Hyperventilating leads to hallucinations instead of stimulation. I went to a Holotropic Breathwork session once. Some years before that, I went to a Sufi workshop in NYC where Hu was chanted to get the same result. I have to admit I cheated at both events—I limited my breathing rate or depth so not much happened to me.
Listening to the reports from the other participants of the Holotropic Breathwork session made my motives very clear to me. I don’t want any of that. I like the way my mind works. I might consider making purposeful and careful changes to how my mind works, but I do not want random changes. I don’t take psychoactive drugs for the same reason.
Humans can be recognized inductively: Pick a time such as the present when it is not common to manipulate genomes. Define a human to be everyone genetically human at that time, plus all descendants who resulted from the naturally occurring process, along with some constraints on the life from conception to the present to rule out various kinds of manipulation.
Or maybe just say that the humans are the genetic humans at the start time, and that’s all. Caring for the initial set of humans should lead to caring for their descendants because humans care about their descendants, so if you’re doing FAI you’re done. If you want to recognize humans for some other purpose this may not be sufficient.
Predicting human behavior seems harder than recognizing humans, so it seems to me that you’re presupposing the solution of a hard problem in order to solve an easy problem.
An entirely separate problem is that if you train to discover what humans would do in one situation and then stop training and then use the trained inference scheme in new situations, you’re open to the objection that the new situations might be outside the domain covered by the original training.