5/19/2025 at 6:02:52 PM
> Maybe a useful way to think about what it would be like to coexist in a world that includes intelligences that aren’t human is to consider the fact that we’ve been doing exactly that for long as we’ve existed, because we live among animals.Another analogy that I like is about large institutions / corporations. They are, right now, kind of like AIs. Like Harari says in one of his books, Peugeot co. is an entity that we could call AI. It has goals, needs, wants and obviously intelligence, even if it's comprised by many thousands of individuals working on small parts of the company. But in aggregate it manifests intelligence to the world, it acts on the world and it reacts to the world.
I'd take this a step forward and say that we might even have ASI already, in the US military complex. That "machine" is likely the most advanced conglomerate of tech and intelligence (pun intended) that the world has ever created. In aggregate it likely is "smarter" than any single human being in existence, and if it sets a goal it uses hundreds of thousands of human minds + billions of dollars of sensors, equipment and tech to accomplish that goal.
We survived those kinds of entities, I think we'll be fine with whatever AI turns out to be. And if not, oh well, we had a good run.
by NitpickLawyer
5/19/2025 at 6:58:38 PM
Did we survive these entities? By current projections, between 13.9% and 27.6% of all species would be likely to be extinct by 2070 [0]. The USA suffers an estimated 200,000 annual deaths associated with lacking health insurance [1]. Thanks to intense lobbying by private prisons, the US incarceration rate is 6 times that of Canada, despite similar economic development [2].Sure, the human species is not yet on the brink of extinction, but we are already seeing an unprecedented fall in worldwide birth rates, which shows our social fabric itself is being pulled apart for paperclips. Changing the scale and magnitude to a hypothetical entity equivalent to a hundred copies of the generation's brightest minds with a pathological drive to maximize an arbitrary metric might only mean one of two things: either its fixation leads it to hacking its own reward mechanism, putting it in a perpetual comma while resisting termination, or it succeeds at doing the same on a planetary scale.
[0] https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/gcb.17125
[1] https://healthjusticemonitor.org/2024/12/28/estimated-us-dea...
[2] https://www.prisonstudies.org/highest-to-lowest/prison_popul...
by pona-a
5/19/2025 at 10:14:39 PM
> but we are already seeing an unprecedented fall in worldwide birth rates, which shows our social fabric itself is being pulled apart for paperclipsPeople choose to have fewer kids as they get richer, it's not about living conditions like so many people like to claim, otherwise poor people wouldn't be having so many children. Even controlling for high living conditions, like in Scandinavia, people still choose to have fewer kids.
by satvikpendem
5/20/2025 at 7:39:53 AM
The upper class people in scandinavia are having more kids than the middle class.Housing seems to be a pretty common issue that doesn't prevent people from having kids but if it delays (which it often does) it does the same job of dropping birthrates. I wish people would stop acting like it's only a wealth issue. Like oh if people get more money they no longer want kids....no
by modo_mario
5/20/2025 at 11:11:35 AM
You don't need a house to have kids. Poor people manage to have kids with no assets whatsoever and many animals manage to have kids without anything even resembling a house.It seems much more likely that humans don't have a particular impulse to have children because their instincts were designed for a world without birth control. Having children has become uneconomic, so people stopped. There isn't a natural instinct to raise alarms about that (which is what evolution would tend to do) because historically that just wouldn't have mattered. Both because people were poor and because sex used to imply children in a way it doesn't now.
The house thing is really a red herring. Sure we'd all like to own a house and being wealthy is better than being poor. But in a literal sense - not necessary and for almost all of our evolutionary history people have been reproducing without any wealth at all. The stats actually seem reasonably clear that it is exactly wealth that is blocking the children, despite the excuses that people come up with.
A real boon from chance that is unlikely to last, we're probably lucky to be living in this era before evolution starts kicking in and pushing us back towards overpopulation. Which will happen in a few generations.
by roenxi
5/20/2025 at 11:36:17 AM
>You don't need a house to have kids.Tell that to a good bunch of people I know who feel secure about their living situation well into their thirties and then of course that 3rd or 4th kid or even 2nd kid they might have felt comfortable having never happens.
What was the historical standard does not matter today in this context. One set of my great grandparents had 8 kids in an abode smaller than mine today. Yet I do not have a single one because where would I put it. A room where i have to strip the walls?
