In the past, people like Eliezer Yudkowsky (see 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) have argued that MIRI has a medium probability of success. What is this probability estimate based on and how is success defined?
I've read standard MIRI literature (like "Evidence and Import" and "Five Theses"), but I may have missed something.
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(Meta: I don't think this deserves a discussion thread, but I posted this on the open thread and no-one responded, and I think it's important enough to merit a response.)
This is astonishingly good evidence that MIRI's efforts will not be wasted via redundancy, de facto "failure" only because someone else will independently succeed first.
But it's actually (very weak) evidence against the proposition that MIRI's efforts will not be wasted because you've overestimated the problem, and it isn't evidence either way concerning the proposition that you haven't overestimated the problem but nobody will succeed at solving it.
you're asking about the probability of having some technical people get together and solve basic research problems. I don't see why anyone else should expect to know more about that than workshop MIRI participants. Besides backward reasoning from the importance of a good result (which ordinarily operates through implying already-well-tugged ropes) is there any reason why you should be more skeptical of this than any other piece of basic research on an important problem?