Nah, I don’t think you think theological thoughts, but I do admit I have that opinion of some other people. Theological thoughts are strangely attractive to minds :/ . That’s how we got religion in first place. Can’t be too careful about recreating religion.
With the hash functions, there seems to be a very strong disparity—a definition of a hash can fit in 1 page, but our entire might can not solve it. And that’s with us trying to use fewer iterations.
Here we are speaking of a hash, definition of which is trillions times larger, and which introduces random thermal noise. Complexity theory is not only tool… there’s also the Lyapunov’s exponent considerations; it may well be that too big range of minds are compatible with the dataset, even though the dataset has enough data—if the thermal noise got hashed in. Then there’s can be future ethical considerations against any form of brute force process that creates minds only to destroy them.
On whenever it is worth a try, for me the strategic considerations apply—if I am to deem something like this worth a try, I will end up buying snake oil. Also, the money, for most of us, can be spent on living better life now.
Nah, I don’t think you think theological thoughts, but I do admit I have that opinion of some other people. Theological thoughts are strangely attractive to minds :/ . That’s how we got religion in first place. Can’t be too careful about recreating religion.
With the hash functions, there seems to be a very strong disparity—a definition of a hash can fit in 1 page, but our entire might can not solve it. And that’s with us trying to use fewer iterations.
Here we are speaking of a hash, definition of which is trillions times larger, and which introduces random thermal noise. Complexity theory is not only tool… there’s also the Lyapunov’s exponent considerations; it may well be that too big range of minds are compatible with the dataset, even though the dataset has enough data—if the thermal noise got hashed in. Then there’s can be future ethical considerations against any form of brute force process that creates minds only to destroy them.
On whenever it is worth a try, for me the strategic considerations apply—if I am to deem something like this worth a try, I will end up buying snake oil. Also, the money, for most of us, can be spent on living better life now.