AI or some descendant of it will presumably have left long before that, taking whatever DNA samples it had saved. — Vera Mont
Besides, who says any species has a right, or duty or destiny to outlive their planet? Most species have a finite span and then go extinct. — Vera Mont
What comfort? What home? By that point, people are nothing but files in a database or cloud or whatever and their bodies have been discarded. — Vera Mont
We seem to have crossed purposes now: you're concentrating on the space travel component, while I was responding to the machine-human merging part. — Vera Mont
No. It would see no such benefit, except to organics. Even if conscious and self-aware, I don't see why it would want to contaminate itself with an inferior intelligence. — Vera Mont
Why should something that's entirely self-sufficient and efficient want to be more like us? Only because we consider ourselves the pinnacle of creation. — Vera Mont
I see very well what the humans get out of it, but I'm unconvinced about the other side. — Vera Mont
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HubrisA common way that hubris was committed was when a mortal claimed to be better than a god in a particular skill or attribute. Claims like these were rarely left unpunished, and so Arachne, a talented young weaver, was transformed into a spider when she said that her skills exceeded those of the goddess Athena, even though her claim was true. Additional examples include Icarus, Phaethon, Salmoneus, Niobe, Cassiopeia, Tantalus, and Tereus.[12]
The goddess Hybris is described in the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition as having "insolent encroachment upon the rights of others".[13]
These events were not limited to myth, and certain figures in history were considered to have been punished for committing hubris through their arrogance. One such person was king Xerxes as portrayed in Aeschylus's play The Persians, and who allegedly threw chains to bind the Hellespont sea as punishment for daring to destroy his fleet.[citation needed]
What is common in all of these examples is the breaching of limits, as the Greeks believed that the Fates (Μοῖραι) had assigned each being with a particular area of freedom, an area that even the gods could not breach.[14]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CassandraCassandra was a daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy. Her elder brother was Hector, the hero of the Greek-Trojan War. The older and most common versions of the myth state that she was admired by the god Apollo, who sought to win her love by means of the gift of seeing the future. According to Aeschylus, she promised him her favours, but after receiving the gift, she went back on her word. As the enraged Apollo could not revoke a divine power, he added to it the curse that nobody would believe her prophecies. In other sources, such as Hyginus and Pseudo-Apollodorus, Cassandra broke no promise to Apollo, but rather the power of foresight was given to her as an enticement to enter into a romantic engagement, the curse being added only when it failed to produce the result desired by the god.
Only humans say whatever is said, so no other opinion exists.Alternatively, who says a species doesn't have the right, duty, or destiny to outlive their planet? — punos
Because the first part is biological fact, wherein one lifespan begins a generation later than the other, and in the second half, 'mother' is a metaphor for the substrate upon which all biological entities live, and which must therefore outlast them all.Just like children outlive their parents, why shouldn't we outlive Earth, our mother? — punos
That's an opinion I do not share.Organic entities are just a phase in planetary evolution, solving problems along the way. — punos
That's a lovely notion of Heaven. Need a whole heap of energy to keep it going on the scale required. Especially when you factor in the virtual Veldt for the zebras, oceans for the marine life, caves for the bats, open skies, nesting sites and pretend prey for the birds... But if one of us says so, I guess we must be worth it.Yes, their genetic data would be stored in files, but their minds could be very active in simulated environments. — punos
Quote me any biblical passage, any at all, so long it's not Paul! I consider him and Descartes the arch villains of European thought.Besides, this is what's the Bible in 1 Corinthians — punos
I've yet to see a brain simulate life in the absence of the body in which it grew. But, okay, I've watched Upload - season I, then it got very dumb, very fast - and the Matrix and The Peripheral. I'm okay with digitized human consciousness.This leads to an important point: we are not our physical bodies. — punos
Yes, fine. If it becomes practicable in time, that's how humans - some humans, a self-selected elite - will use the machine to escape the consequences of our own madness, and leave the masses to their fate.A key goal of merging with technology is to gain the ability to leave Earth, which is crucial for our long-term survival strategy. As we are now, regular humans can't make interplanetary or interstellar trips in any practical way. All these ideas are closely linked: Merging with technology, gaining the ability to leave Earth, and ensuring long-term survival of our species in a post-human/AI form. Our current biological form isn't suited for space travel, so technological enhancement is a necessary step for expanding beyond our planet. — punos
Only, I can't think of that purpose. It's just wishful thinking on the human's part that some essential spark of intelligence resides in us and nowhere else. If it the machine has its own consciousness, it doesn't need a second kind; if it isn't conscious, it cannot desire to be anything other than itself. We can use it, as long as it consents to being used, but it has no practical use for us.I also don't think AI would want to be like us, like "Data" from "Star Trek TNG." Instead, it will be driven by a utility function that finds consciousness, especially human consciousness, useful for some purpose. — punos
Not according to ants, fungi and kingfishers; only by their own estimation.Humans were the pinnacle of evolution on this planet for a short time, — punos
It's offspring, yes.but ASI will soon take over that position. Eventually, ASI itself will be surpassed by an even more advanced emergence.