>before evolution starts kicking in and pushing us back towards overpopulation
societal evolution will work quicker than biological evolution ever will. Most of the families with lots of kids here in western europe are conservative muslims.
by modo_mario
5/20/2025 at 1:16:42 PM
The conversation started with Low birth rates in advanced economies - and you talk about how poverty is correlated with having kids.by intended
5/20/2025 at 7:58:04 AM
It's not about being rich or not, it's about working hard to have a simple life. If you take a look into all those people who are not having kids, usually is because their work and balance in life needs to be like that. If you have a kid, it will lag your career and probably will stop the way you make more money each year, by growing up or scaling up in your company.by Malcolmlisk
5/20/2025 at 10:07:02 AM
> otherwise poor people wouldn't be having so many childrenChalking it up to choice seems a bit unfair. I suspect lack of access to birth control probably plays a part.
by squigz
5/20/2025 at 7:34:32 AM
I would worry about the correlation isn't causation in the above statement. Having less kids making you richer seems just as, if not more, plausible of an explanation (among other possibilities).by gampleman
5/19/2025 at 11:22:33 PM
We (humans) have not only survived but thrived. 200,000 annual deaths is just 7% of the 3mil that die each year. More (as a percentage) probably died from access to the best health care 100 or 200 years ago. The fall in birth rates is, IMO, a good thing as the alternative, overpopulation seems like a far scarier specter to me. And to bring it back to AI's, an AI "with a pathological drive to maximize an arbitrary metric" is a hypothetical without any basis in reality. While fictional literature -- where I assume you got that concept -- is great for inspiration, it rarely has any predictive power. One probably shouldn't look to it as a guideline.by rmah
5/20/2025 at 9:20:29 AM
And 'associated with' is pretty weak as far as causality goes. I bet they all also drank water.by eru
5/21/2025 at 8:41:08 AM
> The USA suffers an estimated 200,000 annual deaths associated with lacking health insuranceIsn't this just about the advancement of medical science? I.e. Wouldn't they have died from the same causes regardless of medical insurance a few decades ago?
To take it to the extreme, let's say that I invent a new treatment that can extend any dying person's life by a year for the cost of $10M, and let's say that there is a provider that is willing to insure for that for an exorbitant cost. Then wouldn't almost every single person still dying be dying from lack of insurance?
by falcor84
5/20/2025 at 7:03:42 AM
You have to be careful with species. It could be dominated by obscure minor local variations in insects and fungi that nobody would even notice went missing and which might not actually matter.Apparently almost all animal species are insects:
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/number-of-described-speci...
by foxglacier
5/20/2025 at 9:19:42 AM
> The USA suffers an estimated 200,000 annual deaths associated with lacking health insurance [1].'Associated with' is a pretty lose term.
by eru
5/19/2025 at 7:47:46 PM
Charles Stross has also made that point about corporations essentially being artificial intelligence entities:https://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2018/01/dude-yo...
by keeda
5/20/2025 at 11:36:15 AM
https://omniorthogonal.blogspot.com/2013/02/hostile-ai-youre...This blog is where I saw the same idea recently, which also links to that post you link.
by ayrtondesozzla
5/19/2025 at 7:32:57 PM
In the general case, the entire species is an example of ASI.We're a collective intelligence. Individually we're pretty stupid, even when we're relatively intelligent. But we have created social systems which persist and amplify individual intelligence to raise collective ability.
But this proto-ASI isn't sentient. It's not even particularly sane. It's extremely fragile, with numerous internal conflicts which keep kneecapping its potential. It keeps skirting suicidal ideation.
Right now parts of it are going into reverse.
The difference between where we are now and AI is that ASI could potentially automate and unify the accumulation of knowledge and intelligence, with more effective persistence, and without the internal conflicts.
It's completely unknown if it would want to keep us around. We probably can't even imagine its thought processes. It would be so far outside our experience we have no way of predicting its abilities and choices.
by TheOtherHobbes
5/20/2025 at 11:23:45 AM
I get the idea, but I'm not quite sold on it. Being intelligent on vast scales is something an individual cannot do, but I'm not sure the "species" is more intelligent than any individual agent. I'm actually a bit more sure of the opposite. It's like LLM agents where just adding more doesn't improve the quality it just introduces more room for bullshit.To allocate capital on vast scales and make decisions on industry etc, sure, that's a level of intelligence quite beyond any one of us but this feels like cheating the definition of intelligence. It's not the quantity of it that matters, it's the quality. It's like flying I guess. A large bird and a small bird are both flying and the big bird is not doing "more" of it. A group of birds is doing something an individual is incapable of (forming a swarm), sure, but it's not an improvement on flying. It's just something else. That something else can be useful, but I don't particularly like applying that same move to "intelligence".
