Possibilizing vs. actualizing

post by TsviBT · 2023-04-16T15:55:40.330Z · LW · GW · 2 comments

Contents

  Terms
  Examples
  Related distinctions
  Redescriptions
  Reasons there's not a real distinction
None
2 comments

[Metadata: crossposted from https://tsvibt.blogspot.com/2022/12/possibilizing-vs-actualizing.html. First completed December 31, 2022. This essay is more like research notes than exposition, so context may be missing, the use of terms may change across essays, and the text might be revised later; only the versions at tsvibt.blogspot.com are definitely up to date.]

Some behavior seems like it's just making things possible, without actually doing much of anything, while other behavior seems to actually do something. Is there a principled, or a useful, distinction between possibilizing and actualizing? Is it possible to possibilize a large effect on the world without actualizing large effects on the world?

It's not clear whether this is a real distinction, but to me it's a very intuitive and intuitively salient idea (because possibilizing seems safer than actualizing), so I'd like to have a better analysis or dissolution of it.

Terms

Possibilizing is making something possible for an agent to do. That is, it's setting the stage, preparing, unlocking, satisfying the preconditions, gathering the needed resources and tools, gaining the necessary understanding and skill and components and information, getting agents on board, making the plans, opening the way. "Possible" is cognate with "potent", "power", and "hospital". Other possible words: enabling, feasibilizing, empowering.

Actualizing is (an agent) actually doing something, making something happen, achieving a goal, affecting something, having impact, delivering a payload. Other possible words: realizing, implementing, exerting.

Examples

Related distinctions

Redescriptions

Possibilizing vs. actualizing might not be a suitable distinction, but if it is, what might that distinction be? Some possibilities:

Reasons there's not a real distinction

2 comments

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comment by rickjdavies · 2023-04-16T21:27:21.698Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Re related distinctions: Innovation is sometimes defined as "invention + use" . Possibilizing vs. actualizing sounds similar to these two elements of innovation

comment by Max H (Maxc) · 2023-04-16T20:27:53.585Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think this is a real and useful distinction. In a recent post, I sketched a system [LW · GW] which I'd describe in your terms as actualizing by default, but would be more like a possibilizer if the observation = execute(action)line were commented out. The possibilizing system could be used to cache sequences of actions for reaching a particular world state, stored for potential later execution.

In the limit of perfect world modelling, planning heuristics, and compute resources, the set of reachable nodes in the tree might be the same as those in the actualizing version. But for more practical instantiations, the possibilizing system likely becomes much less accurate when searching deep in the tree.

Instead of preventing action execution entirely, you can imagine restricting only certain kinds of actions or action sequences whose effects are irreversible or otherwise high-impact. As you lift more and more restrictions, the systems transitions back towards actualizing.