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comment by OrphanWilde · 2016-02-17T18:11:15.426Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

My prior on humans going extinct in the next century is less than .05%, because in the last 2,000 centuries, we haven't. My prior on civilization ending in the next century is less than 1.6%, because in the last 60 centuries, it hasn't.

I have, however, absolutely no faith in those priors, because in any universe in which either of those things happened, nobody is asking those questions.

As for evidence that would update those priors? Well... I see no evidence of anything that could or would end our species, so I have nothing to update on there. I see some evidence of things that could end our civilization, so that could be updated slightly higher. But my error bars dominate the question.

So I'm going to say <1% odds of humans (or rather, human minds) going extinct in the next century. Indeed, I'd bet my life it won't happen.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-18T07:11:28.349Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Could you elaborate on why you consider p(UFAI before 2116) < 0.01? I am genuinely interested.

Replies from: OrphanWilde
comment by OrphanWilde · 2016-02-18T13:39:37.626Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I consider a runaway process by which any AI ascends into godhood through recursive self-improvement of its intelligence to be... vaguely magical, by which I mean that while every word in that sentence makes sense, as a whole that sentence doesn't refer to anything. The heavy lifting is done by poorly-defined abstractions and assumptions.

Unfriendly AI, by the metrics I consider meaningful, already exists. It just isn't taking over the world.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-18T20:14:58.429Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Some of the smarter (large, naval) landmines are arguably both intelligent and unfriendly. Let us use the standard AI risk metric.

I feel that your sentence does refer to something: A hypothetical scenario. ("Godhood" should be replaced with "Superintelligence").

Is it correct that the sentence can be divided into these 4 claims?:

  1. An AI self-improves it's intelligence
  2. The self-improvement becomes recursive
  3. An AI reaches superintelligence through 1 and 2
  4. This can happen in a process that can be called "runaway"

Do you mean that one of the probabilities is extremely small? (E.g., p(4 | 1 and 2 and 3) = 0.02). Or do you mean that the statement is not well-formed? (E.g, Intelligence is poorly-defined by the AI Risk theory)

Replies from: OrphanWilde, Lumifer, TheAncientGeek
comment by OrphanWilde · 2016-02-18T20:47:38.487Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Intelligence is poorly-defined, for a start, artificial intelligence doubly so - think about the number of times we've redefined "AI" after achieving what we previously called "AI".

"Recursive self-improvement" is also poorly-defined; as an example, we have recursive self-improving AIs right now, in the form of self-training neural nets.

Superintelligence is even less well-defined, which is why I prefer the term "godhood", which I regard as more honest in its vagueness. It may also be illusory; most of us on Less Wrong are here in part because of boredom, because intelligence isn't nearly as applicable in daily life as we'd need it to be to stay entertained; does intelligence have diminishing returns?

We can tell that some people are smarter than other people, but we're not even certain what that means, except that they do better by the measurement we measure them by.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-19T08:07:58.354Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Intelligence, Artificial Intelligence and Recursive Self-improvement are likely poorly defined. But since we can point to concrete examples of all three, this is a problem in the map, not the territory. These things exist, and different versions of them will exist in the future.

Superintelligences do not exist, and it is an open question if they ever will. Bostrom defines superintelligences as "an intellect that is much smarter than the best human brains in practically every field, including scientific creativity, general wisdom and social skills." While this definition has a lot of fuzzy edges, it is conceivable that we could one day point to a specific intellect, and confidently say that it is superintelligent. I feel that this too is a problem in the map, not the territory.

I was wrong to assume that you meant superintelligence when you wrote godhood, and I hope that you will forgive me for sticking with "superintelligence" for now.

comment by Lumifer · 2016-02-18T20:43:42.266Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Is it correct that the sentence can be divided into these 4 claims?:

You are missing an important claim: that the process of recursive self-improvement does not encounter any constraints, impediments, roadblocks, etc.

Consider the analogy of your 1. and 2. for human reproduction.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-19T07:22:35.225Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I meant claim number 3 to be a sharper version of your claim: The AI will meet constraints, impediments and roadblocks, but these are overcome, and the AI reaches superintelligence.

Could you explain the analogy with human reproduction?

Replies from: Lumifer
comment by Lumifer · 2016-02-19T15:47:57.043Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Ah, so you meant the accent in 3. to be on "reaches", not on "super"?

The analogy looks like this: 1. Humans multiply, they self-improve their numbers; 2. The reproduction is recursive -- the larger a generation is, the yet larger will the next one be. Absent constraints, the growth of a population is exponential.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-19T20:00:50.544Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

English is not my first language. I think I would put the accent on "reaches", but I am unsure what would be implied by having the accent on "super". I apologize for my failure to write clearly.

I now see the analogy with human reproduction. Could we stretch the analogy to claim 3, and call some increases in human numbers "super"?

The lowest estimate of the historical number of humans I have seen is from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_bottleneck , claiming down to 2000 humans for 100.000 years. Human numbers will probably reach a (mostly cultural) limit of 10.000.000.000. I feel that this development in human numbers deserves to be called "super".

The analogy could perhaps even be stretched to claim 4 - some places at some times could be characterized by "runaway population growth".

