Dennis Hackethal’s Blog
My blog about philosophy, coding, and anything else that interests me.
Tweets
An archive of my tweets and retweets through . They may be formatted slightly differently than on Twitter. API access has since gotten prohibitively expensive – I don't know whether or when I'll be able to update this archive.
But in case I will, you can subscribe via RSS – without a Twitter account. Rationale
Very cool. How have you been building the UI—is it written in HTML and displayed in a browser, or some other way?
I think AGI will be achieved in a qualitative jump from something much less powerful, but it will take time to get to that jump.
Somewhere in the West because Western countries are the only ones with even a hint of good epistemology. No sign of AGI yet though.
RT @deezzer:
For coders - A great discussion on benefits of Functional vs OOP youtube.com/watch?v=uu3tb3… #programming #better #reactjs #functi…
I was interviewed about the new Berlin programming language, which aims to make programming simpler and more enjoyable. This video is a good intro: youtube.com/watch?v=uu3tb3…
This thread has been archived on archive.vn/jsBFE, archive.vn/fVbeG, archive.vn/KzNXG, and various mirrors thereof.
Social-justice warriors may be gaining power right now, but they will eat themselves up eventually and they will turn against you and may well use this twitter thread to do so.
What you post makes for good marketing and it’s very “in” right now, but people may not always look on it so favorably. You may choose to be more careful. You should jump off the social-justice bandwagon while you still can.
I’m not a boomer :) I think you have good intentions btw. But by basing investment decisions on race and publicly admitting to it you’re just begging for someone you turn down in the future to file a lawsuit against you.
By basing investment decisions off of skin color, you’re lowering the standards for blacks relative to nonblacks, which is economically counterproductive, patronizing, and, of course, racist.
You’re clearly making investment decisions based on race—otherwise you couldn’t account for your “subconscious bias,” which is a non-falsifiable idea that people can always use to justify decisions based on skin color.
(And btw, by admitting to “subconscious bias” you basically admitted to harboring racist thoughts against black people.) So then, the question is, how can you ensure a “fair” outcome without favoring black people and disfavoring white people?
I take that as a “yes,” because, to ensure you’re not “exhibit[ing] any subconscious bias,” you must look at the ratio of black founders you invested in. That’s why you share the number of “black investments” so proudly.
And to do that, and because—people would hope—you want to ensure a proportionate and fair outcome, you are taking into account their race to make an investment decision, yes?
Are you favoring black people for investments? (Not a rhetorical question)
I’m assuming the first picture is a rendering, the second is a photograph?
@ReachChristofer @FitzClaridge
Do ideas replicate within a mind?
@ReachChristofer @FitzClaridge
What are the similarities and differences between coercive mechanisms within a mind and across minds?
Is TCS compatible with non-libertarian political views?
... to a more positive, open, people-friend (and, thereby, AGI-friendly) worldview, in which rapid progress and error correction are things not to be feared and avoided, but celebrated.
technology ultimately requires a shift in attitude from the kind of cynical, pessimistic and AGI-skeptical view I explained in this tweet: twitter.com/dchackethal/st…
And, as I have argued in another thread with someone else, most of these surface issues are really only addressed properly by getting on the same page about epistemology.
Lastly, at the end of the day, embracing AGI and seeing it as a fascinating and ultimately positive...
That software is the decisive limiting factor does not make for a trivial case—indeed, it follows from our best explanations about computation.
But yes, as I have argued before, more processing speed can help with faster error correction, including the correction of moral errors
Most of the anti-AGI worries translate into this: sentencing AGIs to death for crimes against humanity they didn’t commit, nor could have committed because they haven’t been born yet, but might possibly commit.
Basically pre-natal thought crimes.
I get VERY excited watching videos like this one: youtube.com/watch?v=y6VlzF…
I've considered that, and it might be an interesting approach. But again, the tech was easy—a browser extension would also involve getting people to install it, use it frequently, etc.
Unless I could somehow integrate the browser extension with an existing social network...
I built a social network once that had the ability to compute the quality of a post. The tech was easy; getting people to join more difficult.
Reminds me I should spend more time reading and less time on Twitter.
@nburn42 @Plinz
Well, the brain is a computer, but the mind is software running on the brain. The mind attempts to explain the world by repeatedly conjecturing and criticizing solutions to problems (Popper).
