The following is a point-by-point critique of Lukas Gloor’s essay Altruists Should Prioritize Artificial Intelligence. My hope is that this critique will serve to make it clear — to Lukas, myself, and others — where and why I disagree with this line of argument, and thereby hopefully also bring some relevant considerations to the table with respect to what we should be working on to best reduce suffering. I should like to note, before I begin, that I have the deepest respect for Lukas, and that I consider his work very important and inspiring.

Below, I quote every paragraph from the body of Lukas’ article, which begins with the following abstract:

The large-scale adoption of today’s cutting-edge AI technologies across different industries would already prove transformative for human society. And AI research rapidly progresses further towards the goal of general intelligence. Once created, we can expect smarter-than-human artificial intelligence (AI) to not only be transformative for the world, but also (plausibly) to be better than humans at self-preservation and goal preservation. This makes it particularly attractive, from the perspective of those who care about improving the quality of the future, to focus on affecting the development goals of such AI systems, as well as to install potential safety precautions against likely failure modes. Some experts emphasize that steering the development of smarter-than-human AI into beneficial directions is important because it could make the difference between human extinction and a utopian future. But because we cannot confidently rule out the possibility that some AI scenarios will go badly and also result in large amounts of suffering, thinking about the impacts of AI is paramount for both suffering-focused altruists as well as those focused on actualizing the upsides of the very best futures.

An abstract of my thoughts on this argument:

My response to this argument is twofold: 1) I do not consider the main argument presented by Lukas, as I understand it, to be plausible, and 2) I think we should think hard about whether we have considered the opportunity cost carefully enough. We should not be particularly confident, I would argue, that any of us have found the best thing to focus on to reduce the most suffering.

I do not think the claim that “altruists can expect to have the largest positive impact by focusing on artificial intelligence” is warranted. In part, my divergence from Lukas rests on empirical disagreements, and in larger part it stems from what may be called “conceptual disagreements” — I think most talk about “superintelligence” is conceptually confused. For example, intelligence as “cognitive abilities” is liberally conflated with intelligence as “the ability to achieve goals in general”, and this confusion does a lot of deceptive work.

I would advocate for more foundational research into the question of what we ought to prioritize. Artificial intelligence undoubtedly poses many serious risks, yet it is important that we maintain a sense of proportion with respect to these risks relative to other serious risks, many of which we have not even contemplated yet.

I will now turn to the full argument presented by Lukas.

I. Introduction and definitions Terms like “AI” or “intelligence” can have many different (and often vague) meanings. “Intelligence” as used here refers to the ability to achieve goals in a wide range of environments. This definition captures the essence of many common perspectives on intelligence (Legg & Hutter, 2005), and conveys the meaning that is most relevant to us, namely that agents with the highest comparative goal-achieving ability (all things considered) are the most likely to shape the future.

A crucial thing to flag is that “intelligence” here refers to the ability to achieve goals — not to scoring high on an IQ test, or “intelligence” as “advanced cognitive abilities”. And these are not the same, and should not be conflated (indeed, this is one of the central points of my book Reflections on Intelligence, which dispenses with the muddled term “intelligence” at an early point, and instead examines the nature of this better defined “ability to achieve goals” in greater depth).

While it is true that the concept of goal achieving is related to the concept of IQ, the latter is much narrower, as it relates to a specific class of goals. Boosting the IQ of everyone would not immediately boost our ability to achieve goals in every respect — at least not immediately, and not to the same extent across all domains. For even if we all woke up with an IQ of 200 tomorrow, all the external technology with which we run and grow our economy would still be the same. Our cars would drive just as fast, the energy available to us would be the same, and so would the energy efficiency of our machines. And while a higher IQ might now enable us to grow this external technology faster, there are quite restricting limits to how much it can grow. Most of our machines and energy harvesting technology cannot be made many times more efficient, as their efficiency is already a significant fraction — 15 to 40 percent — of the maximum physical limit. In other words, their efficiency cannot be doubled more than a couple of times, if even that.

One could then, of course, build more machines and power plants, yet such an effort would itself be constrained strongly by the state of our external technology, including the energy available to us; not just by the cognitive abilities available. This is one of the reasons I am skeptical of the idea of AI-powered runaway growth. Yes, greater cognitive abilities is a highly significant factor, yet there is just so much more to growing the economy and our ability to achieve a wide range of goals than that, as evidenced by the fact that we have seen a massive increase in computer-powered cognitive abilities — indeed, exponential growth for many decades by many measures — and yet we have continued to see fairly stable, in fact modestly declining, economic growth.

