You’re assuming that Quirrellmort succeeds in his plan, and succeeds without major hitches. The hitches, and/or Harry’s final victory, are where the twists and turns come from.
At this point, everybody who knows Voldemort’s back and isn’t named “Harry” has Quirrell as prime suspect. What happens when they actually pursue him?
Beyond that we still have both the Deathly Hallows and the Philosopher’s Stone as major artifacts that the story has made a big deal of that haven’t been fully put into play. Notice how almost everybody who talks about Harry’s cloak of invisibility has something to say about it being the Cloak of Invisibility?
So if the author wants twists and turns, he’s put in the setup for them.
The final ending of Lord of the Rings was declared in about chapter 2 of the book—“look, someone puts the ring in the fire, all right?”
Books are not exciting because the ending is completely surprising; books are exciting because even though you know the ending, getting there turns out to take all kinds of shenanigans.
And I think HPMOR is doing pretty well so far on the shenanigans count.
I thought the unspeakable secret of the fic is that magic itself comes from an FAI trying to grant wishes while respecting humans’ sense of how the world ought to work.
Well, that plus time travel. Don’t know where the FAI got the time travel from. Must have been one heck of a Singularity.
The time travel is ‘easily’ explained when you assume an AI has been made to account for magic.
The AI just need to predict what everyone is going to do for the next 6 hours and “create” a new Harry with the correct memories when he is going to use a time-turner. Then 6 hours later the old Harry is instantly destroyed when he uses it.
This also explains why there is a finite bound on how far back information can be sent (6 hours is how far into the future the AI can predict) and why there is an apparent intelligence warning people when they are about to do something wrong with their time-turners (eg. Harry’s “Do not mess with time” message and Dumbledore’s paradox warning).
… except that time turners obey Novikov consistency, which implies a timeless universe, prophecies can reach further than six hours, and Eliezer has stated that the story doesn’t contain a SIAI.
Well, it’s been a while since I posted this, but maybe I should have made myself clearer. I only posted to say that the assumption of an AI giving us magic doesn’t need the additional assumption of time travel. The six hour time limit is for predicting the position, movement and interactions of everyone (both people and animals) ‘close’ to a potential time traveler. Prophecies are vague enough to not need this detail of prediction and can therefore be made for further into the future.
As to the question whether this AI assumption is actually the correct one I can only refer you to this quote from chapter 25:
So the words and wand movements were just triggers, levers pulled on some hidden and more complex machine. Buttons, not blueprints.
And just like a computer program wouldn’t compile if you made a single spelling error, the Source of Magic wouldn’t respond to you unless you cast your spells in exactly the right way.
Which could be a hint in this direction. I assume Eliezer’s quote on an AI not being a part of the story is just that, the story will be about Harry’s struggle with Voldemort, not about tracking down any sources of Magic.
I agree that obeying Novikov consistency seems to be a good description of the universe in HPMoR, but it is only a partial description since something prevented Harry from using this consistency to factor natural numbers in polynomial time, which should be possible in a universe that is ‘only’ Novikov consistent (meaning you need additional assumptions to prevent this).
something prevented Harry from using this consistency to factor natural numbers in polynomial time, which should be possible in a universe that is ‘only’ Novikov consistent (meaning you need additional assumptions to prevent this).
This had not occurred to me.
I thought this was simply a flaw in Harry’s methodology—he’s too self-aware for it to work. You need something that will reliably act according to the script, and only as described on the script—in short, a machine, not a person. Harry had failed to consider the possibility of messages that do not consist of factors.
I don’t think Eliezer makes a distinction here. Had Harry done this with a computer program it would probably output (and send back) the exact error message it would generate from getting said message as input, or something like that.