(and no, faster hardware doesn't make an AGI child even significantly different in the relevant ways)
In other words, faster hardware by itself doesn't make an AGI child not a child.
If this still doesn't convince you, then I suspect that your condition to convince you wasn't sufficient in the first place.
If you're like most AI-safety worriers, you may reply "but this is different! This time, it's orders of magnitude!" So were computers when they first came around, and they have been gaining orders of magnitude every decade since. Which has again been overwhelmingly a good thing
That's not to mention Deutsch's point that people have been increasing their hardware over the centuries through pen, paper, computers, etc and that's overwhelmingly been a good thing.
Hardware performance is overrated for this particular issue. It needs to be accompanied by improved software performance, the AGI child needs to learn how to use fast hardware, etc...
No, "a human mind is a function that takes in observations and yields behavior and policy updates" is an empiricist and behaviorist misrepresentation of the mind. Human minds are creative, and continue do be so without sense input.
I've enjoyed videos from Bucky Roberts' channel: youtube.com/user/thenewbos…
And Treehouse has good tutorials as well (paid though!): teamtreehouse.com/courses
The same question remains: but why? Where does “greater potential for rapidly gaining power and influence over the world” come from? And where do the bad inborn ideas come from?
Or better yet, no school at all, just voluntary learning and fun.
Btw I already explained how and why an AGI child is just like a human child and you ignored that and made an unargued assertion to the contrary when, if I’m not mistaken, I had met your condition to change your mind.
Right, an AGI child might not be bright at all. Or mediocre. Or very smart.
To your second point: but why?!
Ok. To learn about Popperian epistemology, I recommend reading "The Beginning of Infinity" by David Deutsch, or Karl Popper's "Objective Knowledge."
That's not to mention that no parent of a human child ever goes "thank god my child doesn't develop quickly enough to harm the human race."
A good parent will want to help their child develop as quickly as possible.
Yes, an AGI is literally a child. It will have a few inborn ideas and needs to figure out everything else for itself. Learn to perceive, learn to communicate, learn to move, etc.
How quickly that happens depends entirely on the child, just like with human children.
@bnielson01 @ChipkinLogan @HeuristicAndy @RealtimeAI @mizroba
I understand it was tongue in cheek, just wanted to clarify. Didn’t mean to take away the humor. :)
AGI is different in that regard from any other technology in that one wouldn’t instantiate an AGI to benefit from it, but because one wants to raise it and help it learn. Same reason people (should) have behind raising children.
But again: any other way to change your mind?
@bnielson01 @ChipkinLogan @HeuristicAndy @RealtimeAI @mizroba
I think Logan was talking about the creation of wealth, not its redistribution.
@bnielson01 @HeuristicAndy @RealtimeAI @mizroba
I think the fact that ideas in favor of authority conflict with Popperian epistemology is merely interesting and worthy of exploration. It points to a problem. There lies a fascinating truth to be found. There is no need to call those who want to find that solution "idiotarians."
@bnielson01 @HeuristicAndy @RealtimeAI @mizroba
But they would also contend that privately-owned security companies would do a better job at it.
@bnielson01 @HeuristicAndy @RealtimeAI @mizroba
And it doesn't seem that people try to understand the libertarian position. For example, Andy claims that they "sloganeer that anything the government does by definition is evil."
But they don't. I think they would say, if a cop prevents a murder, that's a good thing.
@bnielson01 @HeuristicAndy @RealtimeAI @mizroba
Those skeptical of regulations are considered flawed somehow, or dumb. "Idiotarians." Or thinking along the lines of "only an idiot could think that way." Which begs the related questions of "why that happened."
@bnielson01 @HeuristicAndy @RealtimeAI @mizroba
What's telling is that these "disturbing idiotarians" happily grant that people in favor of regulations have reasons for thinking that and are not idiots. That good will is not reciprocated.
We will have a hard time agreeing on the surface issue of AI safety if we don't resolve the underlying disagreement about epistemology.
The problem is that Bayesian epistemology is completely false, and the only good epistemology we have found is Popper's. With Popper's, it is much easier to see that AI-safety concerns do not apply any more than to any other people.
Your bio says you're interested in effective altruism, which makes me think that you quite possibly subscribe to Bayesian epistemology and other related rationalist ideas about epistemology.
Those who worry about AI safety usually come from that direction.
AGIs could not be created as psychopaths, because psychopathic ideas cannot be "induced"—there is no instruction from without (Popper).
