I am not alone in preferring not to die and have humanity and all that it values obliterated by the selection pressures of a Malthusian catastrophe as a precursor to the cosmic commons being burned.
I don’t think Robin particularly wants to die. Note that he’s signed up for cryonics for example. Regarding the burning of the cosmic commons, it isn’t clear to me that he is in favor of that, just that he considers it to be a likely result. Given his training as an economist, that shouldn’t be that surprising.
All non-singleton possibilities being horrific is not to say that the majority of possible singletons do not constitute “humanity: FAIL” as well. Just that the only significant opportunities for a desirable future happen to involve a singleton.
Can you expand on this? I don’t know if this is something that is a) agreed upon or b) sufficiently well-defined. If for example, AGI turns out to be not able to go foom, and we all get functioning cryonics and clinical immortality that seems like a pretty good outcome. I don’t see how you get that non-singleton results must be horrific or even that most of them must be horrific. There may be definitional issues here in what constitutes horrific.
There may be definitional issues here in what constitutes horrific.
No, just the basic ‘everybody dies and that which constitutes the human value system is obliterated without being met’.
But there are certainly issues regarding different premises which would prohibit useful discussion here without multiple-post level groundwork preparation.
Regarding the burning of the cosmic commons, it isn’t clear to me that he is in favor of that,
No, rather, it is the default mainline probable outcome of other scenarios that he does (explicitly) embrace. (Some of that embracing was, I will grant, made for the purpose of being deliberately provocative.)
I don’t think Robin particularly wants to die. Note that he’s signed up for cryonics for example. Regarding the burning of the cosmic commons, it isn’t clear to me that he is in favor of that, just that he considers it to be a likely result. Given his training as an economist, that shouldn’t be that surprising.
Can you expand on this? I don’t know if this is something that is a) agreed upon or b) sufficiently well-defined. If for example, AGI turns out to be not able to go foom, and we all get functioning cryonics and clinical immortality that seems like a pretty good outcome. I don’t see how you get that non-singleton results must be horrific or even that most of them must be horrific. There may be definitional issues here in what constitutes horrific.
No, just the basic ‘everybody dies and that which constitutes the human value system is obliterated without being met’.
But there are certainly issues regarding different premises which would prohibit useful discussion here without multiple-post level groundwork preparation.
No, rather, it is the default mainline probable outcome of other scenarios that he does (explicitly) embrace. (Some of that embracing was, I will grant, made for the purpose of being deliberately provocative.)