Difference between revisions of "Changing selection pressures argument"

From Issawiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''changing selection pressures argument''' is an argument for [[continuous AI takeoff]]. It states that during most of hominid evolution, evolution was not optimizing for scientific ability or cultural accumulation (or some other factor that explains human dominance), but that at some point evolution did start optimizing for these things (i.e. there was a change in selection pressure towards scientific ability or cultural accumulation), and that this explains why humans are so much better than chimps are doing science. This becomes an argument for continuous AI takeoff because (the argument goes), during AI development there will not be a similar change in selection pressures.
+
The '''changing selection pressures argument''' is an argument for [[continuous AI takeoff]]. It states that during most of hominid evolution, evolution was not optimizing for scientific ability or cultural accumulation (or some other factor that explains human dominance), but that at some point evolution did start optimizing for these things (i.e. there was a change in selection pressure towards scientific ability or cultural accumulation), and that this explains why humans are so much better than chimps at doing science despite only splitting off from chimps several million years ago. This becomes an argument for continuous AI takeoff because (the argument goes), during AI development there will not be a similar change in selection pressures.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==

Revision as of 01:14, 24 February 2021

The changing selection pressures argument is an argument for continuous AI takeoff. It states that during most of hominid evolution, evolution was not optimizing for scientific ability or cultural accumulation (or some other factor that explains human dominance), but that at some point evolution did start optimizing for these things (i.e. there was a change in selection pressure towards scientific ability or cultural accumulation), and that this explains why humans are so much better than chimps at doing science despite only splitting off from chimps several million years ago. This becomes an argument for continuous AI takeoff because (the argument goes), during AI development there will not be a similar change in selection pressures.

History

The argument was first made by Paul Christiano in a 2018 blog post.[1]

The argument was named by Richard Ngo in 2020.[2]

References