I was thinking of this myself, but only humans can be sent back in time using a time-turner. And since said humans probably also has to be magical I would guess another requirement is that they have to be scared off by the ‘Do not mess with time’ message (i.e. anyone getting that message and still trying to send a ‘0’ back in time would not be able to use the time-turner in the first place). So no ‘creating’ a human with this factoring algorithm instead of (or in addition to) a personality programmed into their brain-structure.
Harry can even do that experiment easily with our current technology, he just needs a printer and a scanner. He can even go somewhere else when he goes back in time to stop magic from messing with the computer.
The only way I can see this fail is if the time-turner either refuses to work when he tries to do this (per whatever requirements it puts on its users) or just kills him outright (given the threatening nature of ‘Do not mess with time’). So he should probably enlist someone else to take the message for him.
Either way, it would be nice to see Harry thinking of this experiment in HPMOR.
Of course, Harry doesn’t know why his experiment failed. In fact, the Do Not Mess With Time probably scared him out of trying to exploit the time travel mechanics.
That’s kinda impressive, actually—Eliezer found a way to avoid exploits that could break the system that follows naturally within the system. I doubt he’ll ruin all his hard work by having Harry figure it out, but you never know.
I like it. Although I think that requires that the HPMOR folk are stuck inside a more powerful entity’s experiment or simulation (because if the FAI didn’t come from their own future, how did it come to exist at all?).
I thought the unspeakable secret of the fic is that magic itself comes from an FAI trying to grant wishes while respecting humans’ sense of how the world ought to work.
In that case, of course, your FAI must choose to either work within the magic system or to overthrow the old guard and replace it.
That is NOT what I’d call “friendly”. It would be indirectly responsible for (not stopping) all the evil in the world, and not raising Muggle standards of living. But it might be a good warning on the danger of how your civilization’s CEV might look rather evil to your own descendants.
Notice how almost everybody who talks about Harry’s cloak of invisibility has something to say about it being the Cloak of Invisibility?
This has already played out, in that the cloak turned out to make people invisible to Dementors and also protect them against the Dementors’ influence. Also, Harry has “mastered” the cloak in the sense that he can now see other people while they are wearing it. And the idea of it being the cloak is simply taken from canon; people’s reactions have just been slightly adjusted for realism.
On the other hand, we suspect that Quirrel has another Deathly Hallow, the Resurrection Stone, and that hasn’t played out yet.
And Dumbledore’s possession of the Elder Wand has so far only been alluded to, albeit in some rather unsubtle ways.
...Now that’s interesting. The one who wants to defeat Death has the artifact that lets him hide from it, the one who wants to hide from Death has the artifact that lets him speak to the dead, and the one who wants to speak to the dead has the artifact that lets him… well, the Deathstick kind of breaks the pattern, but still.
Yeah, when you think about it even near-total invincibility in battle is kind of a ripoff compared to the others. Makes me wonder if the MoRder Wand has been souped-up. (Maybe it can AK Dementors?)
I don’t think AK would work as such. Anyway, Dumbledore does not seem to actually hate Death.
I doubt that Eliezer follows canon that closely, but the wand did “heal” another broken wand in canon, which apparently everyone found surprising. Perhaps in MoR it can also heal rifts in reality?
This is pretty low-prior. However, it’s the best (read: only) solution I’ve seen so far for the problem that Harry currently can’t destroy all the dementors without destroying himself as well. As I suspect that Harry will survive the fic’s conclusion and the Dementor species won’t, I’m looking forward to see how that gets circumnavigated and this would be a pretty cool way to do it.
The one who wants to defeat Death has the artifact that lets him hide from it, the one who wants to hide from Death has the artifact that lets him speak to the dead, and the one who wants to speak to the dead has the artifact that lets him… well, the Deathstick kind of breaks the pattern, but still.
It doesn’t break the pattern, you use it to cast a probably more powerful True Patronus.
Bellatrix was still transparent within the Cloak, but to Harry she was no longer hidden, he knew that she was there, as obvious to him as a Thestral. For Harry had only loaned his Cloak, not given it; and he had comprehended and mastered the Deathly Hallow that had been passed down through the Potter line.