If one considers the concept of “increase in cognitive powers” to be the same as “increase in the ability to achieve goals, period” then this criticism will be missed. “I defined intelligence to be the ability to achieve goals, so when I say intelligence is increased, then all abilities are increased.” One can easily come to entertain a kind of motte and bailey argument in this way, by moving back and forth between this broad notion of intelligence as “the ability to achieve goals” and the more narrow sense of intelligence as “cognitive abilities”. To be sure, a statement like the one above need not be problematic as such, as long as one is clear that this concept of intelligence lies very far from “intelligence as measured by IQ/raw cognitive power”. Such clarity is often absent, however, and thus the statement is quite problematic in practice, with respect to the goals of communicating clearly and not confusing ourselves.

Again, my main point here is that increasing cognitive powers should not be conflated with increasing the ability to achieve goals in general — in every respect. I think much confusion springs from a lack of clarity on this matter.

While everyday use of the term “intelligence” often refers merely to something like “brainpower” or “thinking speed,” our usage also presupposes rationality, or goal-optimization in an agent’s thinking and acting. In this usage, if someone is e.g. displaying overconfidence or confirmation bias, they may not qualify as very intelligent overall, even if they score high on an IQ test. The same applies to someone who lacks willpower or self control.

This is an important step toward highlighting the distinction between “goal achieving ability” and “IQ”, yet it is still quite a small step, as it does not really go much beyond distinguishing “high IQ” from “optimal cognitive abilities for goal achievement”. We are still talking about things going on in a single human head (or computer), while leaving out the all-important aspect that is (external) culture and technology. We are still not talking about the ability to achieve goals in general.

Artificial intelligence refers to machines designed with the ability to pursue tasks or goals. The AI designs currently in use – ranging from trading algorithms in finance, to chess programs, to self-driving cars – are intelligent in a domain-specific sense only. Chess programs beat the best human players in chess, but they would fail terribly at operating a car. Similarly, car-driving software in many contexts already performs better than human drivers, but no amount of learning (at least not with present algorithms) would make [this] software work safely on an airplane.

My only comment here would be that it is not quite clear what counts as artificial intelligence. For example, would a human, edited as well as unedited, count as “a machine designed with the ability to pursue tasks or goals”? And could not all software be considered “designed with the ability to pursue tasks or goals”, and hence all software would be artificial intelligence by this definition? If so, we should then just be clear that this definition is quite broad, including both all humans and all software, and more.

The most ambitious AI researchers are working to build systems that exhibit (artificial) general intelligence (AGI) – the type of intelligence we defined above, which enables the expert pursuit of virtually any task or objective.

This is where the distinction we drew above becomes relevant. While the claim quoted above may be true in one sense, we should be clear that the most ambitious AI researchers are not working to increase “all our abilities”, including our ability to get more energy out of our steam engines and solar panels. Our economy arguably works on that broader endeavor. AI researchers, in contrast, work only on bettering what may be called “artificial cognitive abilities”, which, granted, may in turn help spur growth in many other areas (although the degree to which it would do so is quite unclear, and likely surprisingly limited in the big picture, since “growth may be constrained not by what we are good at but rather by what is essential and yet hard to improve”).

In the past few years, we have witnessed impressive progress in algorithms becoming more and more versatile. Google’s DeepMind team for example built an algorithm that learned to play 2-D Atari games on its own, achieving superhuman skill at several of them (Mnih et al., 2015). DeepMind then developed a program that beat the world champion in the game of Go (Silver et al., 2016), and – tackling more practical real-world applications – managed to cut down data center electricity costs by rearranging the cooling systems.

I think it is important not to overstate recent progress compared to progress in the past. We also saw computers becoming better than humans at many things several decades ago, including many kinds of mathematical calculations (and people also thought that computers would soon beat humans at everything back then). So superhuman skill at many tasks is not what is new and unique about recent progress, but rather that these superhuman skills have been attained via self-training, and, as Lukas notes, that the skills achieved by this training seem of a broader, more general nature than the skills of a single algorithm in the past.

And yet the breadth of these skills should not be overstated either, as the skills cited are all acquired in a rather expensive trial-and-error fashion with readily accessible feedback. This mode of learning surely holds a lot of promise in many areas, yet there are reasons to be skeptical that such learning can bring us significantly closer to achieving all the cognitive and motor abilities humans have (see also David Pearce’s “Humans and Intelligent Machines“; one need not agree with Pearce on everything to agree with some of his reasons to be skeptical).

