I believe there are people with far greater knowledge than me that can point out where I am wrong. Cause I do believe my reasoning is wrong, but I can not see why it would be highly unfeasible to train a sub-AGI intelligent AI that most likely will be aligned and able to solve AI alignment.
My assumptions are as follows:
- Current AI seems aligned to the best of its ability.
- PhD level researchers would eventually solve AI alignment if given enough time.
- PhD level intelligence is below AGI in intelligence.
- There is no clear reason why current AI using current paradigm technology would become unaligned before reaching PhD level intelligence.
- We could train AI until it reaches PhD level intelligence, and then let it solve AI Alignment, without itself needing to self improve.
The point I am least confident in, is 4, since we have no clear way of knowing at what intelligence level an AI model would become unaligned.
Multiple organisations seem to already think that training AI that solves alignment for us is the best path (e.g. superalignment).
Attached is my mental model of what intelligence different tasks require, and different people have.
Figure 1: My mental model of natural research capability RC (basically IQ with higher correlation for research capabilities), where intelligence needed to align AI is above average PhD level, but below smartest human in the world, and even further from AGI.
It might not be very clear, but as stated in the diagram, AGI is defined here as capable of passing the turing test, as defined by Alan Turing.
An AGI would likely need to surpass the intelligence, rather than be equal to, the adversaries it is doing the turing test with.
For example, if the AGI had IQ/RC of 150, two people with 160 IQ/RC should more than 50% of the time be able to determine if they are speaking with a human or an AI.
Further, two 150 IQ/RC people could probably guess which one is the AI, since the AI has the additional difficult apart from being intelligent, to also simulate being a human well enough to be indistinguishable for the judges.