So a thing I’ve been trying to look at is get a better notion of “What actually is it about human intelligence that lets us be the dominant species?” Like, “intelligence” is a big box that holds which specific behaviors? What were the actual behaviors that evolution reinforced, over the course of giving of big brains? Big question, hard to know what’s the case.
I’m in the middle of “Darwin’s Unfinished Symphony”, and finding it at least intriguing as a look how creativity / imitation are related, and how “imitation” is a complex skill that humans are nevertheless supremely good at. (The “Secret of Our Success” is another great read here of course.)
Both of these kinda about the human imitation prior… in humans. And why that may be important. So I think if one is thinking around the human-imitation prior being powerful, it would make sense to read them as cases for why something like the human imitation prior is also powerful in humans :)
They don’t give straight answers to any questions about AI, of course, and I’d be sympathetic to the belief that they’re irrelevant or kinda a waste of time, and frankly they might be a waste of time depending on what you’re funging against. I’m not saying they answer any question; I’m saying they’re interesting. But I think they’re good reads if one’s approaching from the angle of “Intelligence is what lets humans dominate the earth” and want a particular angle on how “intelligence” is a mixed bag of some different skills, at least some of which are probably not general search and planning. So, yeah.
So a thing I’ve been trying to look at is get a better notion of “What actually is it about human intelligence that lets us be the dominant species?” Like, “intelligence” is a big box that holds which specific behaviors? What were the actual behaviors that evolution reinforced, over the course of giving of big brains? Big question, hard to know what’s the case.
I’m in the middle of “Darwin’s Unfinished Symphony”, and finding it at least intriguing as a look how creativity / imitation are related, and how “imitation” is a complex skill that humans are nevertheless supremely good at. (The “Secret of Our Success” is another great read here of course.)
Both of these kinda about the human imitation prior… in humans. And why that may be important. So I think if one is thinking around the human-imitation prior being powerful, it would make sense to read them as cases for why something like the human imitation prior is also powerful in humans :)
They don’t give straight answers to any questions about AI, of course, and I’d be sympathetic to the belief that they’re irrelevant or kinda a waste of time, and frankly they might be a waste of time depending on what you’re funging against. I’m not saying they answer any question; I’m saying they’re interesting. But I think they’re good reads if one’s approaching from the angle of “Intelligence is what lets humans dominate the earth” and want a particular angle on how “intelligence” is a mixed bag of some different skills, at least some of which are probably not general search and planning. So, yeah.