That DeepMind’s AI technology makes quick progress in many domains, without requiring researchers to build new architecture from scratch each time, indicates that their machine learning algorithms have already reached an impressive level of general applicability. (Edit: I wrote the previous sentence in 2016. In the meantime [January 2018] DeepMind went on to refine its Go-playing AI, culminating in a version called AlphaGo Zero. While the initial version of DeepMind’s Go-playing AI started out with access to a large database of games played by human experts, AlphaGo Zero only learns through self-play. Nevertheless, it managed to become superhuman after a mere 4 days of practice. After 40 days of practice, it was able to beat its already superhuman predecessor 100–0. Moreover, Deepmind then created the version AlphaZero, which is not a “Go-specific” algorithm anymore. Fed with nothing but the rules for either Go, chess, or shogi, it managed to become superhuman at each of these games in less than 24 hours of practice.)

This is no doubt impressive. Yet it is also important not to overstate how much progress that was achieved in 24 hours of practice. This is not, we should be clear, a story about innovation going from zero to superhuman in 24 hours, but rather the story of immense amounts of hardware developed over decades which has then been fed with an algorithm that has also been developed over many years by many people. And then, this highly refined algorithm running on specialized, cutting-edge hardware is unleashed to reach its dormant potential.

And this potential was, it should be noted, not vastly superior to the abilities of previous systems. In chess, for instance, AlphaZero beat the chess program Stockfish (although Stockfish author Tord Romstad notes that it was a version that was a year old and not running on optimal hardware) 25 times as white, 3 as black, and drew the remaining 72 times. Thus, it was significantly better, yet it still did not win in most of the games. Similarly, in Go, AlphaZero won 60 games and lost 40, while in Shogi it won 90 times, lost 8, and drew twice.

Thus, AlphaZero undoubtedly comprised clear progress with respect to these games, yet not an enormous leap that rendered it unbeatable, and certainly not a leap made in a single day.

The road may still be long, but if this trend continues, developments in AI research will eventually lead to superhuman performance across all domains. As there is no reason to assume that humans have attained the maximal degree of intelligence (Section III), AI may soon after reaching our own level of intelligence surpass it.

Again, I would start by noting that human “intelligence” as our “ability to achieve goals” is strongly dependent on the state of our technology and culture at large, not merely our raw cognitive powers. And the claim made above that there is no reason to believe that humans have attained “the maximal degree of intelligence” seems, in this context, to mostly refer to our cognitive abilities rather than our ability to achieve goals in general. For with respect to our ability to achieve goals in general, it is clear that our abilities are not maximal, but indeed continually growing, largely as the result of better software and better machines. Thus, there is not a dichotomous relationship between “human abilities to achieve goals” and “our machines’ abilities to achieve goals”. And given that our ability to achieve goals is in many ways mostly limited by what our best technology can do — how fast our airplanes can fly, how fast our hardware is, how efficient our power plants are, etc. — it is not clear why some other agent or set of agents coming to control this technology (which is extremely difficult to imagine in the first place given the collaborative nature of the grosser infrastructure of this technology) should be vastly more capable of achieving goals than humans powered by/powering this technology.

As for AI surpassing “our own level of intelligence”, one can say that, at the level of cognitive tasks, machines have already been vastly superhuman in many respects for many years — in virtually all mathematical calculations, for instance. And now also in many games, ranging from Atari to Go. Yet, as noted above, I would argue that, so far, such progress has comprised a clear increase in human “intelligence” in the general sense: it has increased our ability to achieve goals.

Nick Bostrom (2014) popularized the term superintelligence to refer to (AGI-)systems that are vastly smarter than human experts in virtually all respects. This includes not only skills that computers traditionally excel at, such as calculus or chess, but also tasks like writing novels or talking people into doing things they otherwise would not. Whether AI systems would quickly develop superhuman skills across all possible domains, or whether we will already see major transformations with [superhuman skills in] just a [few] such domains while others lag behind, is an open question.

I would argue that our machines already have superhuman skills in countless domains, and that this has indeed already given rise to major transformations, in one sense of this term at least.

Note that the definitions of “AGI” and “superintelligence” leave open the question of whether these systems would exhibit something like consciousness.

