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Comment by twic

5 days ago

There's a variant of this that argues that humans are already as intelligent as it's possible to be. Because if it's possible to be more intelligent, why aren't we? And a slightly more reasonable variant that argues that we're already as intelligent as it's useful to be.

"Because if it's possible to be more intelligent, why aren't we?"

Because deep abstract thoughts about the nature of the universe and elaborate deep thinking were maybe not as useful while we were chasing lions and buffaloes with a spear?

We just had to be smarter then them. Which included finding out that tools were great. Learning about the habits of the prey and optmize hunting success. Those who were smarter in that capacity had a greater chance of reproducing. Those who just exceeded in thinking likely did not lived that long.

  • Is it just dumb luck that we're able to create knowledge about black holes, quarks, and lots of things in between which presumably had zero evolutionary benefit before a handful of generations ago?

    • Basically yes it is luck, in the sense that evolution is just randomness with a filter of death applied, so whatever brains we happen to have are just luck.

      The brains we did end up with are really bad at creating that sort of knowledge. Almost none of us can. But we’re good at communicating, coming up with simplified models of things, and seeing how ideas interact.

      We’re not universe-understanders, we’re behavior modelers and concept explainers.

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    • Evolution rewarded us for developing general intelligence. But with a very immediate practical focus and not too much specialisation.

I don't think the logic follows here. Nor does it match evidence.

The premise is ignorant of time. It is also ignorant of the fact that we know there's a lot of things we don't know. That's all before we consider other factors like if there are limits and physical barriers or many other things.

While I'm deeply and fundamentally skeptical of the recursive self-improvement/singularity hypothesis, I also don't really buy this.

There are some pretty obvious ways we could improve human cognition if we had the ability to reliably edit or augment it. Better storage & recall. Lower distractibility. More working memory capacity. Hell, even extra hands for writing on more blackboards or putting up more conspiracy theory strings at a time!

I suppose it might be possible that, given the fundamental design and structure of the human brain, none of these things can be improved any further without catastrophic side effects—but since the only "designer" of its structure is evolution, I think that's extremely unlikely.

  • Some of your suggestions, if you don't mind my saying, seem like only modest improvements — akin to Henry Ford's quote “If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said a faster horse.”

    To your point though, an electronic machine is a different host altogether with different strengths and weaknesses.

    • Well, twic's comment didn't say anything about revolutionary improvements, just "maybe we're as smart as we can be".