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Monday, May 19, 2025

Science fiction author Neal Stephenson has suggested AIs should be allowed to fight other AIs, because evolution brings balance to ecosystems, but also thinks humans should stop using AI before it dumbs down our species.

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Typically interesting thoughts about AI from Neal Stephenson. "I see parallels between these and the hydrogen bomb tests that were conducted in your back yard during the 1950s." (via @charlescmann.bsky.social) [nealstephenson.substack.com]

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-- kottke.org (@kottke.org) May 15, 2025 at 5:16 PM

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... Stephenson coined the term "metaverse" in his 1992 classic "Snow Crash", and his 1999 epic "Cryptonomicon" envisioned digital currencies and the encryption needed to make them possible. The prescience of those works, and the cracking yarns he spins, mean he is in demand as both a novelist and thinker.

In the latter capacity he recently participated in what he described a "a panel discussion on AI as part of a private event in New Zealand."

He's since posted his opening remarks from the event, which open by noting understandable anxiety about the sudden arrival of generative AI.

Stephenson suggests remembering that we already share Earth with many non-human intelligences from the animal kingdom and have learned to get along with them.

"We're used to thinking of them as being less intelligent than we are, and that's usually not wrong," he wrote, "but it might be better to think of them as having different sorts of intelligence, because they've evolved to do different things."

His remarks offer ways to categorize non-human intelligences, and he ends up suggesting that the most useful AIs will be like sheepdogs " creatures that can do specific tasks better than a human. He thinks other AIs will be like dragonflies " largely oblivious to humans but doing certain things brilliantly well " while others will be like ravens or crows in that they are aware of humans but don't care about us. ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-05-18 10:07 PM | Reply

As an aside ...

On this most august site, I have oft opined that humans seem to be at the top of the intelligence ratings of critters who inhabit this planet because humans seem to be the determiners of what "intelligence" means.

So, naturally, humans place themselves at the top?

Is that a correct placement?

Or maybe, the ability to survive a long time might be a better criterion to apply to species?

In which case, cockroaches beat out humans.


So, have humans defined intelligence merely to place humans at the top of the intelligence scale?



#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-05-18 10:13 PM | Reply

We already have fire and forget drones run by internal AI...not so far from judgement day, is my guess.

#3 | Posted by Hughmass at 2025-05-20 07:14 AM | Reply

OK, I have to ask, do we really want to encourage AI to become even smarter?

Asked differently (as I have on this most august site), there's a theory that the reason why we have not been contacted by alien life is because that AI has killed off its creators.

The United States is no longer the leader of the Free World. (2024)
www.space.com

... The rise of AI might explain why the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) has yet to detect the signatures of advanced technical civilizations elsewhere in the galaxy. ...


#4 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-05-20 08:23 PM | Reply

@#4

oops, a cut 'n' paste error ...

The United States is no longer the leader of the Free World. (2024)

--- should be ---

AI may be to blame for our failure to make contact with alien civilizations

Apologies abound.


#5 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-05-20 08:26 PM | Reply

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