From: Nick Bostrom (bostrom@ndirect.co.uk)
Date: Sun Nov 22 1998 - 17:28:02 MST
Hal Finney wrote:
> they ran into balancing problems, where trivial
> strategies would dominate (often a problem with alife simulations).
> At last report they were introducing various ad hoc rules and limitations
> to try to get robust evolutionary behavior.
At this most basic level, complexity or growth in compexity does
certainly not seem to be the most likely or natural situation. But
since it's boring (for the human psychology), we change the
parameters in the simulation until we get something interesting. It
makes me wonder if we may not be prone to overestimate the likelihood
that the far future will be complex.
It appears to me that Anders and Robin (and Max?) have a tendency to
think that there are lots of checks and balances in the nature of
things, and that tradeoffs and diminishing returns guarantee that a
large variety of different strategies will always co-exist. Eliezer
and other extreme singularians (and to some extent me) seem to think
that the world and posthuman society might well be more brittle, and
that system could easily end up in one of the "boring" states,
i.e. simple states. (If the universe were transformed into a giant
pleasure-machine, for example, it might be a simple state, but not a
boring one from the insiders point-of-view.) In a factor analysis of
different thinking styles in transhumanism, I would expect this to
turn out to be one of the basic dimensions.
Nick Bostrom
http://www.hedweb.com/nickb n.bostrom@lse.ac.uk
Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method
London School of Economics
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