I can’t think of another way to reason—does our brain dictate our goal, or receives a goal from somewhere and makes an effort to execute it accurately? I’d go with the first option, which to me means that whatever our brain (code) is built to do is our goal.
The complication in the case of humans might be the fact that we have more than one competing goal. It is as if this robot has a multi-tasking operating system, with one process trying to kill blue objects and another trying to build a pyramid out of plastic bottles. Normally they can co-exist somehow with some switching between processes or by just one process “not caring” about doing some activity at the current instance.
It gets ugly when the robot finds a few blue bottles. Then the robot becomes “irrational” with one process destroying what the other is trying to do. This is simply when you are on a healthy diet and see a slice of chocolate cake—you’re processes are doing their jobs, but they are competing on resources—who gets to move your arms?
Let’s then imagine that we have in our brains a controlling (operating) system that can get to decide which process to kill when they are in conflict. Will this operating system have a right and wrong decision? Or will whatever it does be the right thing according to its code—or else it wouldn’t have done it?
I was thinking of, y’know, biased people. Also known as me and everyone I’ve ever met. Telling them “don’t worry, whatever you’re already doing is what you really want” does not seem Friendly.
I can’t think of another way to reason—does our brain dictate our goal, or receives a goal from somewhere and makes an effort to execute it accurately? I’d go with the first option, which to me means that whatever our brain (code) is built to do is our goal.
The complication in the case of humans might be the fact that we have more than one competing goal. It is as if this robot has a multi-tasking operating system, with one process trying to kill blue objects and another trying to build a pyramid out of plastic bottles. Normally they can co-exist somehow with some switching between processes or by just one process “not caring” about doing some activity at the current instance.
It gets ugly when the robot finds a few blue bottles. Then the robot becomes “irrational” with one process destroying what the other is trying to do. This is simply when you are on a healthy diet and see a slice of chocolate cake—you’re processes are doing their jobs, but they are competing on resources—who gets to move your arms?
Let’s then imagine that we have in our brains a controlling (operating) system that can get to decide which process to kill when they are in conflict. Will this operating system have a right and wrong decision? Or will whatever it does be the right thing according to its code—or else it wouldn’t have done it?
I was thinking of, y’know, biased people. Also known as me and everyone I’ve ever met. Telling them “don’t worry, whatever you’re already doing is what you really want” does not seem Friendly.