People are not fanatical immortal maximizers that are robustly distributed with near unlimited regenerative properties. If we were I’d expect there to be exactly one person left on earth after an arbitrary amount of time.
That seems like an unrelated argument to me. The agents we are talking about here are also physically limited. Maybe they are more powerful, but they are presumably more powerful in some kind of sphere of influence, and they need to cooperate too. Sure, any analogy has to be proven tight, but I have proposed a model for that in the other comment.
Isn’t there a base assumption that agents are super intelligent, don’t “decay” I.e. they have infinite time horizons, they are maximizing EV, and would work fine alone?
People are not fanatical immortal maximizers that are robustly distributed with near unlimited regenerative properties. If we were I’d expect there to be exactly one person left on earth after an arbitrary amount of time.
That seems like an unrelated argument to me. The agents we are talking about here are also physically limited. Maybe they are more powerful, but they are presumably more powerful in some kind of sphere of influence, and they need to cooperate too. Sure, any analogy has to be proven tight, but I have proposed a model for that in the other comment.
Isn’t there a base assumption that agents are super intelligent, don’t “decay” I.e. they have infinite time horizons, they are maximizing EV, and would work fine alone?
No?
And even if they do not decay and have long time horizon, they would still benefit from collaborating with each other. This is about how they do that.