Quotes on Existential Risk
Similar to the AGI Quotes thread and the monthly Rationality Quotes threads, this is a thread for memorable quotes about existential risk.
Please post all quotes separately, so that they can be voted up/down separately. (If they are strongly related, reply to your own comments. If strongly ordered, then go ahead and post them together.)
Do not quote yourself.
But please feel free to quote posts and comments from Less Wrong or Overcoming Bias.
Derek Parfit, 1984, Reasons and Persons
I don’t at all disagree with Parfit’s assessment that 2>3 by much more than 1>2 (and, incidentally, Reasons and Persons is an excellent book, though rather dense) but I wonder whether he’s right that “most people”—by which I think he probably really means something like “most people who would ever consider such a question in the first place”—think otherwise.
Maybe he means that most people (out of everyone, including those who never have considered the question) would give that answer if asked out of the blue.
Yes, perhaps he does, but if so I don’t know why he’s paying any attention—in a quite technical work of philosophy aimed at professional philosophers—to the question of what “most people” would unreflectively say to a question of that sort.
I’m not sure I’d agree. “Civilization began only a few thousand years ago” alright, but during these years the Earth wasn’t full of radioactive waste.
-- Sam Hughes, Preamble to How to destroy the Earth
Rendering Earth uninhabitable would be as bad an existential risk as destroying it altogether, though.
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-- Eliezer Yudkowsky, Cognitive biases potentially affecting judgment of global risks
I hope I am allowed to quote EY. I personally thought this was a very well written and beautiful quote.
First reaction: EY wrote entire long paragraphs without any italics? So I looked up the paper. It should be “The extension of” and “phrase end of the world invokes”. Apparently he toned it down.
This is two quotes; quite a bit of text separates these two paragraphs.
-- Nick Bostrom
-- Robert Heinlein.
Lewis Mumford, 1970, “The Technological Imperative”
-- Eliezer Yudkowsky, Cognitive biases potentially affecting judgment of global risks
Norbert Wiener, 1950, The Human Use of Human Beings