malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
Obviously not, but you must admit that you are contributing to the very problem you lament. If someone complains about smog hurting their lungs while chain-smoking, they inevitably sound insincere. Individual choice will not solve the problem of dangerous technology proliferating of course.
I'm shocked that people find this surprising. Capitalism has always done these things you complain about, only more slowly. Big business is always putting themselves (in addition to small businesses) out of business. Marx calls this the immanent "contradiction" of capitalism. Everyone (including business leaders) is caught in a cycle that only a few celebrate.
malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
My choice to avoid firearms does nothing to change the state of gun manufacturing or the culture surrounding guns. Even so, I would have no right to lament mass shootings or wartime casualties if I spent all day designing ever more powerful guns and defending the gun industry against critics.
Beau of the Fifth Column is an anarchist firearms instructor who laments mass shootings all the time. I'd argue that situation is more analogous.
malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
Clearly we need some form of collective and indeed international action on this issue, much like previous attempts to regulate nuclear weapons and address global warming.
That's what I'm saying, but your choice for collective action is reactionary in the sense that it increases collective scarcity.
malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
On the contrary, the natural world is astonishingly cruel in numerous different ways. Many animals put no effort into parental care and will even eat their own hatchlings. Others have draconian social hierarchies like chickens with their pecking order or the lobsters that Jordan Peterson so admires, and the less said about ducks, the better.
Jordan Peterson is wrong about lobsters. Watch Cass Eris:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=P ... KOxtFhDZdF
malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
You don't see skinks opening orphanages nor crows holding elections. Many technologies were developed precisely to shield us from the unquenchable cruelty of nature: houses and clothes for protection from the elements, antibiotics for protection from germs, and so forth.
The natural world is inhuman. All you have to do to create a society where people are not forced to behave like beasts in an ecology is to create government jobs by command. (I prefer these commands to be the will of the people for both ethical and economic reasons, i.e. measuring demand.)
Personally, I think applying "ecological" thinking to human society is an essentially conservative policy. I oppose all popular political factions because it's a contest between the "ecological" conservatives (left) vs. the fascists (right). Neither of these groups are looking out for my interests.
malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
Let us not make the mistake of creating machines capable of treating us the way invasive species treat everything in their new stomping ground.
AIs have no instinct for survival, and no one is incentivized to give them one. Corporations like AIs BECAUSE, unlike humans, they have no instinct for survival.
malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
The point for most AI researchers has always been replacing humans (whether physically or conceptually) with superintelligent machines. They dream of unleashing what they call the singularity, where AI becomes so powerful that humanity can no longer control or even comprehend it. The rest are staunch capitalists who want to destroy even more job opportunities than previous forms of automation so they can slash labor costs ever further. Socialism is quite a minority position in the tech industry, even compared with other industries in this era of aggressive neo-liberalism.
Putting aside everyone from Musk to Moldbug,
These people are not AI researchers. Honestly, I'm not sure Elon Musk functions like a full-fledged person at this point. If you count people like this, Astral Codex Ten is a left-leaning blog that started as an AI blog.
I know that a lot of left-wing AI researchers exist. Even Anirbit Mukherjee I mentioned earlier says his politics is mostly opposing the right, but he's not left-wing either. Personally though, only right-wing sources have ever offered me opportunities to grow my career. Throughout my life, I have never even had a left-wing professor.
malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
it seems less than obvious that superintelligent blackboxes would solve the problem of scarcity. There are many factors behind scarcity, from physical shortage of resources to markets failing to make goods affordable to the poor. Technological innovation has its place in addressing these issues since it can allow us to access more resources or produce enough for everyone. Yet it cannot solve them on its own and indeed not all technologies are appropriate for addressing scarcity. In any case, most usages I have seen proposed for artificial intelligence have nothing to do with relieving scarcity. Nobody is starving to death because they can't get more anime-style pinups or fanfiction than human content creators can currently provide.
Scarcity of illustrators for poor writers. Once I'm fired from programming, shut up in an insane asylum and writing novels to pass the time, who will do my illustrations for me if not DALL-E?
There is also a lot of information-based scarcity that AIs solve. My research is in automated debugging. This might put human debuggers out of business, but it's good for programmers in general.
malloc wrote: ↑Sat Feb 24, 2024 12:17 pm
Marx has much to admire and made many great contributions to economics and political thought, but he also got many things wrong and had many limitations on his knowledge simply because of when he lived. Stalin not only read Marx and built his entire career around implementing his ideas but that hardly prevented him from making numerous irrational and outrageous decisions.
I don't think it's true that Stalin implemented Marx accurately. An accurate implementation of the Marxist vision would have been better than Stalinism in some ways and worse in others. I have written extensive comments about my disagreements with Marx. Nevertheless, he gets many important things right that nearly everyone gets wrong these days. This makes perfect sense once you remember that accuracy is unnecessary for success.