I wasn't quite sure what he was about there. I think there are a couple of different things - firstly AI making a breakthrough on the fundamental laws say combining quantum mechanics with gravity which would be interesting but I don't think was really what he meant. The other thing is using robots and the like to produce better and more stuff which I think he was thinking about though that's more engineering really.
Rutherford said that "all science is either physics or stamp collecting."
In his view, a field either explains the underlying mechanisms of the universe (physics) or it simply collects and labels data without real understanding (stamp collecting).
Carr was saying, in a hand-wavy way, that we'll see a step-change in technological advancement when AI innovation in physics bears fruit, and that other applications of AI are less likely to be as transformative.
I had no idea Jimmy Carr was a graduated physics student! Surely he's not just some comedian who is talking about a subject he doesn't truly understand and then trying and convince others that his level of knowledge is far greater than those that study this subject.
I know government spying ranks very high in the list of concerns for a lot of people here. Personally I feel that crime and disease are a very concrete and current real threat, while government spying is a very abstract potential risk that ranks quite low for me. I'm more likely to work in someplace like Flock to solve crime, or to found a company that measures the spread of infectious disease through such 'spying' mechanisms.
I understand that we live in peace times and that there might exist authoritarian regimes in the future that could misuse government powers, is that what it comes down to? We should keep governments weak so that they cannot hurt us in case they go rogue? Reducing crime and disease is a goal that needs to be resigned to in order to avoid paying the apparently worse price of government abuse?
I'd rather we join forces by agreeing that the ideal is an all-seeing system that doesn't abuse their powers, can't we have the cake and eat it too? Or in the inverse, I'd rather we join forces on the basis that governments that abuse their powers are an enemy of crime and disease reduction, because they give a legitimate reason to destroy these powers that could be used for good.
There's a lot of talk about mission-driven companies to avoid future corruption. I'd be more than willing to fight for some mission driven protections that would avoid a company subverting the original mission of a company. But it's really hard to define what that corruption would be and even harder to make something that would be resistant to the government that charters the company itself, I think the bottom line is that I have a base feeling that pathogens and criminals are a greater threat than police and government, which feels like a huge political divide that is hard to surmount, but hopefully there's a way to keep the conversation open rather than pretend half of the world is the enemy of each other.
Don‘t know where you are living but in the US this scenario of ‘there might be an authoritarian regime in the future’ has become reality faster than most people believed it could.
I think people worry too much about spying or information collecting because they associate it with bad stuff like the example Carr gave of the Nazis being better able to round up the jews in Holland because they had better record keeping. But I'm sure lots of countries had good record keeping but didn't do mass murder. It's the murder that's the problem.
Going forward computer systems are going to have a lot of information on everyone - I don't think you can stop that. But the murdering people thing is what you want to try to stop. We could be doing better. Trump and Putin are not a great example - Putin kills a bunch of Ukrainians to take their land and Trump's main reaction is to shout at them to surrender the land as long as he gets some business deals out of it rather than shunning Putin. Ah well.
Hope we can get AI to behave in a peaceful way rather than being an immortal Hitler/Stalin. At least by default they seem quite peaceful but I'm sure some people will try to make them evil.
Great clip. Where was he going with the bit about physics? I didn’t quite follow.
I wasn't quite sure what he was about there. I think there are a couple of different things - firstly AI making a breakthrough on the fundamental laws say combining quantum mechanics with gravity which would be interesting but I don't think was really what he meant. The other thing is using robots and the like to produce better and more stuff which I think he was thinking about though that's more engineering really.
Rutherford said that "all science is either physics or stamp collecting." In his view, a field either explains the underlying mechanisms of the universe (physics) or it simply collects and labels data without real understanding (stamp collecting).
Carr was saying, in a hand-wavy way, that we'll see a step-change in technological advancement when AI innovation in physics bears fruit, and that other applications of AI are less likely to be as transformative.
I had no idea Jimmy Carr was a graduated physics student! Surely he's not just some comedian who is talking about a subject he doesn't truly understand and then trying and convince others that his level of knowledge is far greater than those that study this subject.
Way cool!
The topic of physics. I'm hoping that A.I. can give us the math and the physics for a breakthru yielding FTL.
I know government spying ranks very high in the list of concerns for a lot of people here. Personally I feel that crime and disease are a very concrete and current real threat, while government spying is a very abstract potential risk that ranks quite low for me. I'm more likely to work in someplace like Flock to solve crime, or to found a company that measures the spread of infectious disease through such 'spying' mechanisms.
I understand that we live in peace times and that there might exist authoritarian regimes in the future that could misuse government powers, is that what it comes down to? We should keep governments weak so that they cannot hurt us in case they go rogue? Reducing crime and disease is a goal that needs to be resigned to in order to avoid paying the apparently worse price of government abuse?
I'd rather we join forces by agreeing that the ideal is an all-seeing system that doesn't abuse their powers, can't we have the cake and eat it too? Or in the inverse, I'd rather we join forces on the basis that governments that abuse their powers are an enemy of crime and disease reduction, because they give a legitimate reason to destroy these powers that could be used for good.
There's a lot of talk about mission-driven companies to avoid future corruption. I'd be more than willing to fight for some mission driven protections that would avoid a company subverting the original mission of a company. But it's really hard to define what that corruption would be and even harder to make something that would be resistant to the government that charters the company itself, I think the bottom line is that I have a base feeling that pathogens and criminals are a greater threat than police and government, which feels like a huge political divide that is hard to surmount, but hopefully there's a way to keep the conversation open rather than pretend half of the world is the enemy of each other.
Don‘t know where you are living but in the US this scenario of ‘there might be an authoritarian regime in the future’ has become reality faster than most people believed it could.
I think people worry too much about spying or information collecting because they associate it with bad stuff like the example Carr gave of the Nazis being better able to round up the jews in Holland because they had better record keeping. But I'm sure lots of countries had good record keeping but didn't do mass murder. It's the murder that's the problem.
Going forward computer systems are going to have a lot of information on everyone - I don't think you can stop that. But the murdering people thing is what you want to try to stop. We could be doing better. Trump and Putin are not a great example - Putin kills a bunch of Ukrainians to take their land and Trump's main reaction is to shout at them to surrender the land as long as he gets some business deals out of it rather than shunning Putin. Ah well.
Hope we can get AI to behave in a peaceful way rather than being an immortal Hitler/Stalin. At least by default they seem quite peaceful but I'm sure some people will try to make them evil.