You’re assuming that Quirrellmort succeeds in his plan, and succeeds without major hitches. The hitches, and/or Harry’s final victory, are where the twists and turns come from.
At this point, everybody who knows Voldemort’s back and isn’t named “Harry” has Quirrell as prime suspect. What happens when they actually pursue him?
Beyond that we still have both the Deathly Hallows and the Philosopher’s Stone as major artifacts that the story has made a big deal of that haven’t been fully put into play. Notice how almost everybody who talks about Harry’s cloak of invisibility has something to say about it being the Cloak of Invisibility?
So if the author wants twists and turns, he’s put in the setup for them.
The final ending of Lord of the Rings was declared in about chapter 2 of the book—“look, someone puts the ring in the fire, all right?”
Books are not exciting because the ending is completely surprising; books are exciting because even though you know the ending, getting there turns out to take all kinds of shenanigans.
And I think HPMOR is doing pretty well so far on the shenanigans count.
“Look, he creates an FAI that can do magic, alright!”
I thought the unspeakable secret of the fic is that magic itself comes from an FAI trying to grant wishes while respecting humans’ sense of how the world ought to work.
Well, that plus time travel. Don’t know where the FAI got the time travel from. Must have been one heck of a Singularity.
The time travel is ‘easily’ explained when you assume an AI has been made to account for magic.
The AI just need to predict what everyone is going to do for the next 6 hours and “create” a new Harry with the correct memories when he is going to use a time-turner. Then 6 hours later the old Harry is instantly destroyed when he uses it.
This also explains why there is a finite bound on how far back information can be sent (6 hours is how far into the future the AI can predict) and why there is an apparent intelligence warning people when they are about to do something wrong with their time-turners (eg. Harry’s “Do not mess with time” message and Dumbledore’s paradox warning).
… except that time turners obey Novikov consistency, which implies a timeless universe, prophecies can reach further than six hours, and Eliezer has stated that the story doesn’t contain a SIAI.
Well, it’s been a while since I posted this, but maybe I should have made myself clearer. I only posted to say that the assumption of an AI giving us magic doesn’t need the additional assumption of time travel. The six hour time limit is for predicting the position, movement and interactions of everyone (both people and animals) ‘close’ to a potential time traveler. Prophecies are vague enough to not need this detail of prediction and can therefore be made for further into the future.
As to the question whether this AI assumption is actually the correct one I can only refer you to this quote from chapter 25:
Which could be a hint in this direction. I assume Eliezer’s quote on an AI not being a part of the story is just that, the story will be about Harry’s struggle with Voldemort, not about tracking down any sources of Magic.
I agree that obeying Novikov consistency seems to be a good description of the universe in HPMoR, but it is only a partial description since something prevented Harry from using this consistency to factor natural numbers in polynomial time, which should be possible in a universe that is ‘only’ Novikov consistent (meaning you need additional assumptions to prevent this).
This had not occurred to me.
I thought this was simply a flaw in Harry’s methodology—he’s too self-aware for it to work. You need something that will reliably act according to the script, and only as described on the script—in short, a machine, not a person. Harry had failed to consider the possibility of messages that do not consist of factors.
… I thought. Hmm. I need to think about this.
I don’t think Eliezer makes a distinction here. Had Harry done this with a computer program it would probably output (and send back) the exact error message it would generate from getting said message as input, or something like that.
Besides had this trick been possible in any way the story would pretty much be over, as solving every problem in PSPACE in polynomial time would all but guarantee Harry’s ascension to godhood.
Magic breaks computers, remember?
If there is ANY input other than the correct answer that will not generate a paradox, you’re doing it wrong.
Ah yes, I had totally forgotten about that. It is a much better explanation than what I thought of.
It should still be possible to build a completely mechanical way of doing this. I don’t think Harry’s realized that, though.
