▲ | jakelazaroff 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Even if we grant that for the sake of argument, there are two leaps of faith here: - That AI as it currently exists is on the right track to creating that replica. Maybe neural networks will plateau before we get close. Maybe the Von Neumann architecture is the limiting factor, and we can only create the replica with a radically different model of computing! - That we will have enough time. Maybe we'll accomplish it by the end of the decade. Maybe climate change or nuclear war will turn the world into a Mad Max–esque wasteland before we get the chance. Maybe it'll happen in a million years, when humans have evolved into other species. We just don't know! | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | quantummagic 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I don't think you've refuted the point though. There's no reason to think that the apparatus we employ to animate ourselves will remain inscrutable forever. Unless you believe in a religious soul, all that stands in the way of the scientific method yielding results, is time. > Maybe climate change or nuclear war will turn the world into a Mad Max–esque wasteland before we get the chance In that eventuality, it really doesn't matter. The point remains, given enough time, we'll be successful. If we aren't successful, that means everything else has gone to shit anyway. Failure wont be because it is fundamentally impossible, it will be because we ran out of time to continue the effort. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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