LessWrong 2.0 Reader
View: New · Old · Topnext page (older posts) →
next page (older posts) →
How much higher was the scoring on neuroticism than the general population?
chipmonk on Key takeaways from our EA and alignment research surveysHow many alignment researchers do you think there are total? What % do you think this survey hit that you wanted it to hit?
porby on Does reducing the amount of RL for a given capability level make AI safer?But I disagree that there’s no possible RL system in between those extremes where you can have it both ways.
I don't disagree. For clarity, I would make these claims, and I do not think they are in tension:
I created my first fold. I'm not sure if this is something to be happy with as everybody can do it now.
migueldev on [deleted]
Access to Alpha fold 3: https://golgi.sandbox.google.com/
Is allowing the world access to Alpha Fold 3 a great idea? I don't know how this works but I can imagine a highly motivated bad actor can start from scratch by simply googling/LLM querying/Multi-modal querying each symbol in this image.
ryan_greenblatt on jacquesthibs's ShortformI do think that many of the safety advantages of LLMs come from their understanding of human intentions (and therefore implied values).
Did you mean something different than "AIs understand our intentions" (e.g. maybe you meant that humans can understand the AI's intentions?).
I think future more powerful AIs will surely be strictly better at understanding what humans intend.
jiao-bu on Dating Roundup #3: Third Time’s the CharmI am perfectly happy that the patriarchal roles are no longer shackling women. I would not like to roll back time, personally, on these matters. I hope my question doesn't come across this way -- it is just that I am confused about expectations.
qwertyasdef on D&D.Sci Long War: Defender of Data-mocracyI misremembered the May 6 date as May 9 but luckily other people have been asking for more time so it seems I might not be late.
The average number of soldiers the Army sends looks linear in the number of aliens. A linear regression gives the coefficients: 0.40 soldiers by default + 0.66 per Abomination + 0.32 per Crawler + 0.16 per Scarab + 0.81 per Tyrant + 0.49 per Venompede. From here, the log-odds of victory looks like a linear function of the difference between the actual number of soldiers and the expected number of soldiers.
Based on no evidence at all, I will assume this generalizes to the individual weapon types and that each additional soldier of each weapon type increases the odds of victory by some fixed amount depending on the composition of the aliens, but not dependent on the other soldiers already present.
Here's a guess that can definitely be improved upon but I don't know if I will
7 Thermo-Torpedos
While the use of tarot archetypes is... questionable... it does point at an angle to exploring embedding space which is that it is a fundamentally semiotic space, its going in many respects to be structured by the texts that fed it, and human text is richly symbolic.
That said, theres a preexisting set of ideas around this that might be more productive, and that is structuralism, particularly the works of Levi Strauss, Roland Barthes, Lacan, and more distantly Foucault and Derrida.
Levi Strauss's anthropology in particular is interesting ,because it looked at the mythologies of humans and tried to find structuring principles underlying it, particularly the "dialectics" , oppositions, and how these provided a sort of deep structure to mythology that was common across humanity (For instance Strauss noted "trickster" archetypes across cultures and proposed these formed a way of interrogating blurred oppositions, for instance sickness as a state that has has aspects of both life (dead things cant be sick) and death (a sick person is not rhetorically "full of life").
Essentially what I'm getting at is that this sort of analysis likely works with any symbolic system that has had resonances with human thinking over time. The problem with Tarot is that it specifically applies to a certain european circumstance of meaning production. Astrology probably works just as well. Literary analysis however probably works dramatically better. Thus maybe it might be worth looking at the works of literature critics, particularly the structuralists where where very interested in ontologies of symbolic meaning, and this might provide a better toolkit than this.
Two noncentral pages I like on the site: