Yes, the last sentence is probably my real “objection”. (Well, I don’t object to your statements, I just don’t think that’s what Eliezer meant. Even if you run a non-statistical, deterministic theorem prover, using current hardware the probability of failure is much above 10^-100.)
The silly part of the comment was just a reminder (partly to myself) that AGI problems can span orders of magnitude so ridiculously outside the usual human scale that one can’t quite approximate (the number of atoms in the universe)^-1 as zero without thinking carefully about it.
Yes, the last sentence is probably my real “objection”. (Well, I don’t object to your statements, I just don’t think that’s what Eliezer meant. Even if you run a non-statistical, deterministic theorem prover, using current hardware the probability of failure is much above 10^-100.)
The silly part of the comment was just a reminder (partly to myself) that AGI problems can span orders of magnitude so ridiculously outside the usual human scale that one can’t quite approximate (the number of atoms in the universe)^-1 as zero without thinking carefully about it.