Which brings me to my main point. I doubt any of this will convince you, because the underlying disagreement is an epistemological one.
You cannot prevent someone from becoming a psychopath by coercing them, or through "education," or any other restrictive measures.
To think it is our concern to "manage its development" is rather sinister. An AGI is a child, free to develop in any way it wants.
Since AGIs, by definition, are people, they will automatically be capable of feeling love and of being psychopaths, and everything else/in between.
Whether an AGI—like any person—becomes a psychopaths depends on the development of ideas within that person's mind.
When the conflict is solved, that leads to happiness, both in society and within the mind. Coercion, in turn, can only lead to misery: something's gotta give.
Source on coercion (highly recommended): takingchildrenseriously.com/node/50#Coerci…
Solving the conflict would mean that both sides within oneself are happy. That is also always possible, but also takes creativity and is, therefore, hard.
That's bound to make oneself unhappy, just like the lockdown is leading to unrest. And any gym routine based on coercion won't last long.
An example of coercion within a mind is when the idea of going to the gym arbitrarily wins over the idea of staying in bed. In other words, one forces oneself to go to the gym even though a conflicting idea is still present in one's mind.
Truly resolving the conflict would mean both sides are happy. That is always possible, but takes creativity, so it can be hard.
A timely example of coercion across minds is the lockdown some societies have implemented. There is coercion because the idea of locking down wins arbitrarily over the idea of not locking down without solving the conflict.
The evolution of ideas in a mind is analogous to the evolution of ideas across minds. We can see this when we study coercion.
A thread 🧵👇
@julepparadox @alvarlagerlof @iamdevloper
You can do a whole-word search on “i”.
In exchange for Corona, all the null pointer exceptions will fix themselves on Christmas.
No, that's one of the things that differentiates AGI from narrow AI—it doesn't require any training data.
That doesn't answer my question about how one could change your mind. To be clear, I didn't ask for a concession.
In any case, it sounds like your mind is made up. Why keep discussing? How could one change your mind?
I used to think about slave holders the same way, but I recently learned from a podcast that many slave holders thought they were giving their slaves a better life than in Africa. Slave holders did not consider themselves evil, yet they were doing great evil.
In other words, these algorithms are coerced into optimizing some predetermined criterion. That's why they couldn't possibly be AGIs: that requires freedom from coercion.
One of the driving forces of evolution is replication, and selection is a phenomenon that emerges from differences in replication. Existing evolutionary algorithms force a fitness function onto their population of replicators—which is not how evolution works in reality.
👇
...and that his book is a slaveholder's manual instructing people how to keep "their" AGIs in check.
People look back in horror at slavery in the US and ask, "how could this happen." Today it's Bostrom's book. That's how.
I read Bostrom's book. He mentions Deutsch in the acknowledgments but he clearly didn't take Deutsch's (superior) ideas seriously or he wouldn't have written it. He would have known that the very concept of superintelligence is an appeal to the supernatural...
The question is not whether some AGIs will be psychopaths (some might). The question is whether that warrants shackling all AGIs ("aligning" is just a euphemism for coercion/shackling).
It takes a shift in perspective to recognize how disgusting "alignment" really is.
Exactly, an AGI would be capable of love, relationships, humor, etc.
Yup that’s where I fall, too, both seem true at different times.
Yes, one should put in the time. But it shouldn’t be uncomfortable. It should be fun—and once it’s fun, there won’t be any distractions. If it’s fun, you’ll put it in the time happily and automatically.
@itsDanielSuarez @Plinz @NASA @SpaceX @AstroBehnken @Astro_Doug
Yeah pretty nuts! People are awesome. Onward!
Right, so if it’s prior, and we need ten more minutes, wouldn’t + make more sense?
Yes, people can harm each other. But should we shackle them in advance because they might harm each other?
Well, again, AGIs are people by definition, so they can feel love and be altruistic (let’s table for the moment whether altruism is a good thing). And they will be a product of the culture they’re born into, like all children.
AGIs are literally children. Read your tweets again while imagining you’re talking about children and maybe you’ll see how sinister those tweets are.
Indeed. Once something is automated, it’s time to move onto the next problem and solve it creatively.
AGIs cannot work under regulations or bondage. They can only work in spite of them. Like economies and memes, the minds of all people, including AGIs, are evolutionary processes that self-regulate. Impose force, and they cease being people.