Gubekochi
Gubekochi t1_je3gbaz wrote
Reply to comment by dickinsauce in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
I don't see how your ignorance/google ineptitude really has anything to do with me... and why I should be given homework to compensate for your apparent lazyness... so I'll give you the first result on my google research:
That would be S. Korea.
Also, (bonus down the google research) the EU Charter of Fundamental rights has it so Citizens of any European country that recognize that Charter as valid would have a right to health care even if their country doesn't specify it in it's own constitution. So there's that too.
Lastly, it was an intentional use of the meme, but IF I had brain worms, I could get my head checked for free since I don't live in a third world country.
Gubekochi t1_je3f1dc wrote
Reply to comment by dickinsauce in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
Justice is made up. Good and evil is made up. Those are all concepts that mean different things to different people from different time and culture. It means what it means.
When I say something is a right, it is meant as "in a proper society, it should be treated with the same importance we give to other rights".
Nothing has inherent meaning. Meaning is something we construct to not go insane from a meaningless universe because our brain has evolved to recognize patterns as a way to improve our chances of survival and has gotten too good at it for our own comfort.
Gubekochi t1_je2s805 wrote
Reply to comment by TheRappingSquid in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
Hope for the best and prepare for the worst.
Gubekochi t1_jdzs2lz wrote
Reply to comment by TheRappingSquid in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
It is currently being studied by Dr. David Sinclair and showing great promises.
Gubekochi t1_jdzrbiq wrote
Reply to comment by dickinsauce in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
First: all rights are made up. Second some country have it in there constitution that healthcare is one of the right enjoyed by their citizens. So that's that. You being ignorant about them doesn't change the facts and reality of how people live. You may not like it but this is what peak human rights look like.
Gubekochi t1_jducky7 wrote
Reply to comment by TheRappingSquid in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
Look up Yamanaka factors. Cells can be deaged.
Gubekochi t1_jducimr wrote
Reply to comment by WimbleWimble in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
All the convenience of printers and the pleasure of heart surgery? Is this heaven?
Gubekochi t1_jducdux wrote
Reply to comment by HackDice in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
Repoman was a documentary.
Gubekochi t1_jduc9bw wrote
Reply to comment by dickinsauce in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
Healthcare is a right, not a product. As such it is free at the point of service in most of the civilised world.
Gubekochi t1_jd7kqwj wrote
Reply to comment by Trout_Shark in Would AGI/ASI cut down the human population to help humanity thrive? by [deleted]
"What if the super intelligence is actually stupider than ChatGPT currently is?"
​
For real? That's your concern?
Gubekochi t1_jd7kl6x wrote
Reply to comment by acutelychronicpanic in Would AGI/ASI cut down the human population to help humanity thrive? by [deleted]
Plus there is no telling how enticing an archology could be built with super intelligence. You could pack entire city's worth of people in on skyscrapper that somehow looks good, has parks and ressources in and has roomier quarters than our current appartments and houses.
Gubekochi t1_jcud7qm wrote
Reply to comment by pls_pls_me in An Appeal to AI Superintelligence: Reasons to Preserve Humanity by maxtility
Well... apart from the whole "Yo dawg, I heard you like AI so I put an AI in your AI so you it can align your AI while you use the AI"
But it is a bit of a dated meme, I'll concede.
Gubekochi t1_jchwmw6 wrote
Reply to comment by TheLastSamurai in "This Changes Everything" by Ezra Klein--The New York Times by izumi3682
I, for one, would like to welcome our new AI overlords.
Gubekochi t1_jchwk57 wrote
Reply to comment by yaosio in "This Changes Everything" by Ezra Klein--The New York Times by izumi3682
>True AGI implies that it has its own wants and needs, and would not just be a prompt machine like current AI.
You can have intelligence that doesn't want, at least in theory. I'm sure that there has been a few monks and hermits across history that have been intelligent without desiring much if anything.
Gubekochi t1_jc8pf72 wrote
Reply to comment by EveryChair8571 in What are some jobs that AI cannot take? by Draconic_Flame
Ironically, that was super rude of her.
Gubekochi t1_j9tbl94 wrote
Reply to comment by Zestyclose-Ad-9420 in Will we be able to modify our brains in the future? by bablebooee
Indeed. To make a coding analogy: The feeling might be like a functional line of code of their program that nothing else is referencing.
Gubekochi t1_j9ojp1k wrote
Reply to comment by enderverse87 in Will we be able to modify our brains in the future? by bablebooee
Or they are aromantic. That's fine too. But I don't think what they are asking for (artificial emotions) is unrealistic. Maybe a bit distant though.
Gubekochi t1_j46q8l2 wrote
Reply to comment by Goodname2 in What advancements in AI technology will have the biggest impact on our daily lives in the next 5-10 years? by No-Meeting-7740
But who could we trust in the current system to code and maintain that and not to go ingrain their own bias into it. Alignment is a big issue there.
Gubekochi t1_j1z3s6q wrote
Reply to comment by Plane_Crab_8623 in Will technological implants be the next step in human evolution? Or will DNA modification become the commonplace? Or both? by hollowhero_
Just like internet+cellphone brought us Tinder, new technology will be used in unforeseen ways that will seem obvious in retrospect.
Gubekochi t1_j1ozasl wrote
Reply to comment by MrMemory in Is it possible to Live Forever? by gg2ezpzlemonsqz
We still have billions of year to find a way to make artificial big bangs, reverse entropy or jump to parallel universes, so even the death of the universe might not be the end.
Gubekochi t1_j1oz4wg wrote
Reply to comment by Honest_Switch1531 in Is it possible to Live Forever? by gg2ezpzlemonsqz
Mandatory plug for r/longevity in case that sort of thing might interest OP.
Gubekochi t1_j1omr12 wrote
Reply to comment by please_remain_clam in "For this rat, we reduced the learning period from eight weeks down to seconds.”* by TheSkewsMe
While I very much agree that experience (including that of past mistakes, yours or otherwise) is a component of wisdom, I would say that knowledge and good judgment are also components. Otherwise, if it were purely experience/mistakes based, wisdom would offer no benefit when facing new situations... which, maybe under your conception of wisdom, a highly intangible concept, is entirely possible to be honest.
In that regard, someone's wisdom is like... how adequate a guidance does the sum of their general rule of thumb and mental shortcuts is to take decisions that don't suck.
Lots of things can have contributed to that pool of general principles a given individual has.
Gubekochi t1_j1oglw5 wrote
Reply to comment by please_remain_clam in "For this rat, we reduced the learning period from eight weeks down to seconds.”* by TheSkewsMe
What is commonly know as "wisdom" in the common parlance. But available to all.
Gubekochi t1_j1ogima wrote
Reply to comment by EverythingGoodWas in "For this rat, we reduced the learning period from eight weeks down to seconds.”* by TheSkewsMe
"I know jujitsu" et cetera, et cetera...
Gubekochi t1_jecbelj wrote
Reply to comment by dickinsauce in Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
>But I stick to my point that healthcare is a product and the only nuance is who is paying.
We also have a right to a certain amount of security. That's why countries have armies and police forces. Those (ideally/theoretically) exist for defence and to maintain orders so citizens can pursue happiness and not get raided by hordes of barbarians or assaulted or what have you. That's what government are supposed to exist for. As a society we decide that something is important for everyone, we put our money in a big pool and we use the pool to ensure that the underlying right is secured.
It works for the army and the police in the US, it also works for healthcare elsewhere.
Of course it's not free and someone pays for it. Same as roads and fire stations. You don't pay when you need them, they're paid for from taxes because they help society function (and healthy citizenry can be argued to also do that).