Eliezer Yudkowsky wrote:
> As for pulling this trick on genuine SIs:
>
> This would ENSURE that at least one of the SIs went nuts,
> broke out of your little sandbox, and stomped on the planet!
> This multiplies the risk factor by a hundred times for no
> conceivable benefit! I would rather have three million
> lines of Asimov Laws written in COBOL than run evolutionary
> simulations! No matter how badly you screw up ONE mind,
> there's a good chance it will shake it off and go sane!
The greatest potential for benefit and/or cost to our minds as a result of the emergence of SI (whether weak or strong) are the properties that will emerge from intelligent conscious systems far more complex than our own minds. The only two possibilities I can think of off the top of my head are Strong superintelligence and some form of superconsciousness. However, there most probably are emergent properties that are utterly beyond our minds to predict or grasp.
While it is a conundrum to speculate in such a manner, it is hard to substantiate that intelligence or consciousness would have been predictable properties of the increasing complexity of self-replicating systems. The conundrum is that nothing would have been able to attempt such a prediction prior to the emergence of these properties without tainting the predictive process.
Doug Bailey
doug.bailey@ey.com
nanotech@cwix.com