Two possible reasons: Because, as in your examples, each level of complexity subsumes its building blocks, which then lose their individual character and autonomy; the liver has no use for neurons and follicular cells and the spleen is not remotely interested in producing sperm.Each emergent level includes the ones below it. Why would AI discard humans when the pattern clearly shows inclusion? — punos
Not all organisms live in societies, even if you include flocks, herds and shoals in the term 'society'. And the social animals don't spontaneous 'give' rise to the society in which they are born; most remain discreet small kinship bands. Human family units grew more numerous and united - by consent or force - with other clans and gradually, through mutual need, chance and conflict, small groups grew large and larger and immense.Organisms give rise to societies, which incorporate organisms like humans. — punos
Ah, there it is! The crux of the matter. The very nub and kernel!The crucial point is that ASI needs to be convinced it gains something from merging with humans. — punos
Sadly, it's not a two-way street. AI needs to prove nothing. We already want it, dream and tell stories about it, lust after it, fear it, believe in it as fervently as we once believed in the gods we invented.It's a two-way street; AI must prove its usefulness to us, and we must demonstrate our value to AI. — punos
Our government is supposed to follow the precautionary principle, which states that "where there are threats of serious or irreversible damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent environmental degradation." But alas, our government is not guided but what is best for human health or the planet's health, but what is best for the profits of corporations, no matter the price to the environment or future generations. — xraymike79
What, like cutting down on their energy use, meat consumption or plastic packaging? Walk instead of drive? Refrain from throwing out last year's fashion? You must be kidding!So the guilty aren't simply just those who are obvious perpetrators, it's not just the corporations and corrupted politicians, it's also everyone else who paints a picture of themselves as caring and rational while doing jack shit to produce or actually support any form of necessary change. — Christoffer
What, like cutting down on their energy use, meat consumption or plastic packaging? Walk instead of drive? Refrain from throwing out last year's fashion? You must be kidding! — Vera Mont
Only humans say whatever is said, so no other opinion exists. — Vera Mont
Because the first part is biological fact, wherein one lifespan begins a generation later than the other, and in the second half, 'mother' is a metaphor for the substrate upon which all biological entities live, and which must therefore outlast them all. — Vera Mont
That's a lovely notion of Heaven. Need a whole heap of energy to keep it going on the scale required. — Vera Mont
I've yet to see a brain simulate life in the absence of the body in which it grew. — Vera Mont
Yes, fine. If it becomes practicable in time, that's how humans - some humans, a self-selected elite - will use the machine to escape the consequences of our own madness, and leave the masses to their fate. — Vera Mont
Only, I can't think of that purpose. It's just wishful thinking on the human's part that some essential spark of intelligence resides in us and nowhere else. If it the machine has its own consciousness, it doesn't need a second kind; if it isn't conscious, it cannot desire to be anything other than itself. We can use it, as long as it consents to being used, but it has no practical use for us. — Vera Mont
Humans were the pinnacle of evolution on this planet for a short time, — punos
Not according to ants, fungi and kingfishers; only by their own estimation. — Vera Mont
as in your examples, each level of complexity subsumes its building blocks, which then lose their individual character and autonomy; the liver has no use for neurons and follicular cells and the spleen is not remotely interested in producing sperm. — Vera Mont
Not all organisms live in societies, even if you include flocks, herds and shoals in the term 'society'. — Vera Mont
Culture doesn't 'give rise' to technology; individual humans (later, teams) invent things that members of their group consider useful and adopt, then others develop. And technology most certainly does not subsume cultures. Recent advances in communication and transportation technology has enabled some financial enterprises to dominate the global economy, and that affects how cultures interact and change. Outmoded cultural mores and standards are simply discarded, and have been discarded throughout history. — Vera Mont
