catastrophists: when evolution was gradually improving hominid brains, suddenly something clicked—it stumbled upon the core of general reasoning—and hominids went from banana classifiers to spaceship builders. hence we should expect a similar (but much sharper, given the process speeds) discontinuity with AI.
gradualists: no, there was no discontinuity with hominids per se; human brains merely reached a threshold that enabled cultural accumulation (and in a meaningul sense it was culture that built those spaceships). similarly, we should not expect sudden discontinuities with AI per se, just an accelerating (and possibly unfavorable to humans) cultural changes as human contributions will be automated away.
I found the extended Fire/Nuclear Weapons analogy to be quite helpful. Here’s how I think it goes:
In 1870 the gradualist and the catastrophist physicist wonder about whether there will ever be a discontinuity in explosive power
Gradualist: we’ve already had our zero-to-one discontinuity—we’ve invented black powder, dynamite and fuses, from now on there’ll be incremental changes and inventions that increase explosive power but probably not anything qualitatively new, because that’s our default expectation with a technology like explosives where there are lots of paths to improvement and lots of effort exerted
Catastrophist: that’s all fine and good, but those priors don’t mean anything if we have already seen an existence proof for qualitatively new energy sources. What about the sun? The energy the sun outputs is overwhelming, enough to warm the entire earth. One day, we’ll discover how to release those energies ourselves, and that will give us qualitatively better explosives.
Gradualist: But we don’t know anything about how the sun works! It’s probably just be a giant ball of gas heated by gravitational collapse! One day, in some crazy distant future, we might be able to pile on enough gas that gravity implodes and heats it, but that’ll require us to be able to literally build stars, it’s not going to occur suddenly. We’ll pile up a small amount of gas, then a larger amount, and so on after we’ve given up on assembling bigger and bigger piles of explosives. There’s no secret physics there, just a lot of conventional gravitational and chemical energy in one place
Catastrophist: ah, but don’t you know Lord Kelvin calculated the Sun could only shine for a few million years under the gravitational mechanism, and we know the Earth is far older than that? So there has to be some other, incredibly powerful energy source that we’ve not yet discovered within the sun. And when we do discover it, we know it can under the right circumstances, release enough energy to power the Sun, so it seems foolhardy to assume it’ll just happen to be as powerful as our best normal explosive technologies are whenever we make the discovery. Imagine the coincidence if that was true! So I can’t say when this will happen or even exactly how powerful it’ll be, but when we discover the Sun’s power it will probably represent a qualitatively more powerful new energy source. Even if there are many ways to try to tweak our best chemical explosives to be more powerful and/or the potential new sun-power explosives to be weaker, and we’d still not hit the narrow target of the two being roughly on the same level.
Gradualist: Your logic works, but I doubt Lord Kelvin’s calculation
It seems like the AGI Gradualist sees the example of humans like my imagined Nukes Gradualist sees the sun, i.e. just a scale up of what we have now. While the AGI Catastrophist sees Humans as my imagined Nukes Catastrophist sees the sun.
The key disanalogy is that for the Sun case, there’s a very clear ‘impossibility proof’ given by the Nukes Catastrophist that the sun couldn’t just be a scale up of existing chemical and gravitational energy sources.
Nuclear Energy: Gradualism vs Catastrophism
I found the extended Fire/Nuclear Weapons analogy to be quite helpful. Here’s how I think it goes:
In 1870 the gradualist and the catastrophist physicist wonder about whether there will ever be a discontinuity in explosive power
Gradualist: we’ve already had our zero-to-one discontinuity—we’ve invented black powder, dynamite and fuses, from now on there’ll be incremental changes and inventions that increase explosive power but probably not anything qualitatively new, because that’s our default expectation with a technology like explosives where there are lots of paths to improvement and lots of effort exerted
Catastrophist: that’s all fine and good, but those priors don’t mean anything if we have already seen an existence proof for qualitatively new energy sources. What about the sun? The energy the sun outputs is overwhelming, enough to warm the entire earth. One day, we’ll discover how to release those energies ourselves, and that will give us qualitatively better explosives.
Gradualist: But we don’t know anything about how the sun works! It’s probably just be a giant ball of gas heated by gravitational collapse! One day, in some crazy distant future, we might be able to pile on enough gas that gravity implodes and heats it, but that’ll require us to be able to literally build stars, it’s not going to occur suddenly. We’ll pile up a small amount of gas, then a larger amount, and so on after we’ve given up on assembling bigger and bigger piles of explosives. There’s no secret physics there, just a lot of conventional gravitational and chemical energy in one place
Catastrophist: ah, but don’t you know Lord Kelvin calculated the Sun could only shine for a few million years under the gravitational mechanism, and we know the Earth is far older than that? So there has to be some other, incredibly powerful energy source that we’ve not yet discovered within the sun. And when we do discover it, we know it can under the right circumstances, release enough energy to power the Sun, so it seems foolhardy to assume it’ll just happen to be as powerful as our best normal explosive technologies are whenever we make the discovery. Imagine the coincidence if that was true! So I can’t say when this will happen or even exactly how powerful it’ll be, but when we discover the Sun’s power it will probably represent a qualitatively more powerful new energy source. Even if there are many ways to try to tweak our best chemical explosives to be more powerful and/or the potential new sun-power explosives to be weaker, and we’d still not hit the narrow target of the two being roughly on the same level.
Gradualist: Your logic works, but I doubt Lord Kelvin’s calculation
It seems like the AGI Gradualist sees the example of humans like my imagined Nukes Gradualist sees the sun, i.e. just a scale up of what we have now. While the AGI Catastrophist sees Humans as my imagined Nukes Catastrophist sees the sun.
The key disanalogy is that for the Sun case, there’s a very clear ‘impossibility proof’ given by the Nukes Catastrophist that the sun couldn’t just be a scale up of existing chemical and gravitational energy sources.