I have the same tendency. But a useful question to ask is "What would change your 
mind?" It's a trope at this point, watching Musk or Trump zealots defend their 
Cheeto Jesus no matter what he does or what evidence is presented to them. But when 
confronted by a relatively more reasonable optimist like Altman, it's a useful question. 
What evidence would change your mind. And is that evidence out there; you just 
can't/won't see it?

I'm not trying to imply there is such evidence, nor that anyone here is an evidence-blind zealot. I 
use the question on myself when I find that I've started believing in something/anything. For 
example, the Pinker books that Gish gallop us with chart after chart showing the "to the 
moon" curves, like some crypto bro or MLM scammer, do tend to change my mind. But what 
preserves my skepticism in the face of such Gish gallops is we don't see them asking themselves 
"What would change my mind?" And those that don't ask that question on a fairly regular 
basis, are ripe to be captured by zealotry. I'd be more interested if Pinker outlined a testing 
program capable of showing that we're failing.

What evidence are we *actively* looking for that demonstrates these advances in 
technology are making our lives *worse*, not better as we currently believe? We 
learn through failure, not success.

On 1/19/23 03:17, Pieter Steenekamp wrote:
*Sadly, there are some hidden elements to all that techno-optimism.*

Yes, sadly the world is unequal and those at the bottom of the economic ladder 
just don't get a good deal.

On the positive side, looking back at the history of mankind there is evidence 
that it is now better to live than ever in the past for the large majority of 
humankind. This is true even though it is the sad truth that it's very far from 
perfect; human suffering is a reality, Glen's comment is sad but true.

The question of course is whether it will continue to go better?

It's just impossible to know the future. One person can believe it'll go better 
in the future, another that it'll be worse, each with tons of  good arguments.

I for one, embrace the optimism of Sam Altman, just for completeness I repeat 
his quote and give the reference again.
"Intelligence and energy have been the fundamental limiters towards most things we 
want. A future where these are not the limiting reagents will be radically different, and 
can be amazingly better."
Taken from 
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/intelligence-energy-sam-altmans-technology-predictions-for-2020s/articleshow/86088731.cms
 
<https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/intelligence-energy-sam-altmans-technology-predictions-for-2020s/articleshow/86088731.cms>
  :

In conclusion, yes I agree with Glen that there are sadly hidden elements to 
all the techno-optimism. but this does not dampen my enthusiasm for the future 
triggered by abundant intelligence and energy.

On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 at 21:08, glen <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Sadly, there are some hidden elements to all that techno-optimism. E.g.

    https://nitter.cz/billyperrigo/status/1615682180201447425#m 
<https://nitter.cz/billyperrigo/status/1615682180201447425#m>

    On 1/18/23 00:40, Pieter Steenekamp wrote:
     > I totally agree that realizable behavior is what matters.
     >
     > The elephant in the room is whether AI (and robotics of course) will 
(not to replace but to) be able to do better than humans in all respects, 
including come up with creative solutions to not only the world's most pressing 
problems but also small creative things like writing poems, and then to do the 
mental and physical tasks required to provide goods and services to all in the 
world,
     >
     > Sam Altman said there are two things that will shape our future; 
intelligence and energy. If we have real abundant intelligence and energy, the 
world will be very different indeed.
     >
     > To quote Sam Altmen at 
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/intelligence-energy-sam-altmans-technology-predictions-for-2020s/articleshow/86088731.cms
 
<https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/intelligence-energy-sam-altmans-technology-predictions-for-2020s/articleshow/86088731.cms>
 
<https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/intelligence-energy-sam-altmans-technology-predictions-for-2020s/articleshow/86088731.cms
 
<https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/startups/intelligence-energy-sam-altmans-technology-predictions-for-2020s/articleshow/86088731.cms>>
  :
     >
     > "intelligence and energy have been the fundamental limiters towards most 
things we want. A future where these are not the limiting reagents will be radically 
different, and can be amazingly better."
     >
     >
     >
     > On Wed, 18 Jan 2023 at 03:06, Marcus Daniels <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>>> wrote:
     >
     >     Definitions are all fine and good, but realizable behavior is what 
matters.   Analog computers will have imperfect behavior, and there will be 
leakage between components.   A large network of transistors or neurons are 
sufficiently similar for my purposes.   The unrolling would be inside a skull, so 
somewhat isolated from interference.
     >
     >     -----Original Message-----
     >     From: Friam <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
<mailto:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>> On Behalf Of glen
     >     Sent: Tuesday, January 17, 2023 2:11 PM
     >     To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>>
     >     Subject: Re: [FRIAM] NickC channels DaveW
     >
     >     I don't quite grok that. A crisp definition of recursion implies no 
interaction with the outside world, right? If you can tolerate the ambiguity in that 
statement, the artifacts laying about from an unrolled recursion might be seen and used by 
outsiders. That's not to say a trespasser can't have some sophisticated intrusion technique. 
But unrolled seems more "open" to family, friends, and the occasional acquaintance.
     >
     >     On 1/17/23 13:37, Marcus Daniels wrote:
     >      > I probably didn't pay enough attention to the thread some time 
ago on serialization, but to me recursion is hard to distinguish from an unrolling of 
recursion.


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