Judgethunder
Judgethunder t1_j9yrz2c wrote
Reply to comment by Drawmeomg in The Job Market Apocalypse: We Must Democratize AI Now! by Otarih
The difference between previous automations in textiles and transportation is that those actually created more jobs than they replaced.
What we are taking about here is potentially eliminating ALL jobs besides owning capital.
Judgethunder t1_j9thfzm wrote
I kept looking at this chart expecting insights to like.. Divorce.
Not the entertainment of some looney House Members from the most racist part of Atlanta's Twitter rant.
Judgethunder t1_j9pr5jf wrote
If we create machines that can actually think, sure we ought to give them rights for our own good.
Chatbots are not that.
Judgethunder t1_j9ojefz wrote
Reply to Haunted, Me, Digital, 2023 by akramness
This fucks. Good job! I love it.
Judgethunder t1_j9mdhdk wrote
Reply to comment by ChubbiestLamb6 in Thought experiments claim to use our intuitive responses to generate philosophical insights. But these scenarios are deceptive. Moral intuitions depend heavily on context and the individual. by IAI_Admin
Because I think it is indeed a useless philosophical technicality.
There are many objective facts we accept as objective facts because we use our senses to perceive then. Our senses are subjective. Nothing we detect using them is truly objective, from colors, to shapes, to anything at all.
But we set a standard of objectivity based on our senses anyway.
So in the absence of the word of a deity, what kind of objective reality could we possibly expect beside what we can to the best of our ability calculate is in the best interest of all humanity and the ecosystem we are a part of?
The fact that it is usually better to eat than to starve is as objective as me looking up and observing the color of the sky.
Judgethunder t1_j9kh9b4 wrote
Reply to comment by ChubbiestLamb6 in Thought experiments claim to use our intuitive responses to generate philosophical insights. But these scenarios are deceptive. Moral intuitions depend heavily on context and the individual. by IAI_Admin
>From everyone else's point of view, you missed the point of what "objective morality" means, and from your point of view, everyone else is bumbling around acting like it's impossible to determine if starving is preferable to being safe and well-fed due to some veil of philosophical technicality. But the real issue is that you're talking past each other.
Yeah. That's about the sum of it.
Judgethunder t1_j9k92bb wrote
Reply to comment by PrimalZed in Thought experiments claim to use our intuitive responses to generate philosophical insights. But these scenarios are deceptive. Moral intuitions depend heavily on context and the individual. by IAI_Admin
Assuming that human life and the continuation of humans is a reasonable assumption to make. And an assumption that nearly everyone makes.
Judgethunder t1_j9k2zil wrote
Reply to comment by Midrya in Thought experiments claim to use our intuitive responses to generate philosophical insights. But these scenarios are deceptive. Moral intuitions depend heavily on context and the individual. by IAI_Admin
You can deconstruct all frameworks to be meaningless if you want to. But we don't. Our minds and desires are emergent products of evolution with certain common desires leaning toward survival, homeostasis, propagation.
Some outcomes are going to be better than others for this. Some desires and goals are going to be better than others for this.
Could we deconstruct these goals as philosophers and render propagation of our species and our ecosystem and our societies as relatively meaningless? Sure. But we don't. Not really.
Judgethunder t1_j9ju677 wrote
Reply to comment by PrimalZed in Thought experiments claim to use our intuitive responses to generate philosophical insights. But these scenarios are deceptive. Moral intuitions depend heavily on context and the individual. by IAI_Admin
Some solutions to problems are going to be objectively better than others in their given context. Morality and ethics are problem solving tools, emergent from the evolutionary process.
Judgethunder t1_j9jr491 wrote
Reply to comment by mackinator3 in Thought experiments claim to use our intuitive responses to generate philosophical insights. But these scenarios are deceptive. Moral intuitions depend heavily on context and the individual. by IAI_Admin
That's an awfully interesting interpretation.
Judgethunder t1_j9jo4z1 wrote
Reply to comment by Killercod1 in Thought experiments claim to use our intuitive responses to generate philosophical insights. But these scenarios are deceptive. Moral intuitions depend heavily on context and the individual. by IAI_Admin
That's one theory anyway. There certain seems to be some pretty clear commonalities of what most people determine as harmful or helpful or what most people regardless of culture find to be a laudible goal.
Even non human animals have some basic intuitions about reciprocity, compassion, and survival. Some answers seem better suited to achieving a generally positive outcome than others.
And of course you could point to some outliers who might find for whatever reason that causing unneeded suffering is somehow ideal for them. But I could also probably find a similar number of people whom when placed in an unlocked cage decide the best way out is to defecate on the floor.
What I mean to say is people say "There is no objective morality" like that is some kind of given, obvious statement. When it's not. It's just as likely to be a coping mechanism for our lack of ability to make optimal ethical determinations due to our biases and flaws.
Judgethunder t1_j8rnezj wrote
Reply to Americans are ready to test embryos for future college chances, survey shows by ChickenTeriyakiBoy1
Another way to scam rich parents into wasting money. If you give your kid attention, read a parenting book or two, can afford to feed them properly, and are home often enough to help them with their homework they will probably be fine.
Judgethunder t1_j8rn7i4 wrote
Reply to comment by StarsinmyOcean in Americans are ready to test embryos for future college chances, survey shows by ChickenTeriyakiBoy1
Careful peddling pop psychology myths. Actual neuroscience is way harder.
Judgethunder t1_j29a5qd wrote
Reply to comment by New_Stats in Is anybody else concerned about the people leading us into the future of space exploration? by [deleted]
German Scientist =/= Nazi. But I'm sure there were a few.
Probably a few before WW2 as well. The Nazis had thousands of American sympathizers before the war.
Judgethunder t1_j9zbi6p wrote
Reply to comment by ReptileCultist in The Job Market Apocalypse: We Must Democratize AI Now! by Otarih
Because an artificial intelligence is not the same thing as a railroad or a textile machine.
The assumption that you should be questioning is why it should be the same.