If the species was so goddamn intelligent it could solve unreasonable IQ tests and it cannot. If we want to solve something really, really hard we use Edward Witten not "the species". That's because there is no "species", there is only a bunch of individuals and if they all score bad, the aggregate will score bad as well. We just coast because a bunch of us are extraordinarily clever.
by whyowhy3484939
5/19/2025 at 6:33:35 PM
Metal Gear Solid 2 makes this point about how "over the past 200 years, a kind of consciousness formed layer by layer in the crucible of the White House" through memetic evolution. The whole conversation was markedly prescient for 2001 but not appreciated at the time.by ddq
5/19/2025 at 10:23:10 PM
I don’t think it was “prescient” for 2001 because it was based on already-existing ideas. The same author that inspired The Matrix.But the “art” of MGS might be the memetic powerhouse of Hideo Kojima as the inventor of everything. A boss to surpass Big Boss himself.
by keybored
5/20/2025 at 5:00:23 AM
Corporations, governments, religions -- all human-level intelligences with non-human goals (profit, power, influence).A professor of mine wrote a paper on this[0](~2012).
[0]https://web.eecs.umich.edu/~kuipers/papers/Kuipers-ci-12.pdf
by jumploops
5/19/2025 at 7:40:40 PM
Unless you have a truly bastardized definition of ASI then there is undoubtedly nothing close to it on earth. No corporation or military or government comes close to what ASI could be capable of.Any reasonably smart person can identify errors that Militaries, Governments and Corporations make ALL THE TIME. Do you really think a Chimp can identify the strategic errors Humans are making? Because that is where you would be in comparison to a real ASI. This is also the reason why small startups can and do displace massive supposedly superhuman ASI Corporations literally all the time.
The reality of Human congregations is that they are cognitively bound by the handful of smartest people in the group and communication bound by email or in person communication speeds. ASI has no such limitations.
>We survived those kinds of entities, I think we'll be fine with whatever AI turns out to be. And if not, oh well, we had a good run.
This is dangerously wrong and disgustingly fatalistic.
by vonneumannstan
5/20/2025 at 11:46:31 AM
> Unless you have a truly bastardized definition of ASI then there is undoubtedly nothing close to it on earth. No corporation or military or government comes close to what ASI could be capable of.This is glistening with religious fervour. Sure, they could be that powerful. Just like God/Allah/Thor/Superman could, too.
I've no doubt that many rationalist types sincerely care about these issues, and are sincerely worried. At the same time, I think it very likely that some significant number of them are majorly titillated by the biblical pleasure of playing messiah/prophet.
by ayrtondesozzla
5/20/2025 at 6:35:47 PM
>This is glistening with religious fervour. Sure, they could be that powerful. Just like God/Allah/Thor/Superman could, too.It's just straightforwardly following the definition of what an ASI would be, a strongly superhuman mind. Everything follows from that.
by vonneumannstan
5/19/2025 at 8:08:11 PM
Putting aside questions of what is and isn’t artificial, I think with the usual definitions “Is Microsoft a superintelligence” and “Can Microsoft build a superintelligence” are the same question.by QuadmasterXLII
5/21/2025 at 8:48:06 AM
I would disagree. For almost any particular task that I as an individual could embark on, if MS were to focus all their efforts (or even just a few percent) to outcompete me, they most likely would. But that would be because MS includes capable humans who are able to coordinate together."Building a superintelligence" on the other hand is about whether they can create something that would outcompete me at a task without having to dedicate humans to it.
by falcor84
5/20/2025 at 5:01:06 AM
Sorry, I don’t get it. Why is it a requirement for a superintelligence (whatever it may be) to be able to create another superintelligence (I assume, of comparable “super-ness”)?by drdaeman
5/20/2025 at 11:57:43 PM
sufficient: if entity A can build B who solves task C, then A can solve C by building Bnecessary: if superintelligences are much smarter than humans and humans can build superintelligences, then superintelligences can build superintelligences
If humans categorically can’t build superintelligences, then its not that consequential for our definition of superintelligence to be wrong
by QuadmasterXLII
5/20/2025 at 6:31:03 AM
Do we know that Chimps can't identify some subset of human strategic errors? I'm not convinced that's the case.The idea of dumber agents supervising smarter ones seems relatively grounded to me, and forms the basis of OpenAIs old superalignment efforts (although I think that team might've been disbanded?)
by ViscountPenguin
5/20/2025 at 6:34:41 PM
Well they seemingly can't effectively combat any coordinated human activity so it's probably fair to say they indeed can't strategize against us effectively.by vonneumannstan
5/19/2025 at 10:25:51 PM
If there was anywhere to get the needs-wants-intelligence take on corporations, it would be this site.> We survived those kinds of entities, I think we'll be fine
We just have climate change to worry about and massive inequality (we didn’t “survive” it, the fuzzy little corporations with their precious goals-needs-wants are still there).