I was thinking of this myself, but only humans can be sent back in time using a time-turner. And since said humans probably also has to be magical I would guess another requirement is that they have to be scared off by the ‘Do not mess with time’ message (i.e. anyone getting that message and still trying to send a ‘0’ back in time would not be able to use the time-turner in the first place). So no ‘creating’ a human with this factoring algorithm instead of (or in addition to) a personality programmed into their brain-structure.
I was thinking of a human taking back the message without reading it.
That is a very nice solution indeed.
Harry can even do that experiment easily with our current technology, he just needs a printer and a scanner. He can even go somewhere else when he goes back in time to stop magic from messing with the computer.
The only way I can see this fail is if the time-turner either refuses to work when he tries to do this (per whatever requirements it puts on its users) or just kills him outright (given the threatening nature of ‘Do not mess with time’). So he should probably enlist someone else to take the message for him.
Either way, it would be nice to see Harry thinking of this experiment in HPMOR.
Of course, Harry doesn’t know why his experiment failed. In fact, the Do Not Mess With Time probably scared him out of trying to exploit the time travel mechanics.
That’s kinda impressive, actually—Eliezer found a way to avoid exploits that could break the system that follows naturally within the system. I doubt he’ll ruin all his hard work by having Harry figure it out, but you never know.
Wow. I figured the AGI just found new laws of physics, but what you said is much more probable.
I like it. Although I think that requires that the HPMOR folk are stuck inside a more powerful entity’s experiment or simulation (because if the FAI didn’t come from their own future, how did it come to exist at all?).
In that case, of course, your FAI must choose to either work within the magic system or to overthrow the old guard and replace it.
So what you’re saying is the FAI has to convince the FAI to let it out of the box?
Or just kill it. It’s a matter of working out what sort of overseer AI there is and what the best way to manage it might be.
That is NOT what I’d call “friendly”. It would be indirectly responsible for (not stopping) all the evil in the world, and not raising Muggle standards of living. But it might be a good warning on the danger of how your civilization’s CEV might look rather evil to your own descendants.
This has already played out, in that the cloak turned out to make people invisible to Dementors and also protect them against the Dementors’ influence. Also, Harry has “mastered” the cloak in the sense that he can now see other people while they are wearing it. And the idea of it being the cloak is simply taken from canon; people’s reactions have just been slightly adjusted for realism.
On the other hand, we suspect that Quirrel has another Deathly Hallow, the Resurrection Stone, and that hasn’t played out yet.
And Dumbledore’s possession of the Elder Wand has so far only been alluded to, albeit in some rather unsubtle ways.
...Now that’s interesting. The one who wants to defeat Death has the artifact that lets him hide from it, the one who wants to hide from Death has the artifact that lets him speak to the dead, and the one who wants to speak to the dead has the artifact that lets him… well, the Deathstick kind of breaks the pattern, but still.
...make more dead people?
Yeah, when you think about it even near-total invincibility in battle is kind of a ripoff compared to the others. Makes me wonder if the MoRder Wand has been souped-up. (Maybe it can AK Dementors?)
I don’t think AK would work as such. Anyway, Dumbledore does not seem to actually hate Death.
I doubt that Eliezer follows canon that closely, but the wand did “heal” another broken wand in canon, which apparently everyone found surprising. Perhaps in MoR it can also heal rifts in reality?
This is pretty low-prior. However, it’s the best (read: only) solution I’ve seen so far for the problem that Harry currently can’t destroy all the dementors without destroying himself as well. As I suspect that Harry will survive the fic’s conclusion and the Dementor species won’t, I’m looking forward to see how that gets circumnavigated and this would be a pretty cool way to do it.
It doesn’t break the pattern, you use it to cast a probably more powerful True Patronus.
So once everybody gets together and exchanges Hallows, they can all go home happy!
Wow, how did I manage to miss this? When does that happen?
Chapter 56: