Sure, but I feel like you’re underestimating the complexity of keeping the AGI alive. Let’s focus on the robots. You need to be able to build new ones, because eventually the old ones break. So you need to have a robot factory. Can existing robots build one? I don’t think so. You’d need robots to at least be able to support a minimal “post-apocalyptic” economy; if the robots were human-bodied, you’d need to have enough of these human-bodied things to man the powerplants, to drive trucks, refuel them with gasoline, transport the gasoline from strategic reserves to gas stations, man the robot-building factory, gather materials from the post-apocalyptic landscape, and have some backups of everything in case a hurricane floods your robot factory or something (if you’re trying to last 30 years). I think the minimal viable setup still requires many thousands of human-bodied robots (a million would likely suffice).
So sure, “entire human economy” is an overstatement, but “entire city-level post-apocalyptic human economy” sounds about right. Current robots are still very far from this.
Sure, but I feel like you’re underestimating the complexity of keeping the AGI alive. Let’s focus on the robots. You need to be able to build new ones, because eventually the old ones break. So you need to have a robot factory. Can existing robots build one? I don’t think so. You’d need robots to at least be able to support a minimal “post-apocalyptic” economy; if the robots were human-bodied, you’d need to have enough of these human-bodied things to man the powerplants, to drive trucks, refuel them with gasoline, transport the gasoline from strategic reserves to gas stations, man the robot-building factory, gather materials from the post-apocalyptic landscape, and have some backups of everything in case a hurricane floods your robot factory or something (if you’re trying to last 30 years). I think the minimal viable setup still requires many thousands of human-bodied robots (a million would likely suffice).
So sure, “entire human economy” is an overstatement, but “entire city-level post-apocalyptic human economy” sounds about right. Current robots are still very far from this.