I sort of did touch on Naam’s screwup there; it doesn’t make sense to even talk about the next generation of AI being dumber, whether or not the ‘complexity’ is square, square root, log, or exponential or whether he calculated 70% right.
whups
I’m not sure which objections are stronger than others. Nondeterminism is probably less helpful to an AI than approximations, but is approximations more helpful than redefining problems? Computronium brute force? The possibility that P=NP and an AI can find a non-galactic algorithm for that? Weighing the stronger objections would require a much more precise total model of the constant factors and asymptotics and computational resources and possibilities for expansions.
I think redefining problems and approximation are both huge. I didn’t mean a complete ranking, just fleshing out and giving more life to certain elements after the list is done. Pointing out how big a deal they are. These are important failures in the argument. In a way it comes across as a kind of reverse Gish Gallop—you have a bunch of really really strong arguments, and by putting them in a list the impression is weakened.
I sort of did touch on Naam’s screwup there; it doesn’t make sense to even talk about the next generation of AI being dumber, whether or not the ‘complexity’ is square, square root, log, or exponential or whether he calculated 70% right.
whups
I’m not sure which objections are stronger than others. Nondeterminism is probably less helpful to an AI than approximations, but is approximations more helpful than redefining problems? Computronium brute force? The possibility that P=NP and an AI can find a non-galactic algorithm for that? Weighing the stronger objections would require a much more precise total model of the constant factors and asymptotics and computational resources and possibilities for expansions.
I think redefining problems and approximation are both huge. I didn’t mean a complete ranking, just fleshing out and giving more life to certain elements after the list is done. Pointing out how big a deal they are. These are important failures in the argument. In a way it comes across as a kind of reverse Gish Gallop—you have a bunch of really really strong arguments, and by putting them in a list the impression is weakened.