And, sure, but it’s not clear why any of this matters? What is the thing that we’re going to (attempt) to do with AI, if not use it to solve real-world problems?
It matters because the original poster isn’t saying we don’t use it to solve real world problems, but rather that real world constraints (I.e. laws of physics) will limit its speed of advancement.
An AI likely cannot easily predict a chaotic system unless it can simulate reality at a high fidelity. I guess Op is assuming the TAI won’t have this capability, so even if we do solve real world problems with AI, it is still limited by real world experimentation requirements.
It matters because the original poster isn’t saying we don’t use it to solve real world problems, but rather that real world constraints (I.e. laws of physics) will limit its speed of advancement.
An AI likely cannot easily predict a chaotic system unless it can simulate reality at a high fidelity. I guess Op is assuming the TAI won’t have this capability, so even if we do solve real world problems with AI, it is still limited by real world experimentation requirements.