Why did you title the book “If anyone builds it everyone dies” if the point of the book was not to convince people “If anyone builds it everyone dies”? If this really was some obscure philosophical project that has no bearing on the real question why not give it some obscure title like “On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies” to clearly indicate “this isn’t meant to be persuasive or even comprehensible to 99% of human beings”
IABIED is a 101-level book written for the general public that was deliberately kept nice and short. I kinda think anyone (who is not an expert) who reads IABIED and comes away with a similar level of pessimism as the authors is making an error. If you read any single book on a wild, controversial topic, you should not wind up extremely confident!
My sense is that the point of the book was to convince people that it’s important to take AI x-risk seriously (as BB does). I don’t really think it was intended to get people to think it’s title thesis is clearly true.
>Arguably that wasn’t the point of the book
Why did you title the book “If anyone builds it everyone dies” if the point of the book was not to convince people “If anyone builds it everyone dies”? If this really was some obscure philosophical project that has no bearing on the real question why not give it some obscure title like “On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies” to clearly indicate “this isn’t meant to be persuasive or even comprehensible to 99% of human beings”
My sense is that the point of the book was to convince people that it’s important to take AI x-risk seriously (as BB does). I don’t really think it was intended to get people to think it’s title thesis is clearly true.
Some things are hard to judge.