“Whatever you think you know about the question; you don’t know”—a little too Zen for my liking. I’m pretty sure I know something about FAI.
@ burger flipper:
“proposing solutions tends to cause a version of the anchoring bias”
yeah, I can see how that might be a problem. For example, I get the feeling that everyone is “anchored” to the idea of a utility-maximization based AI.
The best way to get rid of anchoring bias is, IMO, to propose lots of radically different solutions to the problem so that the anchoring to each one is canceled out by anchoring to the others.
@ J. Hill:
“Whatever you think you know about the question; you don’t know”—a little too Zen for my liking. I’m pretty sure I know something about FAI.
@ burger flipper:
“proposing solutions tends to cause a version of the anchoring bias”
yeah, I can see how that might be a problem. For example, I get the feeling that everyone is “anchored” to the idea of a utility-maximization based AI.
The best way to get rid of anchoring bias is, IMO, to propose lots of radically different solutions to the problem so that the anchoring to each one is canceled out by anchoring to the others.