It’s an argument from cosmic normality, about the scope of applicability of such methods. Like medicine or biology, the relevance is a temporary accident of the current phase of human condition. I’m not sure how natural the impression of overclaiming applicability of physics, statistics, information theory, or machine learning is, perhaps this is quite clear already.
The point is that these things are not obviously at all relevant to the nature of agency, or values. You could in principle have frail human biological bodies within a simulated world, and practice medicine on them, but that’s hardly a central thing that happens in a post-computronium world.
It’s an argument from cosmic normality, about the scope of applicability of such methods. Like medicine or biology, the relevance is a temporary accident of the current phase of human condition. I’m not sure how natural the impression of overclaiming applicability of physics, statistics, information theory, or machine learning is, perhaps this is quite clear already.
The point is that these things are not obviously at all relevant to the nature of agency, or values. You could in principle have frail human biological bodies within a simulated world, and practice medicine on them, but that’s hardly a central thing that happens in a post-computronium world.