You bring up a good point, whether it is useful to worry about UFAI.
To recap, my original query was about the claim that p(UFAI before 2116) is less than 1% due to UFAI being “vaguely magical”. I am interested in figuring out what that means—is it a fair representation of the concept to say that p(Interstellar before 2116) is less than 1% because interstellar travel is “vaguely magical”?
What would be the relationship between “Requiring Advanced Technology” and “Vaguely Magical”? Clarke’s third law is a straightforward link, but “vaguely magical” has previously been used to indicate poor definitions, poor abstractions and sentences that do not refer to anything.
I am not sure the OP had much meaning behind his “vaguely magical” expression, but given that we are discussing it anyway :-) I would probably reinterpret it in terms of Knightian uncertainty. It’s not only the case that we don’t know, we don’t know what we don’t know and how much we don’t know.
This interpretation makes a lot of sense. The term can describe events that have a lot of Knightian Uncertainty, which a “Black Swan” like UFAI certainly has.
You bring up a good point, whether it is useful to worry about UFAI.
To recap, my original query was about the claim that p(UFAI before 2116) is less than 1% due to UFAI being “vaguely magical”. I am interested in figuring out what that means—is it a fair representation of the concept to say that p(Interstellar before 2116) is less than 1% because interstellar travel is “vaguely magical”?
What would be the relationship between “Requiring Advanced Technology” and “Vaguely Magical”? Clarke’s third law is a straightforward link, but “vaguely magical” has previously been used to indicate poor definitions, poor abstractions and sentences that do not refer to anything.
I am not sure the OP had much meaning behind his “vaguely magical” expression, but given that we are discussing it anyway :-) I would probably reinterpret it in terms of Knightian uncertainty. It’s not only the case that we don’t know, we don’t know what we don’t know and how much we don’t know.
This interpretation makes a lot of sense. The term can describe events that have a lot of Knightian Uncertainty, which a “Black Swan” like UFAI certainly has.