I have argued to the contrary in the chapter “Consciousness — Orthogonal or Crucial?” in Reflections on Intelligence.

This article focuses on the prospect of creating smarter-than-human artificial intelligence. For simplicity, we will use the term “AI” in a non-standard way here, to refer specifically to artificial general intelligence (AGI).

Again, I would flag that the meaning of the term general intelligence, or AGI, in this context is not clear. It was defined above as the ability that “enables the expert pursuit of virtually any task or objective”. Yet the ability of humans to achieve goals in general is, I would still argue, in large part the product of their technology and culture at large, and AGI, as Lukas uses it here, does not seem to refer to anything remotely like this, i.e. “the sum of the capabilities of our technology and culture”. Instead, it seems to refer to something much more narrow and singular — something akin to “a system that possesses (virtually) all the cognitive abilities that a human does, and which possesses them at a similar or greater level”. I think this is worth highlighting.

The use of “AI” in this article will also leave open how such a system is implemented: While it seems plausible that the first artificial system exhibiting smarter-than-human intelligence will be run on some kind of “supercomputer,” our definition allows for alternative possibilities.

Again, what does “smarter-than-human intelligence” mean here? Machines can already do things that no unaided human can. It seems to refer to what I defined above: “a system that possesses (virtually) all the cognitive abilities that a human does, and which possesses them at a similar or greater level” — not the ability to achieve goals in general. And as for when a computer might have “(virtually) all the cognitive abilities that a human does”, it seems highly doubtful that any system will ever suddenly emerge with them all, given the modular, many-faceted nature of our minds. Instead, it seems much more likely that the gradual process of machines becoming better than humans at particular tasks will continue in its usual, gradual way. Or so I have argued.

The claim that altruists should focus on affecting AI outcomes is therefore intended to mean that we should focus on scenarios where the dominant force shaping the future is no longer (biological) human minds, but rather some outgrowth of information technology – perhaps acting in concert with biotechnology or other technologies. This would also e.g. allow for AI to be distributed over several interacting systems.

I think this can again come close to resembling a motte and bailey argument: it seems very plausible that the future will not be controlled mostly by what we would readily recognize as biological humans today. Yet to say that we should aim to impact such a future by no means implies that we should aim to impact, say, a small set of AI systems which might determine the entire future based on their goal functions (note: I am not saying Lukas has made this claim above, but this is often what people seem to consider the upshot of arguments of this kind, and also what it seems to me that Lukas is arguing below, in the rest of his essay). Indeed, the claim above is hardly much different from saying that we should aim to impact the long-term future. But Lukas seems to be moving back and forth between this general claim and the much narrower claim that we should focus on scenarios involving rapid growth acceleration driven mostly by software, which is the kind of scenario his essay seems almost exclusively focused on.

II. It is plausible that we create human-level AI this century Even if we expect smarter-than-human artificial intelligence to be a century or more away, its development could already merit serious concern. As Sam Harris emphasized in his TED talk on risks and benefits of AI, we do not know how long it will take to figure out how to program ethical goals into an AI, solve other technical challenges in the space of AI safety, or establish an environment with reduced dangers of arms races. When the stakes are high enough, it pays to start preparing as soon as possible. The sooner we prepare, the better our chances of safely managing the upcoming transition.

I agree that it is worth preparing for high-stakes outcomes. But I think it is crucial that we get a clear sense of what these might look like, as well as how likely they are. “Altruists Should Prioritize Exploring Long-Term Future Outcomes, and Work out How to Best Influence Them”. To say that we should focus on “artificial intelligence”, which has a rather narrow meaning in most contexts (something akin to a software program), when we really mean that we should focus on the future of goal achieving systems in general is, I think, somewhat misleading.

The need for preparation is all the more urgent given that considerably shorter timelines are not out of the question, especially in light of recent developments. While timeline predictions by different AI experts span a wide range, many of those experts think it likely that human-level AI will be created this century (conditional on civilization facing no major disruptions in the meantime). Some even think it may emerge in the first half of this century: In a survey where the hundred most-cited AI researchers were asked in what year they think human-level AI is 10% likely to have arrived by, the median reply was 2024 and the mean was 2034. In response to the same question for a 50% probability of arrival, the median reply was 2050 with a mean of 2072 (Müller & Bostrom, 2016).

Again, it is important to be careful about definitions. For what is meant by “human-level AI” in this context? The authors of the cited source are careful to define what they mean: “Define a ‘high–level machine intelligence’ (HLMI) as one that can carry out most human professions at least as well as a typical human.”

