From: Damien Broderick (damien@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au)
Date: Fri Oct 10 1997 - 06:20:17 MDT
At 11:02 AM 10/9/97 -0700, Hal wrote of John Clark's repost:
>> After evolving for a few hundred million SIMULATED years
>> you have intelligence, high order intelligence.
>What makes them become intelligent is the challenge presented to the
>brains by the environment. [...]
>So it would be necessary to simulate not only the brains, but the bodies
>and the environment where the brains interact.
And unless we made the simulated environment isomorphic to our own (to the
historical layers of our own, including ourselves), that ` intelligence,
high order intelligence' will surely be wildly, weirdly, dangerously,
incommensurably *dangerous*. `Intellects,' as Wells said of the Martians,
`vast cool and unsympathetic' - not by their own standards, of course, but
by ours.
Damien Broderick
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