top | item 45079366 (no title) tmn | 6 months ago There’s a significant difference between predicting what it will specifically look like, and predicting sets of possibilities it won’t look like discuss order hn newest kragen|6 months ago No, there isn't. When speaking of logically consistent possibilities, the two problems are precisely isomorphic under Boolean negation. bryanrasmussen|6 months ago good point, someone recently said> Five years from now AI might still break down at even a small bit of complexity, or it might be installing air conditioners, or it might be colonizing Mercury and putting humans in zoos.do all these seem logically consistent possibilities to you? load replies (1)
kragen|6 months ago No, there isn't. When speaking of logically consistent possibilities, the two problems are precisely isomorphic under Boolean negation. bryanrasmussen|6 months ago good point, someone recently said> Five years from now AI might still break down at even a small bit of complexity, or it might be installing air conditioners, or it might be colonizing Mercury and putting humans in zoos.do all these seem logically consistent possibilities to you? load replies (1)
bryanrasmussen|6 months ago good point, someone recently said> Five years from now AI might still break down at even a small bit of complexity, or it might be installing air conditioners, or it might be colonizing Mercury and putting humans in zoos.do all these seem logically consistent possibilities to you? load replies (1)
kragen|6 months ago
bryanrasmussen|6 months ago
> Five years from now AI might still break down at even a small bit of complexity, or it might be installing air conditioners, or it might be colonizing Mercury and putting humans in zoos.
do all these seem logically consistent possibilities to you?