care about these infinitely many theories?
why not?
Why not what?
Why don't you have to care about the infinity of theories?
you can criticize categories, e.g. all ideas with feature X
...How can you know that every single theory in that infinity has feature X? o
Has anyone here put much thought into parenting/educating AGIs?
I'm interested in General Intelligence Augmentation, what it would be like try and build/train an artificial brain lobe and try and make it part of a normal human intelligence.
I wrote a bit on my current thoughts on how I expect to align it using training/education here but watching this presentation is necessary for context.
Because
"[the brain] is sending signals at a millionth the speed of light, firing at 100 Hz, and even in heat dissipation [...] 50000 times the thermodynamic minimum energy expenditure per binary swtich operation"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUjc1WuyPT8&t=3320s
AI will be quantitatively smarter because it'll be able to think over 10000 times faster (arbitrary conservative lower bound) and it will be qualitatively smarter because its software will be built by an algoirthm far better than evolution
I think we might be having terminology problems -- in particular I feel that you stick the "evolution" label on vastly broader things.
First, the notion of progress. Evolution doesn't do progress not being teleological. Evolution does adapation to the current environment. A decrease in complexity is not an uncommon event in evolution, for example. A mass die-off is not an uncommon event, either.
Second, evolution doesn't correct "errors". Those are not errors, those are random exploratory steps. A random walk. And evolution does not correct them, it just kills off those who misstep (which is 99.99%+ of steps).
Sure. Please provide empirical evidence.
And I still don't understand what's wrong with plain-vanilla observation as a way to acquire knowledge.
killing off a misstep is a way of getting rid of that error. the stuff that doesn't work is probabilistically removed from later generations – so the effect there is error correction. (experimenting itself isn't a mistake, but some of the experiments work badly – error).
Evolution adapts, yes. Adapting something to solve a particular problem = creating knowledge of how to solve that problem. Biological evolution is limited in what problems it solves but still powerful enough to create human intelligence b/c of the ability for a single piece of knowledge to ... (read more)