I don’t think Eliezer believes he’s irreplaceable, exactly. He thinks, or I think he thinks, that any sufficiently intelligent AI which has not been built to the standard of Friendliness (as he defines it) is an existential risk. And the only practical means for preventing the development of UnFriendly AI is to develop superintelligent FAI first. The team to develop FAI needn’t be SIAI, and Eliezer wouldn’t necessarily be the most important contributor to the project, and SIAI might not ultimately be equal to the task. But if he’s right about the risk and the solution, and his untimely demise were to doom the world, it would be because no-one else tried to do this, not because he was the only one who could.
Not that this rules out your interpretation. I’m sure he has a high opinion of his abilities as well. Any accusation of hubris should probably mention that he once told Aubrey de Grey “I bet I can solve ALL of Earth’s emergency problems before you cure aging.”
I don’t think Eliezer believes he’s irreplaceable, exactly. He thinks, or I think he thinks, that any sufficiently intelligent AI which has not been built to the standard of Friendliness (as he defines it) is an existential risk. And the only practical means for preventing the development of UnFriendly AI is to develop superintelligent FAI first. The team to develop FAI needn’t be SIAI, and Eliezer wouldn’t necessarily be the most important contributor to the project, and SIAI might not ultimately be equal to the task. But if he’s right about the risk and the solution, and his untimely demise were to doom the world, it would be because no-one else tried to do this, not because he was the only one who could.
Not that this rules out your interpretation. I’m sure he has a high opinion of his abilities as well. Any accusation of hubris should probably mention that he once told Aubrey de Grey “I bet I can solve ALL of Earth’s emergency problems before you cure aging.”