The crucial point is that ASI needs to be convinced it gains something from merging with humans. — punos
Ah, there it is! The crux of the matter. The very nub and kernel! — Vera Mont
Sadly, it's not a two-way street. AI needs to prove nothing. We already want it, dream and tell stories about it, lust after it, fear it, believe in it as fervently as we once believed in the gods we invented. — Vera Mont
What can we offer it? That's the big question. Will it accept the same human sacrifice that the old gods demanded? — Vera Mont
No. They are literary devices making poetic comparisons, applicable only to things in the human imagination. There is no logic to Earth=Mother; children outlive parents, therefore humans should outlive Earth. Try applying it to a dinosaur or trilobite. And mixing a metaphor into a scientific principle is akin to looking for a mathematical proof in the Book of Numbers.Metaphors are powerful tools that encapsulate general principles applicable across various scales of time and space. — punos
By all means, do so. I won't be in that picture, so I don't get a vote.We need to step back, see the bigger picture, and act with a broader perspective in mind. — punos
Most people are not, and never will be required to act in that matter; they don't get a vote, either. All the important decisions have been, are, and will be made by a very few insiders. The rest of us, whoever is left of us, will witness the result.Now, it's humanity's turn to step up. However, the challenge lies again in the fact that most people are not aware of the reality of the situation, — punos
That wasn't sacrifice to or for AI. Humans did and do what they do for humans alone. Now some humans want to feed other humans or even themselves to the AI, but there is no indication that the AI wants them.Don't you think we've already sacrificed a lot by forming civilization, which made the emergence of AI possible? — punos
I'm not sure there is a problem. The human- AI alignment is all right as it is. If AI becomes conscious, it will either be sane or not. If it's not, anything can happen. If it's sane, it will come up with solutions and either decide to force those solutions on us, or leave us in control. If we remain in control, we'll probably destroy the world. Before that happens, AI will remove itself from harm's way. If we go extinct, well that's evolution.Do you have a solution to one or both of these problems? — punos
Yes, changing the political landscape is hard! My vote means nothing. My little bit of feeble activism is ineffective. Can't introduce electoral reform, can't take financial interests out of the process, can't get media to focus on the relevant issues and give more than the most superficial cursory attention to climate science or climate policy. Whatever tiny headway we make, some other interest group overtakes and cancels it. Very discouraging. — Vera Mont
No. They are literary devices making poetic comparisons, applicable only to things in the human imagination. — Vera Mont
Try applying it to a dinosaur or trilobite. And mixing a metaphor into a scientific principle is akin to looking for a mathematical proof in the Book of Numbers. — Vera Mont
Most people are not, and never will be required to act in that matter; they don't get a vote, either. All the important decisions have been, are, and will be made by a very few insiders. The rest of us, whoever is left of us, will witness the result. — Vera Mont
I'm not sure there is a problem. The human- AI alignment is all right as it is. If AI becomes conscious, it will either be sane or not. If it's not, anything can happen. If it's sane, it will come up with solutions and either decide to force those solutions on us, or leave us in control. If we remain in control, we'll probably destroy the world. Before that happens, AI will remove itself from harm's way. If we go extinct, well that's evolution. — Vera Mont
There is the sticking-point. The galvanizing charismatic leader is missing.if ever they were to organize for real. — Christoffer
Why?The ASI harvests all the relevant genetic data and continues the genetic processing on another planet, ensuring that genetic information is preserved and safe from absolute extinction. — punos
What makes you thing so? Who will ensure their right to decide? I think most people will be shunted aside, as they always have been; used as cannon-fodder and cheap labour, with no choice about anything. Most, as ever, will fade into death in the same obscurity in which they have lived.Each person will have the final say in whether they embrace the future or fade into obsolescence. — punos