And yet even this definition is quite vague, since “most human professions” is not a constant. A couple of hundred years ago, the profession of virtually all humans was farming, whereas only a couple percent of people in developed nations are employed in farming today. And this is not an idle point, because as machines become able to do jobs hitherto performed by humans, market forces will push humans to take new jobs that machines cannot do. And these new jobs may be those that require abilities that it will take many centuries for machines to acquire, if non-biological machines will indeed ever acquire them (this is not necessarily that implausible, as these abilities may include “looking like a real, empathetic biological human who ignites our brain circuits in the right ways”).

Thus, the questionnaire above seems poorly defined. And if it asks about most current human professions, its relevance appears quite limited; also because the nature of different professions change over time as well. A doctor today does not do all the same things a doctor did a hundred years ago, and the same will likely apply to doctors of the future. In other words, also within existing professions can we expect to see humans move toward doing the things that machines cannot do/we do not prefer them to do, even as machines become ever more capable.

While it could be argued that these AI experts are biased towards short timelines, their estimates should make us realize that human-level AI this century is a real possibility.

Yet we should keep in mind what they were asked about, and how relevant this is. Even if most (current?) human professions might be done by machines within this century, this does not imply that we will see “a system that possesses (virtually) all the cognitive abilities that a human does, and which possesses them at a similar or greater level” within this century. These are quite different claims.

The next section will argue that the subsequent transition from human-level AI to superintelligence could happen very rapidly after human-level AI actualizes. We are dealing with the decent possibility – e.g. above 15% likelihood even under highly conservative assumptions – that human intelligence will be surpassed by machine intelligence later this century, perhaps even in the next couple of decades. As such a transition will bring about huge opportunities as well as huge risks, it would be irresponsible not to prepare for it.

I want to flag, again, that it is not clear what “human-level AI” means. Lukas seemed to first define intelligence as something like “the ability to achieve goals in general”, which I have argued is not really what he means here (indeed, it is a rather different beast which I seek to examine in Reflections on Intelligence). And the two senses of the term “human-level intelligence” mentioned in the previous paragraph — “the ability to do most human professions” versus “possessing virtually all human cognitive abilities” — should not be conflated either. So it is in fact not clear what is being referred to here, although I believe it is the latter: “possessing virtually all human cognitive abilities at a similar or greater level”.

It should be noted that a potentially short timeline does not imply that the road to superintelligence is necessarily one of smooth progress: Metrics like Moore’s law are not guaranteed to continue indefinitely, and the rate of breakthrough publications in AI research may not increase (or even stay constant) either. The recent progress in machine learning is impressive and suggests that fairly short timelines of a decade or two are not to be ruled out. However, this progress could also be mostly due to some important but limited insights that enable companies like DeepMind to reap the low-hanging fruit before progress would slow down again. There are large gaps still to be filled before AIs reach human-level intelligence, and it is difficult to estimate how long it will take researchers to bridge these gaps. Current hype about AI may lead to disappointment in the medium term, which could bring about an “AI safety winter” with people mistakenly concluding that the safety concerns were exaggerated and smarter-than-human AI is not something we should worry about yet.

This seems true, yet it should also be conceded that a consistent lack of progress in AI would count as at least weak evidence against the claim that we should mainly prioritize what is usually referred to as “AI safety“. And more generally, we should be careful not to make the hypothesis “AI safety is the most important thing we could be working on” into an unfalsifiable one.

As for Moore’s law, not only is it “not guaranteed to continue indefinitely”, but we know, for theoretical reasons, that it must come to an end within a decade, at least in its original formulation concerning silicon transistors, and progress has indeed already been below the prediction of “the law” for some time now. And the same can be said about other aspects in hardware progress: it shows signs of waning off.

If AI progress were to slow down for a long time and then unexpectedly speed up again, a transition to superintelligence could happen with little warning (Shulman & Sandberg, 2010). This scenario is plausible because gains in software efficiency make a larger comparative difference to an AI’s overall capabilities when the hardware available is more powerful. And once an AI develops the intelligence of its human creators, it could start taking part in its own self-improvement (see section IV).

I am not sure I understand the claims being made here. With respect to the first argument about gains in efficiency, the question is how likely we should expect such gains to be if progress has been slow for long. Other things being equal, this would seem less likely in a time where growth is slow than in a time when it is fast, and especially if there is not much growth in hardware either, since hardware growth may in large part be driving growth in software.