Replies from: Lumifer
comment by Lumifer · 2016-02-19T20:28:56.130Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Could we stretch the analogy to claim 3, and call some increases in human numbers "super"?

I don't know -- it all depends on what you consider "super" :-) Populations of certain organisms oscillate with much greater magnitude than humans -- see e.g. algae blooms.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-20T15:20:22.405Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Like Unfriendly AI, algae blooms are events that behave very differently from events we normally encounter.

I fear that the analogies have lost a crucial element. OrphanWIlde considered Unfriendly AI "vaguely magical" in the post here. The algae bloom analogy also has very vague definitions, but the changes in population size of an algae bloom is a matter I would call "strongly non-magical".

I realize that you introduced the analogies to help make my argument precise.

Replies from: Lumifer
comment by Lumifer · 2016-02-22T15:54:05.241Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

It's "vaguely magical" in sense that there is a large gap between what we have now and (U)FAI. We have no clear idea of how that gap could be crossed, we just wave hands and say "and then magic happens and we arrive at our destination".

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-03-03T19:52:38.674Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Many things are far beyond our current abilities, such as interstellar space travel. We have no clear idea of how humanity will travel to the stars, but the subject is neither "vaguely magical", nor is it true that the sentence "humans will visit the stars" does not refer to anything.

I feel that it is an unfair characterization of the people who investigate AI risk to say that they claim it will happen by magic, and that they stop the investigation there. You could argue that their investigation is poor, but it is clear that they have worked a lot to investigate the processes that could lead to Unfriendly AI.

Replies from: Lumifer
comment by Lumifer · 2016-03-03T20:12:36.219Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

We have no clear idea of how humanity will travel to the stars, but the subject is neither "vaguely magical", nor is it true that the sentence "humans will visit the stars" does not refer to anything.

We have no clear idea if or how humanity will travel to the stars. I feel that discussions of things like interstellar starship engines at the moment are "vaguely magical" since no known technology suffices and it's not a "merely engineering" problem. Do you think it's useful to work on safety of interstellar engines? They could blow up and destroy a whole potential colony...

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-03-04T07:45:02.656Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

You bring up a good point, whether it is useful to worry about UFAI.

To recap, my original query was about the claim that p(UFAI before 2116) is less than 1% due to UFAI being "vaguely magical". I am interested in figuring out what that means - is it a fair representation of the concept to say that p(Interstellar before 2116) is less than 1% because interstellar travel is "vaguely magical"?

What would be the relationship between "Requiring Advanced Technology" and "Vaguely Magical"? Clarke's third law is a straightforward link, but "vaguely magical" has previously been used to indicate poor definitions, poor abstractions and sentences that do not refer to anything.

Replies from: Lumifer
comment by Lumifer · 2016-03-04T16:53:55.785Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I am not sure the OP had much meaning behind his "vaguely magical" expression, but given that we are discussing it anyway :-) I would probably reinterpret it in terms of Knightian uncertainty. It's not only the case that we don't know, we don't know what we don't know and how much we don't know.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-03-04T19:30:40.296Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

This interpretation makes a lot of sense. The term can describe events that have a lot of Knightian Uncertainty, which a "Black Swan" like UFAI certainly has.

comment by TheAncientGeek · 2016-02-21T17:40:51.830Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Some of the smarter (large, naval) landmines are arguably both intelligent and unfriendly.

But they are not arguably dangerous because they are intelligent.

comment by buybuydandavis · 2016-02-18T03:35:47.391Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Estimating the probability of human extinction

You need to be clear about whether you're talking about the extinction of the human species, or the extinction of all descendants of the human species. Does death by Unfriendly AI count as extinction, or evolution?

I like that both Bostrom and Rees attached dates to their estimates, though Rees talked about a civilization destroying event, not an extinction event.

since Earth-originating life has existed for some 3.5 billion years without an existential catastrophe having happened.

Human life is only a blink in the eye of that 3.5billion years. How much of those 3.5billion years would be compatible with human life? How many catastrophes have occurred in that time which would wipe us out today? Would wipe out civilization today?

comment by James_Miller · 2016-02-18T01:43:26.294Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Great overall, but I disagree with this "while colonization would insulate us against a number of potential existential risks, there are some risks that it wouldn’t stop. A physics disaster on Earth, for example, could have consequences that are cosmic in scope. For example, the universe might not be in its most stable state. Consequently, a high-powered particle accelerator could tip the balance, resulting in a 'catastrophic vacuum decay, with a bubble of the true vacuum expanding at the speed of light.”'

If a positive singularity occurs and the solution to the Fermi paradox is that we are alone I would like to make a copy of myself and put that copy on a spaceship that travels fast enough away from earth so that (given sufficient time) when you add in the expansion of the universe something starting at earth and traveling at the speed of light would not be able to reach me. As I understand it, once I have traveled far enough from earth it will be impossible for something from earth to reach me regardless of my speed.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-18T07:19:08.148Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I've seen this claim many places, including in the Sequences, but I've never been able to track down an authoritative source. It seems false in classical physics, and I know little about relativity. Unfortunately, my Google-Fu is too weak to investigate. Can anyone help?

