Not impressed. The paper lacks an experimental results section.

The paper proposes learning how to learn AI algorithms. Since Legg and
Hutter proved that there is no such thing as a simple, universal learning
algorithm, something more than someone's idea is needed.

Half of human knowledge is learned and half is inherited (10^9 bits each).
The fastest way to code the inherited half is to write on the order of 100
million lines of code at a cost of $100 per line. The alternative,
evolution, is often cited as a simple, universal learner but it is not
universal (we did not evolve wheels), nor is it computationally feasible.
It cost 10^48 DNA base copy operations to write our own source code.

On Wed, Jun 19, 2019, 2:51 AM Junyan Xu <[email protected]> wrote:

> Jeff Clune: https://twitter.com/jeffclune/status/1128327656401850369
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