The reason to compare it to fission is from self gain. For a fission reaction that quirk of physics is called criticality where the neutrons produced self amplify, leading to exponential gain. Up until sufficient fissionable material was concentrated (the Chicago pile) there was zero fission gain and you could say fission was only a theoretical possibility.
Today human beings design and participate in building AI software, AI computer chips, and robots for AI to drive. They also gather the resources to make these things.
The ‘quirk’ we expect to exploit here is that human minds are very limited in I/O and lifespan, and have many inefficiencies and biases. They are also millions of times slower than computer chips that already exist, at least for individual subsystems. They were designed by nature to handle far more limited domain problems than the ones we are faced with now, and thus we are bad at them.
The ‘quirk’ therefore is that if you can build a superior than a human mind but also as robust and broad in capabilities, and the physical materials are a small amount of refined silicon or carbon with small energy requirements (say a cube that is 10cm*10cm and requiring 1 kW) you can order those machines to self replicate, getting the equivalent of adding trillions of workers to our population without any of the needs or desires of those trillions of people.
This will obviously cause explosive economic growth. Will it be over 30% in a single year? No idea.
The reason to compare it to fission is from self gain. For a fission reaction that quirk of physics is called criticality where the neutrons produced self amplify, leading to exponential gain. Up until sufficient fissionable material was concentrated (the Chicago pile) there was zero fission gain and you could say fission was only a theoretical possibility.
Today human beings design and participate in building AI software, AI computer chips, and robots for AI to drive. They also gather the resources to make these things.
The ‘quirk’ we expect to exploit here is that human minds are very limited in I/O and lifespan, and have many inefficiencies and biases. They are also millions of times slower than computer chips that already exist, at least for individual subsystems. They were designed by nature to handle far more limited domain problems than the ones we are faced with now, and thus we are bad at them.
The ‘quirk’ therefore is that if you can build a superior than a human mind but also as robust and broad in capabilities, and the physical materials are a small amount of refined silicon or carbon with small energy requirements (say a cube that is 10cm*10cm and requiring 1 kW) you can order those machines to self replicate, getting the equivalent of adding trillions of workers to our population without any of the needs or desires of those trillions of people.
This will obviously cause explosive economic growth. Will it be over 30% in a single year? No idea.