Ben,

On Mon, Aug 9, 2010 at 1:07 PM, Ben Goertzel <b...@goertzel.org> wrote:

>
> I'm speaking there, on Ai applied to life extension; and participating in a
> panel discussion on narrow vs. general AI...
>
> Having some interest, expertise, and experience in both areas, I find it
hard to imagine much interplay at all.

The present challenge is wrapped up in a lack of basic information,
resulting from insufficient funds to do the needed experiments.
Extrapolations have already gone WAY beyond the data, and new methods to
push extrapolations even further wouldn't be worth nearly as much as just a
little more hard data.

Just look at Aubrey's long list of aging mechanisms. We don't now even know
which predominate, or which cause others. Further, there are new candidates
arising every year, e.g. Burzynski's theory that most aging is secondary to
methylation of DNA receptor sites, or my theory that Aubrey's entire list
could be explained by people dropping their body temperatures later in life.
There are LOTS of other theories, and without experimental results, there is
absolutely no way, AI or not, to sort the wheat from the chaff.

Note that one of the front runners, the cosmic ray theory, could easily be
tested by simply raising some mice in deep tunnels. This is high-school
level stuff, yet with NO significant funding for aging research, it remains
undone.

Note my prior posting explaining my inability even to find a source of
"used" mice for kids to use in high-school anti-aging experiments, all while
university labs are now killing their vast numbers of such mice. So long as
things remain THIS broken, anything that isn't part of the solution simply
becomes a part of the very big problem, AIs included.

The best that an AI could seemingly do is to pronounce "Fund and facilitate
basic aging research" and then suspend execution pending an interrupt
indicating that the needed experiments have been done.

Could you provide some hint as to where you are going with this?

Steve



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agi
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