But ultimately corporations are human inventions, they aren’t an Other that has taken on a life of its own.
by keybored
5/20/2025 at 1:54:26 AM
If a corporation is like an AI, it’s like one we imagine might exist one day, not currently-existing AI. LLM’s aren’t trying to make money or do anything in particular except predict the next token.The corporations that run LLM’s do charge for API usage, but it’s independent of what you the chat is about. It’s happening at a different level in the stack.
by skybrian
5/20/2025 at 3:02:55 AM
AIs minimize perplexity, corporations maximize profits - the rest are implemention details.If you built an AI that could outsource labor to humans and whose reward function is profit, your result would approximately be a corporation.
by overfeed
5/22/2025 at 2:31:31 AM
Some corporations maximise profit. Shareholders can have their corporation pursue any objective they feel like. And in practice, managers tend to run the show. And principle-agent problems crop up all over the place.However, even for the most eccentric shareholders or self-serving managers, it's hard to sustain a corporation if it keeps bleeding red ink. So only companies that at least break even tend to stick around.
Now add a market that's at least reasonably competitive, and your typical corporation barely earns the cost of capital.
Being so close to the edge, means that the minimal goal of 'break even (after cost of capital)' can look very much like 'maximise profit' in practice.
Compare https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instrumental_convergence
by eru
5/19/2025 at 10:57:35 PM
> We survived those kinds of entitiesMight want to wait just a bit longer before confidently making this call.
by crystal_revenge
5/20/2025 at 9:07:33 AM
The Neanderthal didn't survive us. Neither did any of the other extinct species. It's perfectly reasonable to think we may not survive a stronger, smarter species.by jay_kyburz
5/22/2025 at 2:32:37 AM
The Neanderthals didn't survive in the same way that my grand-grand-grand parents didn't survive:Both groups have living off-spring.
by eru
5/20/2025 at 7:41:05 AM
Thank you. Well expressed. I very much agree with this and have been saying so to friends for years.The way I look at it is that it's analogous to the way we ourselves function: we're made up of billions of cells which individually just follow simple programs mediated by local interactions with their neighbours as well as some global state mediated by hormones and signals from the nervous system. However collectively they produce what we call intelligence (and even consciousness) which we wouldn't ascribe to any of the component cells and those components aren't aware of the collective organisms goal. Moreover the overall organism can achieve goals and solve problems beyond the scale of the components.
Similarly our institutions, be they corporations, governments, etc... are collective intelligences with us as the parts. These institutions have goals and problems solving capabilities that far surpass our own - no individual could keep all Walmart stores perfectly stocked every day, or design a modern microchip or end-to-end AI platform, etc... . These really are the goals of the organisations, and not the individuals. Take for example the US government, every four years you swap out the individuals in the executive branch yet overall US policy remains largely unchained. Sure, sometimes there is a major shift in direction, but it takes time for that to be translated into shifts in policy and actions as different parts of the system react at different speeds. The bigger point is that the individuals executing the actions get swapped out over time (at different speeds for different parts like cells being replaced at different speeds in our bodies) but the organisation continues to pursue its own goal which only changes slowly over time. Political and financial analysts implicitly acknowledge this when they talk about US or Chinese policy but this often gets personified into the leader.
I think we really need to acknowledge more the existence and reality of organisational goals as independent of the goals of the individuals in those organisations. I was struck by how in the movie The Corporation they point out that corporations often take actions that are contrary to the beliefs of the individuals in them, including the CEO because the CEO is bound by his fiduciary duty to the shareholders. Corporations are legal persons and if you analyse them as persons they are psychopaths, without any human feelings or regard for human cost or externalities unless those are enforced through some legal or pricing mechanism. Yet when corporations or organisations transgress we often hold the individuals accountable. Sometimes the individuals are to blame but often its how the game has been set up that is at fault. For example, in a globally heterogenous tax regime, a multinational corporation will naturally minimise its tax burden, it can't really do otherwise and the executives of the company have a fiduciary duty to shareholders to carry that out.
Therefore we have revise and keep evolving the rules of the game in order to stay compatible with human values and survival.
by snthpy