I am not sure I follow the claim about AI developing the intelligence of its human creators, and then taking part in its own improvement, but I would just note, as Ramez Naam has argued, that AI, and our machines in general, are already playing a significant role in their own improvement in many ways. In other words, we already actively use our best, most capable technology to build the next generation of such technology.

Indeed, on a more general, yet also less directly relevant note, I would also add that we humans have in some sense been using our most advanced cognitive tools to build the next generation of such tools for hundreds of thousands of years. For over the course of evolution, individual humans have been using the best of their cognitive abilities to select the mates who had the best total package (they could get), of which cognitive abilities were a significant part. In this sense, the idea that “dumb and blind” evolution created intelligent humans is actually quite wrong. The real story is rather one of cognitive abilities actively selecting cognitive abilities (along with other things). A gradual design process over the course of which ever greater cognitive powers were “creating” and in turn created.

For AI progress to stagnate for a long period of time before reaching human-level intelligence, biological brains would have to have surprisingly efficient architectures that AI cannot achieve despite further hardware progress and years of humans conducting more AI research.

Looking over the past decades of AI research and progress, we can say that it indeed has been a fairly long period of time since computers first surpassed humans in the ability to do mathematical calculations, and yet there are still many things humans can do which computers cannot, such as having meaningful conversations with other humans, learning fast from a few examples, and experiencing and expressing feelings. And yet these examples still mostly pertain to cognitive abilities, and hence still overlook other abilities that are also relevant with respect to machines taking over human jobs (if we focus on that definition of “human-level AI”), such as having the physical appearance of a real, biological human, which does seem in strong demand in many professions, especially in the service industry.

However, as long as hardware progress does not come to a complete halt, AGI research will eventually not have to surpass the human brain’s architecture or efficiency anymore. Instead, it could become possible to just copy it: The “foolproof” way to build human-level intelligence would be to develop whole brain emulation (WBE) (Sandberg & Bostrom, 2008), the exact copying of the brain’s pattern of computation (input-output behavior as well as isomorphic internal states at any point in the computation) onto a computer and a suitable virtual environment. In addition to sufficiently powerful hardware, WBE would require scanning technology with fine enough resolution to capture all the relevant cognitive function, as well as a sophisticated understanding of neuroscience to correctly draw the right abstractions. Even though our available estimates are crude, it is possible that all these conditions will be fulfilled well before the end of this century (Sandberg, 2014).

Yet it should be noted that there are many who doubt that this is a foolproof way to build “human-level intelligence” (a term that in this context again seems to mean “a system with roughly the same cognitive abilities as the human brain”). Many doubt that it is even a possibility, and they do so for many different reasons (e.g. that a single, high-resolution scanning of the brain is not enough to capture and enable an emulation of its dynamic workings; that a digital computer cannot adequately simulate the physical complexity of the brain, and that such a computer cannot solve the so-called binding problem.)

Thus, it seems to stand as an open question whether mind uploading is indeed possible, let alone feasible (and it also seems that many people in the broader transhumanist community, who tend to be the people who write and talk the most about mind uploading, could well be biased toward believing it possible, as many of them seem to hope that it can save them from death).

The perhaps most intriguing aspect of WBE technology is that once the first emulation exists and can complete tasks on a computer like a human researcher can, it would then be very easy to make more such emulations by copying the original. Moreover, with powerful enough hardware, it would also become possible to run emulations at higher speeds, or to reset them back to a well-rested state after they performed exhausting work (Hanson, 2016).

Assuming, of course, that WBE will indeed be feasible in the first place. Also, it is worth noting that Robin Hanson himself is critical of the idea that WBEs would be able to create software that is superior to themselves very quickly; i.e. he expects a WBE economy to undergo “many doublings” before it happens.

Sped-up WBE workers could be given the task of improving computer hardware (or AI technology itself), which would trigger a wave of steeply exponential progress in the development of superintelligence.

This is an exceptionally strong claim that would seem in need of justification, and not least some specification, given that it is not clear what “steeply exponential progress in the development of superintelligence” refers to in this context. It hardly means “steeply exponential progress in the development of a super ability to achieve goals in general”, including in energy efficiency and energy harvesting. Such exponential progress is not, I submit, likely to follow from progress in computer hardware or AI technology alone. Indeed, as we saw above, such progress cannot happen with respect to the energy efficiency of most of our machines, as physical limits mean that it cannot double more than a couple of times.

