Comment by YZF
1 day ago
Nobody knows.
It's not a zero sum game. You can have AI "senior engineers" working under humans building bigger things than we've been able to.
We also don't know where the capabilities of current AIs will plateau. The benchmarks aren't really telling the entire story. From my perspective of using the models there are certain axis where they're not making a lot of progress, like being able to have large accurate context on the scale that humans can. There are other dimensions where there is still a large gap between human capabilities and LLMs. It's true that relative to other areas (lessay chess) LLMs are more generalized but they are still not fully generalized (back to the chess example, LLMs are not good at chess).
> It's not a zero sum game.
Resources are, though. The planet cannot support a race of digital super-people, and us, and an continually growing economy.
It's the height of folly to think that, as things are going, we are going anywhere "good".
I was arguing with a friend about this point today. I'd posit that our economy has been growing in a way where goods that require more human time and natural resources to produce are giving way to goods that are intangible.
Once we've met our basic material needs, we're tending to consume things that are replicable with low marginal costs, and which do not interfere with the production of other goods. So maybe we can actually support a continually growing digital and entertainment economy, at least for a few more generations.
Maybe these mathematical contributions will also impact the efficiency and capabilities of our material production systems as well, which is another way to keep the economy growing.
I'm optimistic that we'll do more with our resources rather than trying to optimize for doing the same more efficiently with less resources.
> Once we've met our basic material needs
The concern is not goods produced, those are not "resources", except perhaps in the very limited sense that food is a "produce".
Energy, materials, those are resources.
Economic growth doesn't mean using up resources faster, it means trading things faster.