| >I can't understand the cognitive dissonance that makes a person marvel at how "amazing the brain is" while simultaneously ignore the suffering of billions of those brains. I can. Humans are good at coming up with brilliant ideas (such as, say, the concept of translation). But they are absolutely poor at executing them effectively and "at scale" (translating arbitrary works from one language to another). So "AI advocates" can talk about how amazing the brain is in coming up with ideas (as if ideas were all that were needed), but what they really want are mechanical brutes that are able to execute those ideas quickly and effectively. At least some people hope that the proliferation of AI labor could mean a reduction of human labor, potentially reducing the "suffering of billions of those brains". This, of course, hinges on whether if the gains of productivity can get redistributed fairly (or if they just accumulate to those who already have capital). And then, there's all the social turmoil that occurs during the transition phase: humans may not want to be obsolete, humans may actually like working, AI accidentally becoming an 'exisitenal threat' due to human error, etc. The brains will suffer more in the short-term, in the faint hope that they will suffer less in the future. EDIT: "The vast majority of automation tasks don't require advanced AI. The vast majority of human work can be removed without recourse to AI." I would argue that when you get to the point when we have automation tasks and human work unnecessary, that we already have AI. We may never reach the stage of Strong AI because it turns out that what we actually do is not intelligent enough to require Strong AI. |
> We may never reach the stage of Strong AI because it turns out that what we actually do is not intelligent enough to require Strong AI. That's interesting. If we find a rigorous enough definition of "Strong Intelligence", would humans necessarily qualify as one?