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by ggreer
4491 days ago
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1. I was explaining the position of Bostrom, Hanson, and others. I do not completely agree with them. 2. I think you have misinterpreted their position. Bostrom and Hanson know quite a bit about evolution. They know that evolution is undirected and would eventually result in an organism we wouldn't recognize, let alone value. But they both think that we are entering a time in which we will no longer be bound by evolution. They think that humanity will soon be able to engineer minds, allowing us to improve their raw abilities while having them retain many of our own values. On this point, I do agree with them. Evolution hill-climbs, so it gets stuck in local maxima and can't search the entire solution space. We're already building lots of stuff that could never evolve: radio, wheels, impellers, turbines, lasers, etc. In billions of years, evolution hasn't figured out a way to send signals faster than 0.000001c (300m/sec). That's how fast sound waves and nerve signals travel. As optimization processes go, it really is quite terrible. If we want to make better minds in any reasonable time-frame, we'll need to engineer them ourselves. |
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I understand it perfectly -- they're either as ignorant as their followers, or they're exploiting public ignorance.
> Bostrom and Hanson know quite a bit about evolution.
They either know nothing about evolution, or they're deliberately misleading their readers. Contrary to their writing, natural selection is not a race to the top, because it's not a race to any particular objective.
> But they both think that we are entering a time in which we no longer be bound by evolution.
Apart from revealing their inability to grasp evolutionary theory, this is an ignorant New Age fantasy. We will always be bound by natural selection, even when we actively participate in the process.
> They think that humanity will soon be able to engineer minds, allowing us to improve their raw abilities while having them retain many of our own values.
But that's also evolution. To argue that people meddling with genetics isn't evolution is to misunderstand evolution's scope.
> Evolution hill-climbs ...
You really need to stop thinking about natural selection as though it's a race to the top of the hill. This idea contradicts both evolutionary theory and copious observational evidence.
> We're already building lots of stuff that could never evolve [emphasis added]: radio, wheels, impellers, turbines, lasers, etc.
All these things exist in nature, even including the lasers, all of which evolved in nature:
http://laserstars.org/summary.html
Bacteria use wheel- and axle-based electric motors to propel themselves through their environments:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK22489/
All your examples have similar pre-existing embodiments in nature. And they all evolved.
> If we want to make better minds in any reasonable time-frame, we'll need to engineer them ourselves.
People doing engineering is an example of natural selection. There is nothing in the sequence of human events that isn't an example of evolution by natural selection.
All this talk about moving beyond evolution fails to grasp how evolution works in our lives. Even A/B testing of Web pages is an example of natural selection.
To summarize, these people you're quoting are simply pandering to low public taste -- they're either broadcasting their own ignorance or exploiting the ignorance of the public. Evolution doesn't work they way they claim, and their writing is a scientific laughingstock.