I understand your 2nd point, but to comment on your 1st comment—is having the simpler question always the right thing to focus on? isn’t searching for the right questions to ponder the best way to arrive at the best solutions?
Subpar questions lead to incomplete /wrong answers. If it happens to be that we wrongly framed the alignment problem, the cost of this is huge or even catastrophic. It’s still cheaper to question even the best ideas now rather than change directions or correct errors later.
Thank you for your response.
I understand your 2nd point, but to comment on your 1st comment—is having the simpler question always the right thing to focus on? isn’t searching for the right questions to ponder the best way to arrive at the best solutions?
It depends on whether you’re being academic or practical.
Subpar questions lead to incomplete /wrong answers. If it happens to be that we wrongly framed the alignment problem, the cost of this is huge or even catastrophic. It’s still cheaper to question even the best ideas now rather than change directions or correct errors later.
Again, you are not suggesting something new , you are suggesting a standard answer which no one has the faintest idea how to implement.
I’m in the process of writing it. Will link it here once finished. Thanks for being more direct too.