5
kiki
2y

You can comprehend its whole construction completely in two seconds. Yet, a hamster will be entertained by exploring this thing for life.

In the same way, an advanced neural network will be able to figure out our brain's construction and explain it to us.

If you cry AI takeover, remember that just because you can kill a hamster with your hand, and it absolutely can't do anything about it, doesn't mean you'll do this.

Said neural network may have morals completely detached not only from ours, but from the whole concept of "morals" as we know it. Its goals being beyond our understanding doesn't mean it will be hostile and won't help us.

The only thing we'll lose is control. Yet, benefits are so huge that they can transfer us up within the Kardashev scale, and it may be our only way to prevent the death of our civilization.

We don't have control over our nature either. We can't prevent eruptions and earthquakes. Losing control in itself doesn't mean the thing we lost control on will kill us.

Comments
  • 5
    AI pattern matching we have now is nothing compared to the pattern matching the human brain does. AI also is nowhere near the capacity of the brain even of small animals. This idea that it is somehow going to magically overtake our abilities is laughable. The advanced AI cars that try to drive down railroad tracks on a clear visible day aren't going to replace drivers reliably any time soon. AI is good for certain tasks, but it currently is not panacea the sales people try to make it.
  • 4
    @Demolishun we're talking about very distant future. CPU op/s has physical limit, same with architecture (can't go much lower than 5nm). But neural networks scale by cores, thus a physical limit (running out of silica) is extremely high. There is no other fundamental threshold of AI development.
  • 1
    @kiki I get that it will get more powerful. But until we actually mimic how a brain works, which AI does not really as it is missing a cortex, it will just be fancy pattern matching. It is not thinking at all. I also don't think the all of our thought processing exists solely in the brain itself. There is the problem of how much is matter and how much is spirit. Modern science has completely ignored this even to say it doesn't exist. So the idea of how it works could be flawed to begin with. People who have near death experiences talk about experiencing a hyper reality. There is also people working on other frameworks to explain this phenomenon called the source field. I don't see us producing a thinking machine until we fully understand where all the thinking is actually done. A good example to make you wonder what is going on is people who have high IQs, but basically only have a brain stem.
  • 2
    @Demolishun I still want to see a self-supervised learning system of ten trillion artificial neurons in operation, I think it will be interesting to say the least.
  • 1
    @kiki Yes, that will be very cool to see what can be done. I think it is neat tech, I am dubious of how much thinking it can do.
  • 1
    So who will build that AI?

    You didn't build the hamster and AI by evolution is what we are.

    Advanced AI on advanced hardware will be as bad as humans - but way faster and without any conscience. One slightly misformulated rule and AI will happily sacrifice whole humanity for a minuscule metric increase. Think stereotypical entrepreneur - but with a thousand times the recklessness.
  • 3
    AI is a fancy form of applied statistics. It has nothing to do with thinking or understanding a problem.
  • 0
    @kiki

    Not sure if it was you, did you posted something like this anywhere?

    “I like to blow my partner, to see that huge strong person melting in my mouth…”

    Something like that, am searching for that text
  • 0
    You bring up a very interesting point: Earth is a single point of failure. We need to go to space. That way one asteroid doesn't end us.
  • 1
    @Oktokolo evolution in computer systems are trivially done by simulating genetic drift and natural selection. That's the only two concepts you need to make things evolve. We already have those tools and the whole paradigm of evolutionary programming. Also, remember that in computer systems one generation doesn't need to last years. Few seconds per generation will be enough.
  • 0
    Im not opening this can of worms, but know that I disagree
  • 0
    @kiki: So humans will select the generations that will survive. What you will get is what i warned about.
  • 0
    @Oktokolo if we have a rigorous mathematical framework that allows comparing random mutations to figure out what's "better", that's all we need to do. As soon as it remains maths, there is no room for opinion. There is no room to be human, and no possibility to find out if that framework was created by a human at all
  • 0
    Future computer analyst trying to understand what went wrong with the AI that destroyed humanity:
  • 1
    @kiki: But life has no inherent goal and good or evil isn't something you can describe mathematically. If you try to base ethics on math, you get Stalin - basically the insane AI from the Paranoia role-playing game:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/..._(role-playing_game)
  • 0
    After looking into abiogenisis I have come to the conclusion that it is not a sufficient theory to explain origin. A lot of scientists have come to a similar conclusion. So many are positing that life didn't originate here, but was placed or drifted here. It is entirely possible that "we" in fact were designed as AI by another intelligence. If we are actually AI and not some naturalisticly generated life form. Then we might be the AI that went horribly wrong and destroyed our designers.
  • 1
    @Demolishun Professor Dave had an amazing video on origins of life, I really suggest it. Ignore all James Tour stuff because drama.

    https://yewtu.be/watch/...

    https://yewtu.be/watch/...
  • 0
    This is a great and fun discussion, thanks for bringing up the topic. I came across this the other day that I found very interesting: https://nature.com/articles/...
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