I’d like to see finer-grained surveying of what fields people work in. Reading this post (esp. PZ Myers’ take on WBE roadmap) made me update in the direction of cryonics and uploading not working, and also made me more worried about information cascades on LW in fields where users have little collective expertise.
(It might also be interesting to have another question along the lines of: how informed/accurate does the stuff you’ve read on LW regarding your field seem to be? What’s something important going on in your field that LW should be discussing? Etc. Dunno if the first question is meaningful for most fields though; I’m just throwing this out there.)
Hm, how about adding psychology, neuroscience, physics, math, “something biology-related”, and “something engineering-related” to the list of academic fields?
And then in the bonus questions section at the end: “Got anything to say on the intersection of what you read on LW and your academic field?”
So let me get this straight. You can read PZ Myer’s link, where he states in all serious
You’re just going to increase the speed of the computations — how are you going to do that without disrupting the interactions between all of the subunits? You’ve assumed you’ve got this gigantic database of every cell and synapse in the brain, and you’re going to just tweak the clock speed…how? You’ve got varying length constants in different axons, different kinds of processing, different kinds of synaptic outputs and receptor responses, and you’re just going to wave your hand and say, “Make them go faster!” Jebus. As if timing and hysteresis and fatigue and timing-based potentiation don’t play any role in brain function; as if sensory processing wasn’t dependent on timing. We’ve got cells that respond to phase differences in the activity of inputs, and oh, yeah, we just have a dial that we’ll turn up to 11 to make it go faster.
(Incidentally, in a post on GRG, it was mentioned that the first mouse brain is being examined by the Brain Preservation Prize are showing preliminary signs of excellent fixation, specifically “perfectly preserved ultrastructure throughout the brain”.)
I did find that objection less persuasive. I didn’t say PZ’s post was perfect.
I don’t think doing rationality better than PZ should be our goal; I think figuring out what’s true should be our goal. I do think that semi-ridicule by a professional biologist should be taken as evidence that the authors of WBE roadmap know less than they think (edit: but see Carl Shulman’s comment). Beyond that, I’m out of my depth and happy to be corrected on specifics.
Argument screens off authority. When an esteemed biology writer dismisses a claim about computer simulations of life-forms by using an argument based on a serious confusion regarding computation (not regarding biology), his reputation as a biologist counts for nothing.
Any computer simulation can be run faster than real-time given adequate processing power; and this has nothing to do with whether the process being simulated can be accelerated.
Sure, you can just arbitrarily set the time-scale of the simulation, but then you mess up the inputs from outside the simulation. And you can’t model a human brain in total I/O isolation without it melting down into insanity.
I didn’t feel comfortable dismissing his objection out of hand, because I wasn’t exactly sure what point he was trying to make. Then I read Carl Shulman’s comment, and now I’m thinking it probably just didn’t occur to him to simulate the brain in a sped-up virtual environment. Probably he assumed the simulation was expected to interact with the real world as flesh-and-blood humans do, just while thinking faster. If this was the goal, it seems his objection would be valid.
Fair enough. His point that a mind works with sense organs is a good one, it’s true. Running a double-speed brain with single-speed audio inputs w...o...u...l...d … n...o...t … w...o...r...k.
I’d like to see finer-grained surveying of what fields people work in. Reading this post (esp. PZ Myers’ take on WBE roadmap) made me update in the direction of cryonics and uploading not working, and also made me more worried about information cascades on LW in fields where users have little collective expertise.
(It might also be interesting to have another question along the lines of: how informed/accurate does the stuff you’ve read on LW regarding your field seem to be? What’s something important going on in your field that LW should be discussing? Etc. Dunno if the first question is meaningful for most fields though; I’m just throwing this out there.)
I am much more likely to include this in a way that is to your liking (or at all) if you give me exact questions.
Hm, how about adding psychology, neuroscience, physics, math, “something biology-related”, and “something engineering-related” to the list of academic fields?
And then in the bonus questions section at the end: “Got anything to say on the intersection of what you read on LW and your academic field?”
So let me get this straight. You can read PZ Myer’s link, where he states in all serious
The comments call him out on it in the original post at http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2012/07/14/and-everyone-gets-a-robot-pony/ and he stands by it. And you’re worried about information cascades on LessWrong?
(Incidentally, in a post on GRG, it was mentioned that the first mouse brain is being examined by the Brain Preservation Prize are showing preliminary signs of excellent fixation, specifically “perfectly preserved ultrastructure throughout the brain”.)
I did find that objection less persuasive. I didn’t say PZ’s post was perfect.
I don’t think doing rationality better than PZ should be our goal; I think figuring out what’s true should be our goal. I do think that semi-ridicule by a professional biologist should be taken as evidence that the authors of WBE roadmap know less than they think (edit: but see Carl Shulman’s comment). Beyond that, I’m out of my depth and happy to be corrected on specifics.
Argument screens off authority. When an esteemed biology writer dismisses a claim about computer simulations of life-forms by using an argument based on a serious confusion regarding computation (not regarding biology), his reputation as a biologist counts for nothing.
Any computer simulation can be run faster than real-time given adequate processing power; and this has nothing to do with whether the process being simulated can be accelerated.
Myers writes:
I didn’t feel comfortable dismissing his objection out of hand, because I wasn’t exactly sure what point he was trying to make. Then I read Carl Shulman’s comment, and now I’m thinking it probably just didn’t occur to him to simulate the brain in a sped-up virtual environment. Probably he assumed the simulation was expected to interact with the real world as flesh-and-blood humans do, just while thinking faster. If this was the goal, it seems his objection would be valid.
Fair enough. His point that a mind works with sense organs is a good one, it’s true. Running a double-speed brain with single-speed audio inputs w...o...u...l...d … n...o...t … w...o...r...k.