I think this might be a crux, actually. I think it’s surprisingly common in history for things to work out well empirically, but that we either don’t understand how they work, or it took a long time to understand how it works.
AI development is the most central example, but I’d argue the invention of steel is another good example.
To put it another way, I’m relying on the fact that there have been empirically successful interventions where we either simply don’t know why it works, or it takes a long time to get a useful theory out of the empirically successful intervention.
I think this might be a crux, actually. I think it’s surprisingly common in history for things to work out well empirically, but that we either don’t understand how they work, or it took a long time to understand how it works.
AI development is the most central example, but I’d argue the invention of steel is another good example.
To put it another way, I’m relying on the fact that there have been empirically successful interventions where we either simply don’t know why it works, or it takes a long time to get a useful theory out of the empirically successful intervention.