Someone who believes that a Singularity is likely at, say 2030, might save less for retirement than they otherwise would. I wonder if Singularitarians really do so?
(Some believe that the rich will be the first and only ones to afford the technologies of Transcendence. I don’t believe that, but one who did might save up after all.)
I suppose that depends on what kind of Singularity you are expecting. If you’re expecting a Singleton which will pension off all the humans, then sure, eat drink and be merry—for tomorrow our investments die. If you’re expecting a Hansonian ‘crack of the future dawn’, you’d better be saving and investing in equities so as to ride the coming bull market when ems eat everyone’s wage-jobs.
My best thought is a Pascalian thought about what the quasi-dominant option is:
if the singleton Singularity happens, then your investment is just wasted and your loss is bounded at whatever that money could have bought you pre-Singularity;
if the Hanson Singularity happens, your gains are potentially huge over the long-term (assuming property rights are respected...);
if no Singularity at all happens, then your early all-equity investments (for a young person) was a good-to-great way to save for retirement (or a post-death bequest or expense, like cryonics) and you gain a lot.
So in 2 out of the 3 outcomes, you are much better off investing heavily in equities, and in the first you are not that badly off.
One has to start somewhere. And the possibility-space isn’t that large: the investments will be valuable or not, some sort of Singularity will happen or not, etc.
I would suggest that a breakdown in social order (without a singularity occurring) is another scenario that might be roughly as probable as the others you mentioned. In such case, it would seem the manner by which you invest in equities would matter. I.e.., the value of most abstract investments may vanish, and the value of equities held in trust by various institutions (or counterparties) may also vanish.
Someone who believes that a Singularity is likely at, say 2030, might save less for retirement than they otherwise would. I wonder if Singularitarians really do so?
(Some believe that the rich will be the first and only ones to afford the technologies of Transcendence. I don’t believe that, but one who did might save up after all.)
I suppose that depends on what kind of Singularity you are expecting. If you’re expecting a Singleton which will pension off all the humans, then sure, eat drink and be merry—for tomorrow our investments die. If you’re expecting a Hansonian ‘crack of the future dawn’, you’d better be saving and investing in equities so as to ride the coming bull market when ems eat everyone’s wage-jobs.
what should you do if you have no clue whatsoever what will happen?
My best thought is a Pascalian thought about what the quasi-dominant option is:
if the singleton Singularity happens, then your investment is just wasted and your loss is bounded at whatever that money could have bought you pre-Singularity;
if the Hanson Singularity happens, your gains are potentially huge over the long-term (assuming property rights are respected...);
if no Singularity at all happens, then your early all-equity investments (for a young person) was a good-to-great way to save for retirement (or a post-death bequest or expense, like cryonics) and you gain a lot.
So in 2 out of the 3 outcomes, you are much better off investing heavily in equities, and in the first you are not that badly off.
I think judging on the basis of those three possibilities is a premature narrowing of the hypothesis space.
One has to start somewhere. And the possibility-space isn’t that large: the investments will be valuable or not, some sort of Singularity will happen or not, etc.
I would suggest that a breakdown in social order (without a singularity occurring) is another scenario that might be roughly as probable as the others you mentioned. In such case, it would seem the manner by which you invest in equities would matter. I.e.., the value of most abstract investments may vanish, and the value of equities held in trust by various institutions (or counterparties) may also vanish.
Which falls in the ‘not valuable’/‘not Singularity’ cell of the 2x2 table.
So one should carry on disregarding the possibility of God existing… err… Singularity happening?
Dunno. What do you think of the thumbnail analysis?