hmm, I believe myself to be forecasting what will happen in the majority of timelines. can you clarify your point with one or several qualitatively different rephrasings, given that context? Or, how would your version of my point look?
Sure, the point I’m making applies to what is intended to be actual forecasting just as well, if it has this exploratory engineering form. The argument becomes stronger if it’s reframed from forecasting to discussion of technological affordances, if it in fact is a discussion of technological affordances, in a broad sense of “technological” that can include social dynamics.
An exploratory engineering sketch rests on assumptions of what can be done, and what the world chooses to do, to draw conclusions about what happens in that case, it’s a study of affordances, of options. Its validity is not affected if in fact more can be done, or if in fact something else will be done. But validity of a forecast is affected by those things, so forecasting is more difficult and reframing an exploratory engineering sketch as forecasting unnecessarily damages its validity.
In this particular case, I don’t expect this story to play out without superintelligence getting developed early on, which makes the rest of the story stop being a worthwhile thing for the superintelligence to let continue. And conversely, I don’t expect such a story to start developing more than a few months before a superintelligence is likely to be built. But the story itself is good exploratory engineering, it shows that at least this level of economically unstoppable disempowerment is feasible.
hmm, I believe myself to be forecasting what will happen in the majority of timelines. can you clarify your point with one or several qualitatively different rephrasings, given that context? Or, how would your version of my point look?
Sure, the point I’m making applies to what is intended to be actual forecasting just as well, if it has this exploratory engineering form. The argument becomes stronger if it’s reframed from forecasting to discussion of technological affordances, if it in fact is a discussion of technological affordances, in a broad sense of “technological” that can include social dynamics.
An exploratory engineering sketch rests on assumptions of what can be done, and what the world chooses to do, to draw conclusions about what happens in that case, it’s a study of affordances, of options. Its validity is not affected if in fact more can be done, or if in fact something else will be done. But validity of a forecast is affected by those things, so forecasting is more difficult and reframing an exploratory engineering sketch as forecasting unnecessarily damages its validity.
In this particular case, I don’t expect this story to play out without superintelligence getting developed early on, which makes the rest of the story stop being a worthwhile thing for the superintelligence to let continue. And conversely, I don’t expect such a story to start developing more than a few months before a superintelligence is likely to be built. But the story itself is good exploratory engineering, it shows that at least this level of economically unstoppable disempowerment is feasible.