But even if we understand it to be a claim about the abilities of certain particular machines and their cognitive abilities more narrowly, the claim is still a dubious one. It seems to assume that progress in computer hardware and AI technology is constrained chiefly by the amount of hours put into it by those who work on it directly, as opposed to also being significantly constrained by countless other factors, such as developments in other areas, e.g. in physics, production, and transportation, many of which imply limits on development imposed by factors such as hardware and money, not just the amount of human-like genius available.

For example, how much faster should we expect the hardware that AlphaZero was running on to have been developed and completed if a team of super-WBEs had been working on it? Would the materials used for the hardware have been dug up and transported significantly faster? Would they have been assembled significantly faster? Perhaps somewhat, yet hardly anywhere close to twice as fast. The growth story underlying many worries about explosive AI growth is quite detached from how we actually improve our machines, including AI (software and hardware) as well as the harvesting of the energy that powers it (Vaclav Smil: “Energy transitions are inherently gradual processes and this reality should be kept in mind when judging the recent spate of claims about the coming rapid innovative take-overs […]”). Such growth is the result of countless processes distributed across our entire economy. Just as nobody knows how to make a pencil, nobody, including the very best programmers, knows (more than a tiny part of) how to make better machines.

To get a sense of the potential of this technology, imagine WBEs of the smartest and most productive AI scientists, copied a hundred times to tackle AI research itself as a well-coordinated research team, sped up so they can do years of research in mere weeks or even days, and reset periodically to skip sleep (or other distracting activities) in cases where memory-formation is not needed. The scenario just described requires no further technologies beyond WBE and sufficiently powerful hardware. If the gap from current AI algorithms to smarter-than-human AI is too hard to bridge directly, it may eventually be bridged (potentially very quickly) after WBE technology drastically accelerates further AI research.

As far as I understand, much of the progress in machine learning in modern times was essentially due to modern hardware and computing power that made it possible to implement old ideas invented decades ago (of course then implemented with all the many adjustments and tinkering one cannot foresee from the drawing board). In other words, software progress was hardly the most limiting factor. Arguably, the limiting factor was rather that the economy just had not caught up to be able to make hardware advanced enough to implement these theoretical ideas successfully. And it also seems to me quite naive to think that better hardware design, and genius ideas about how to make hardware more generally, was and is a main limiting factor in our growth of computer hardware. Such progress tends to rest critically on other progress in other kinds of hardware and globally distributed production processes. Processes that no doubt can be sped up, yet hardly that significantly by advanced software alone, in large part because such progress is limited by the fact that many of the crucial processes involved in this progress, such as digging up, refining, and transporting materials, are physical processes that can only go so fast.

Beyond that, there is also an opportunity cost consideration that is ignored by the story of fast growth above. For the hardware and energy required for this team of WBEs could otherwise have been used to run other kinds of computations that could help further innovation, including those we already run on full steam to further progress — CAD programs, simulations, equation solving. And it is not clear that using all this hardware for WBEs would be a better use of hardware than would running these other programs, whose work may be considered a limiting factor to AI progress at a similar level as more “purely” human or human-like work is. Indeed, we should not expect engineers and companies to do these kinds of things with their computing resources if they were not among the most efficient things they could do with them. And even if WBEs are a better use of hardware for fast progress, it is far from clear that it would be that much better.

The potential for WBE to come before de novo AI means that – even if the gap between current AI designs and the human brain is larger than we thought – we should not significantly discount the probability of human-level AI being created eventually. And perhaps paradoxically, we should expect such a late transition to happen abruptly. Barring no upcoming societal collapse, believing that superintelligence is highly unlikely to ever happen requires not only confidence that software or “architectural” improvements to AI are insufficient to ever bridge the gap, but also that – in spite of continued hardware progress – WBE could not get off the ground either. We do not seem to have sufficient reason for great confidence in either of these propositions, let alone both.

Again, what does the term “superintelligence” refer to here? Above, it was defined as “(AGI-)systems that are vastly smarter than human experts in virtually all respects”. And given that AGI is defined as a general ability to pursue goals, and that “smart” here presumably means “better able to achieve goals”, one can say that the definition of superintelligence given here translates to “a system that pursues goals better than human experts in virtually all areas”. Yet we are already building systems that satisfy this definition of superintelligence. Our entire economy is already able to do tasks that no single human expert could ever accomplish. But superintelligence likely refers to something else here, something along the lines of: “a system that is vastly more cognitively capable than any human expert in virtually all respects”. And yet, even by this definition, we already have computer systems that can do countless cognitive tasks much better than any human, and the super system that is the union of all these systems can therefore, in many respects at least, be considered to have vastly superior cognitive abilities relative to humans. And systems composed of humans and technology are clearly vastly more capable than any human expert alone in virtually all respects.