Replies from: _rpd
comment by _rpd · 2016-02-18T10:36:57.117Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

this claim

Do you mean the metric expansion of space?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_expansion_of_space

Because this expansion is caused by relative changes in the distance-defining metric, this expansion (and the resultant movement apart of objects) is not restricted by the speed of light upper bound of special relativity.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-19T07:14:19.904Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thank you. It is moderately clear to me from the link that James' thought-experiment is possible.

Do you know of a more authoritative description of the thought-experiment, preferably with numbers? It would be nice to have an equation where you give the speed of James' spaceship and the distance to it, and calculate if the required speed to catch it is above the speed of light.

Replies from: _rpd
comment by _rpd · 2016-02-19T18:59:08.527Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Naively, the required condition is v + dH > c, where v is the velocity of the spaceship, d is the distance from the threat and H is Hubble's constant.

However, when discussing distances on the order of billions of light years and velocities near the speed of light, the complications are many, not to mention an area of current research. For a more sophisticated treatment see user Pulsar's answer to this question ...

http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/60519/can-space-expand-with-unlimited-speed/

... in particular the graph Pulsar made for the answer ...

http://i.stack.imgur.com/Uzjtg.png

... and/or the Davis and Lineweaver paper [PDF] referenced in the answer.

Replies from: SoerenE
comment by SoerenE · 2016-02-19T20:16:47.133Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Wow. It looks like light from James' spaceship can indeed reach us, even if light from us cannot reach the spaceship.

Replies from: _rpd
comment by _rpd · 2016-02-19T21:39:18.213Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Yes, until the distance exceeds the Hubble distance of the time, then the light from the spaceship will red shift out of existence as it crosses the event horizon. Wiki says that in around 2 trillion years, this will be true for light from all galaxies outside the local supercluster.

comment by philosophytorres · 2016-02-22T17:51:11.743Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thanks so much for these incredibly thoughtful responses. Very, very helpful.

comment by DanArmak · 2016-02-21T17:30:23.502Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

In sum, just as a dog can’t possibly comprehend any of the natural and anthropogenic risks mentioned above, so too could there be risks that forever lie beyond our epistemic reach

This seems to prove too much. For any outcome X, there may be ways of reaching it that are "beyond our epistemic reach", therefore the true probability must be higher than we think.

This also holds for ~X (not necessarily with the same evidential weight as for X). For instance, there may be events we are incapable of imagining which would drastically reduce existential risk, just like FAI would.

One might argue that such risks, if they exist at all, must be highly improbable, since Earth-originating life has existed for some 3.5 billion years without an existential catastrophe having happened. But this line of reasoning is deeply flawed: it fails to take into account that the only worlds in which observers like us could find ourselves are ones in which such a catastrophe has never occurred.

K-T, the extinction event famous for killing the dinosaurs, was only 66 Mya (million years ago), and would pretty certainly kill all humans if it were to reoccur today. So could other big extinction events that occurred in the past, like snowball earth scenarios.

The anthropic argument is misapplied here. Evolution has been extremely slow and 'undirected' in producing humans. If planetary sterilization events were much more common, then we would expect to observe a much shorter evolutionary past: tens of millions of years, not billions of them.

Replies from: James_Miller
comment by James_Miller · 2016-02-21T20:29:32.814Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

If planetary sterilization events were much more common, then we would expect to observe a much shorter evolutionary past: tens of millions of years, not billions of them.

If planetary sterilization events are common and it takes a long time for intelligent life to develop then we would expect to observe the Fermi paradox.

Replies from: DanArmak
comment by DanArmak · 2016-02-23T15:09:58.556Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

What evidence is there that it takes a lot of time for intelligence to evolve, in the sense of requiring very many sequential steps?

To me it seems intelligence is simply unlikely to evolve at any point of time. Roughly equally unintelligent animals may have existed for tens or hundreds millions of years before humans evolved in a few million years. (Who's to say if the ancient ancestors of birds 100 million years ago were as smart as some birds are today?) Before that, life existed for billions of years before multicellular creatures evolved.

Replies from: James_Miller
comment by James_Miller · 2016-02-23T15:17:04.501Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

What evidence is there that it takes a lot of time for intelligence to evolve, in the sense of requiring very many sequential steps?

You probably need multicellular life first, and this takes a while and does involve many steps.

Replies from: DanArmak
comment by DanArmak · 2016-02-24T14:38:56.548Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

What evidence do we have that it takes a long time, other than that it happened late in history, which we already accounted for? My impression is that there weren't progressively-more-multicellular forms evolving into one another over a very long period of time. The first animals lived possibly less than 700 Mya; complex Ediacaran animals appeared 575 Mya; and by 510 Mya we had ostracoderms, which were surely fully multicellular (i.e. with a germline and complex cell differentiation and organs).

That's on the order of 100 million years for some complexity, and possibly some more tens of millions of years for more. But it's also possible that multicellularity evolved much more quickly, and the animals just didn't evolve larger and more complex forms for a while due to e.g. low sea oxygen levels, not having evolved eyes yet, etc.