on/over some sort of sample group and control group.
I notice that there is nothing exponential assumed
about this test object, and so therefore, at most,
the effects are probably multiplicative, if not linear.
Therefore, there are lots of questions about power dynamics
that we can overall safely ignore, as a simplification,
which is in marked contrast to anything involving ASI.
If we assume, as you requested, “no side effects” observed,
in any test group, for any of those things
that we happened to be thinking of, to even look for,
then for any linear system, that is probably “good enough”.
I am not sure I understand the distinction between linear and exponential in the vaccine context. By linear do you mean that only few people die? By exponential do you mean that a lot of people die?
If so, then I am not so sure that vaccine effects could only be linear. For example, there might be some change in our complex environment that would prompt the vaccine to act differently than it did in the past.
More generally, our vaccine can lead to catastrophic outcomes if there is something about its future behavior that we didn’t predict. And if that turns out to be true, then things could go ugly really fast.
And the extent of the damage can be truly big. “Scientifically proven” cancer vaccine that passed the tests is like the holy grail of medicine. “Curing cancer” is often used by parents as an example of the great things their children could achieve. This is combined with the fact that cancer has been with us for a long time and the fact that the current treatment is very expensive and painful.
All of these factors combined tell us that in a relatively short period of time a large percentage of the total population will get this vaccine. At that point, the amount of damage that can be done only depends on what thing we overlooked, which we, by definition, have no control over.
If there is some long future problem that crops up,
the company can say “we never looked for that”
and “we are not responsible for the unexpected”,
because the people who made the deployment choices
have taken their profits and their pleasure in life,
and are now long dead. “Not my Job”.
“Don’t blame us for the sins of our forefathers”.
Similarly, no one is going to ever admit or concede
any point, of any argument, on pain of ego death.
This same excuse would surely be used by companies manufacturing the vaccine. They would argue that they shouldn’t be blamed for something that the researchers overlooked. They would say that they merely manufactured the product in order to prevent the needless suffering of countless people.
For all we know, by the time that the overlooked thing happens, the original researchers (who developed and tested the vaccine) are long dead, having lived a life of praise and glory for their ingenious invention (not to mention all the money that they received).
Thanks for the reply!
I am not sure I understand the distinction between linear and exponential in the vaccine context. By linear do you mean that only few people die? By exponential do you mean that a lot of people die?
If so, then I am not so sure that vaccine effects could only be linear. For example, there might be some change in our complex environment that would prompt the vaccine to act differently than it did in the past.
More generally, our vaccine can lead to catastrophic outcomes if there is something about its future behavior that we didn’t predict. And if that turns out to be true, then things could go ugly really fast.
And the extent of the damage can be truly big. “Scientifically proven” cancer vaccine that passed the tests is like the holy grail of medicine. “Curing cancer” is often used by parents as an example of the great things their children could achieve. This is combined with the fact that cancer has been with us for a long time and the fact that the current treatment is very expensive and painful.
All of these factors combined tell us that in a relatively short period of time a large percentage of the total population will get this vaccine. At that point, the amount of damage that can be done only depends on what thing we overlooked, which we, by definition, have no control over.
This same excuse would surely be used by companies manufacturing the vaccine. They would argue that they shouldn’t be blamed for something that the researchers overlooked. They would say that they merely manufactured the product in order to prevent the needless suffering of countless people.
For all we know, by the time that the overlooked thing happens, the original researchers (who developed and tested the vaccine) are long dead, having lived a life of praise and glory for their ingenious invention (not to mention all the money that they received).