Thanks for this, I really appreciate this comment (though my perspective is different on many points).
My impression (which could be false) is that you seem to be exclusively or disproportionately critical of poor arguments when they come from the “high P(doom)” side.
It’s true that I spend more effort critiquing bad doom arguments. I would like to note that when e.g. I read Quintin I generally am either in agreement or neutral. I bet there are a lot of cases where you would think “that’s a poor argument” and I’d say “hm I don’t think Akash is getting the point (and it’d be good if someone could give a better explanation).”
However, it’s definitely not true that I never critique optimistic arguments which I consider poor. For example, I don’t get why Quintin (apparently) thinks that spectral bias is a reason for optimism, and I’ve said as much on one of his posts. I’ve said something like “I don’t know why you seem to think you can use this mathematical inductive bias to make high-level intuitive claims about what gets learned. This seems to fall into the same trap that ‘simplicity’ theorizing does.” I probably criticize or express skepticism of certain optimistic arguments at least twice a week, though not always on public channels. And I’ve also pushed back on people being unfair, mean, or mocking of “doomers” on private channels.
I do think that statements like “community epistemics have been compromised by groupthink and fear” are pretty unproductive and could be met with statements like “community epistemics have been compromised by powerful billion-dollar companies that have clear financial incentives to make people overly optimistic about the trajectory of AI progress.”
I think both statements are true to varying degrees (the former more than the latter in the cases I’m considering). They’re true and people should say them. The fact that I work at a lab absolutely affects my epistemics (though I think the effect is currently small). People should totally consider the effect which labs are having on discourse.
have a relatively high bar for saying “not only do I think you’re wrong, but also here are some ways in which you and your allies have poor epistemics.”
I do consider myself to have a high bar for this, and the bar keeps getting passed, so I say something. EDIT: Though I don’t mean for my comments to imply “someone and their allies” have bad epistemics. Ideally I’d like to communicate “hey, something weird is in the air guys, can’t you sense it too?”. However, I think I’m often more annoyed than that, and so I don’t communicate that how I’d like.
Thanks for this, I really appreciate this comment (though my perspective is different on many points).
It’s true that I spend more effort critiquing bad doom arguments. I would like to note that when e.g. I read Quintin I generally am either in agreement or neutral. I bet there are a lot of cases where you would think “that’s a poor argument” and I’d say “hm I don’t think Akash is getting the point (and it’d be good if someone could give a better explanation).”
However, it’s definitely not true that I never critique optimistic arguments which I consider poor. For example, I don’t get why Quintin (apparently) thinks that spectral bias is a reason for optimism, and I’ve said as much on one of his posts. I’ve said something like “I don’t know why you seem to think you can use this mathematical inductive bias to make high-level intuitive claims about what gets learned. This seems to fall into the same trap that ‘simplicity’ theorizing does.” I probably criticize or express skepticism of certain optimistic arguments at least twice a week, though not always on public channels. And I’ve also pushed back on people being unfair, mean, or mocking of “doomers” on private channels.
I think both statements are true to varying degrees (the former more than the latter in the cases I’m considering). They’re true and people should say them. The fact that I work at a lab absolutely affects my epistemics (though I think the effect is currently small). People should totally consider the effect which labs are having on discourse.
I do consider myself to have a high bar for this, and the bar keeps getting passed, so I say something. EDIT: Though I don’t mean for my comments to imply “someone and their allies” have bad epistemics. Ideally I’d like to communicate “hey, something weird is in the air guys, can’t you sense it too?”. However, I think I’m often more annoyed than that, and so I don’t communicate that how I’d like.