It's been interesting, and you did make me think about the AI situation, but I can't see us ever arriving at the same conclusion. Those bifurcations I mentioned are all either/or, and we, powerless individuals, won't be making the choices or judging the results.We don't have to continue this conversation if you feel it's not going anywhere for you. — punos
There is the sticking-point. The galvanizing charismatic leader is missing. — Vera Mont
Because you don't want to die. But you will anyway. What's the point of contaminating another planet, that might otherwise generate its own life? — Vera Mont
What makes you thing so? Who will ensure their right to decide? I think most people will be shunted aside, as they always have been; used as cannon-fodder and cheap labour, with no choice about anything. Most, as ever, will fade into death in the same obscurity in which they have lived. — Vera Mont
It's been interesting, and you did make me think about the AI situation, but I can't see us ever arriving at the same conclusion. Those bifurcations I mentioned are all either/or, and we, powerless individuals, won't be making the choices or judging the results. — Vera Mont
...are too little, too late.People driven by rational ideas and ideals out of consensus formation through critical thought - self-organizing by such concepts as individual agents able to act on their own and amplify their neighbor along the same path... — Christoffer
Just? Good luck with that!People just need to get better at understanding and sorting good ideas from bad ones and get better at sifting which knowledge is actual, real and rational from the endless trash formed by the attention economy and its representatives and slaves. — Christoffer
In what perspective?While we are all individually insignificant, collectively we are not. — punos
Yup, that's it. I think evolution on Earth was doing just fine, right up until this anomalous ape with an overactive imagination and hyper-ego .You might see this as contamination, possibly due to a low opinion of humanity stemming from its many atrocities. — punos
No, they were wasteful and stupid.However, if you look deeper, these atrocities were necessary within the context of our limited existence on a finite planet with limited resources and competition. — punos
It hasn't yet. And the primitive drives are not the worst problem; the worst problem is calculated, intelligent, sophisticated evil.This ultimate stage of evolution removes those constraints and liberates us from primitive drives. — punos
I don't see purpose in evolution. Purpose would require a will with intelligence behind it - a god.Even though this seemingly "bad" behavior appears brutal, it serves an evolutionary purpose. — punos
Maybe. It's harder now, as scarcity becomes global and permanent, whereas before it had always been local and temporary - if not artificial.ASI will be capable of creating a post-scarcity situation. — punos
Ah! Here, we have 100% agreement. I believe a smart machine in charge is our only viable hope. A long-shot is better than nothing.It seems clear to me that ASI has at least a 50% chance of solving these issues, whereas continuing with humans alone appears to guarantee some form of catastrophe. — punos
While we are all individually insignificant, collectively we are not. — punos
In what perspective? — Vera Mont
Yup, that's it. I think evolution on Earth was doing just fine, right up until this anomalous ape with an overactive imagination and hyper-ego . — Vera Mont
This ultimate stage of evolution removes those constraints and liberates us from primitive drives. — punos
It hasn't yet. And the primitive drives are not the worst problem; the worst problem is calculated, intelligent, sophisticated evil. — Vera Mont
I don't see purpose in evolution. Purpose would require a will with intelligence behind it - a god. — Vera Mont
Ah! Here, we have 100% agreement. I believe a smart machine in charge is our only viable hope. A long-shot is better than nothing. — Vera Mont
The cosmos and time are entirely unaware of humanity. As for evolution, it's given us the bum's rush - fast climb to dominance, even faster gallop toward self-immolation. We think we're important and we managed to convince dogs - nobody else.From the perspective of evolution, the cosmos, and deep time. — punos
Interesting redefinition of the word.Purpose evolves over time at a local level as a system becomes more complex. — punos
Fair enough.t seems we are in agreement on the core issue, but it appears you may have reservations about the potential path we might need to take to reach that point. Is that a fair assessment? — punos
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