Plausibly an undergraduate math degree would be enough? Agent Foundations is often over my head, but it’s only a little over my head—I definitely have the sense that I could understand the background with not much effort.
Fwiw I also think an undergraduate CS degree is enough to get a good background for safety-oriented ML, as long as you make sure to focus on ML.
The use of the graduate degree is more in training you to do research than to understand any particular background knowledge well.
(Also I’m not claiming that RAISE is not filling a niche—it seems very plausible to me that there are people who would like to work on Agent Foundations who are currently working professionals and not at college, and for them a curated set of resources would be valuable.)
I don’t think most places have enough ML courses at the undergraduate level; I’d expect 0-2 undergraduate ML courses at a typical large or technically focused university. OFC, you can often take graduate courses as an undergraduate as well.
Plausibly an undergraduate math degree would be enough? Agent Foundations is often over my head, but it’s only a little over my head—I definitely have the sense that I could understand the background with not much effort.
Fwiw I also think an undergraduate CS degree is enough to get a good background for safety-oriented ML, as long as you make sure to focus on ML.
The use of the graduate degree is more in training you to do research than to understand any particular background knowledge well.
(Also I’m not claiming that RAISE is not filling a niche—it seems very plausible to me that there are people who would like to work on Agent Foundations who are currently working professionals and not at college, and for them a curated set of resources would be valuable.)
I don’t think most places have enough ML courses at the undergraduate level; I’d expect 0-2 undergraduate ML courses at a typical large or technically focused university. OFC, you can often take graduate courses as an undergraduate as well.