Well I’m not sure there’s any reason to think that we can tell, by looking at the mathematical idealizations, that the inductive parts will take about the same amount of work to create as the agentic parts, just because the formalisms seem to weigh similar amounts (and what does that seeming mean?). I’m not sure our intuitions about the weights of the components mean anything.
If a thing has two main distinct parts, it seems reasonable to say that the thing is half part-1 and half part-2. This does not necessarily imply that the parts are equally difficult to create, although that would be a reasonable prior if you didn’t know much about how the parts worked.
Well I’m not sure there’s any reason to think that we can tell, by looking at the mathematical idealizations, that the inductive parts will take about the same amount of work to create as the agentic parts, just because the formalisms seem to weigh similar amounts (and what does that seeming mean?). I’m not sure our intuitions about the weights of the components mean anything.
If a thing has two main distinct parts, it seems reasonable to say that the thing is half part-1 and half part-2. This does not necessarily imply that the parts are equally difficult to create, although that would be a reasonable prior if you didn’t know much about how the parts worked.