Hi folks,
My supervisor and I co-authored a philosophy paper on the argument that AI represents an existential risk. That paper has just been published in Ratio. We figured LessWrong would be able to catch things in it which we might have missed and, either way, hope it might provoke a conversation.
We reconstructed what we take to be the argument for how AI becomes an xrisk as follows:
- The "Singularity" Claim: Artificial Superintelligence is possible and would be out of human control.
- The Orthogonality Thesis: More or less any less of intelligence is compatible with more or less any final goal. (as per Bostrom's 2014 definition)
From the conjuction of these two presmises, we can conclude that ASI is possible, it might have a goal, instrumental or final, which is at odds with human existence, and, given the ASI would be out of our control, that the ASI is an xrisk.
We then suggested that each premise seems to assume a different interpretation of 'intelligence", namely:
- The "Singularity" claim assumes general intelligence
- The Orthogonality Thesis assumes instrumental intelligence
If this is the case, then the premises cannot be joined together in the original argument, aka the argument is invalid.
We note that this does not mean that AI or ASI is not an xrisk, only that the the current argument to that end, as we have reconstructed it, is invalid.
Eagerly, earnestly, and gratefully looking forward to any responses.
This is where the other main line of argument comes into play:
I think 'ability to navigate frames' is distinct from 'philosophical maturity', roughly because of something like a distinction between soldier mindset and scout mindset.
You can imagine an entity that, whenever it reflects on their current political / moral / philosophical positions, using their path-finding ability like a lawyer to make the best possible case for why they should believe what they already believe, or to discard incoming arguments whose conclusions are unpalatable. There's something like another orthogonality thesis at play here, where even if you're a wizard at maneuvering through frames, it matters whether you're playing chess or suicide chess.
This is just a thesis; it might be the case that it is impossible to be superintelligent and in soldier mindset (the 'curiosity' thesis?), but the orthogonality thesis is that it is possible, and so you could end up with value lock-in, where the very intelligent entity that is morally confused uses that intelligence to prop up the confusion rather than disperse it. Here we're using instrumental intelligence as the 'super' intelligence in both the orthogonality and existential risk consideration. (You consider something like this case later, but I think in a way that fails to visualize this possibility.)
[In humans, intelligence and rationality are only weakly correlated, in a way that I think supports this view pretty strongly.]