In this sense, we clearly do have “superintelligence” already, and we are continually expanding its capabilities. And, with respect to worries above a FOOM takeover, it seems highly unlikely that a single, powerful machine could ever overtake and become more powerful than the entire collective that is the human-machine civilization, which is not to say that low-risk events should be dismissed. But they should be measured against other risks we could be focusing on.

III. Humans are not at peak intelligence

Again, it is important to be clear about what we mean by “intelligence”. Most cognitively advanced? Or best able to achieve goals in general? Humans extended by technology can clearly increase their intelligence, i.e. ability to achieve goals, significantly. We have done so consistently over the last few centuries, and we continue to do so today. And in a world where humans build this growing body of technology to serve their own ends, and in some cases build it to be provably secure, it is far from clear that some non-human system with much greater cognitive powers than humans (which, again, already exists in many domains) will also become more capable of achieving goals in general than humanity, given that it is surrounded by a capable super-system of technology designed for and by humans, controlled by humans, to serve their ends. Again, this is not to say that one should not worry about seemingly improbable risks — we definitely should — but merely that we should doubt the assumption that our making machines more cognitively capable will necessarily imply that they will be better able to achieve goals in general. Again, despite being related, these two senses of “intelligence” must not be confused.

It is difficult to intuitively comprehend the idea that machines – or any physical system for that matter – could become substantially more intelligent than the most intelligent humans. Because the intelligence gap between humans and other animals appears very large to us, we may be tempted to think of intelligence as an “on-or-off concept,” one that humans have and other animals do not. People may believe that computers can be better than humans at certain tasks, but only at tasks that do not require “real” intelligence. This view would suggest that if machines ever became “intelligent” across the board, their capabilities would have to be no greater than those of an intelligent human relying on the aid of (computer-)tools.

Again, we should be clear that the word “intelligence” here seems to mean “most cognitively capable” rather than “best able to achieve goals in general”. And the gap between the “intelligence”, as in the ability to achieve goals, of humans and other animals does arguably not appear very large when we compare individuals. Most other animals can do things that no single human can do, and to the extent we humans can learn to do things other animals naturally beat us at, e.g. lift heavier objects or traverse distances faster than speedy animals, we do so by virtue of technology, in essence the product of collective, cultural evolution.

And even with respect to cognitive abilities, one can argue that humans are not superior to other animals in a general sense. We do not have superior cognitive abilities with respect to echo location, for example, much less long-distance navigation. Nor are humans superior when it comes to all aspects of short-term/working memory,

Measuring goal achieving ability in general, as well as abilities to solve cognitive tasks in particular, along a single axis may be useful in some contexts, yet it can easily become meaningless when the systems being compared are not sufficiently similar.

But this view is mistaken. There is no threshold for “absolute intelligence.” Nonhuman animals such as primates or rodents differ in cognitive abilities a great deal, not just because of domain-specific adaptations, but also due to a correlational “g factor” responsible for a large part of the variation across several cognitive domains (Burkart et al., 2016). In this context, the distinction between domain-specific and general intelligence is fuzzy: In many ways, human cognition is still fairly domain-specific. Our cognitive modules were optimized specifically for reproductive success in the simpler, more predictable environment of our ancestors. We may be great at interpreting which politician has the more confident or authoritative body language, but deficient in evaluating whose policy positions will lead to better developments according to metrics we care about. Our intelligence is good enough or “general enough” that we manage to accomplish impressive feats even in an environment quite unlike the one our ancestors evolved in, but there are many areas where our cognition is slower or more prone to bias than it could be.

I agree with this. I would just note that “intelligence” here again seems to be referring to cognitive abilities, not the ability to achieve goals in general, and that we humans have expanded both over time via culture: our cognitive abilities, as measured by IQ, have increased significantly over the last century, while our ability to achieve goals in general has expanded much more still as we have developed ever more advanced technology.

Intelligence is best thought of in terms of a gradient. Imagine a hypothetical “intelligence scale” (inspired by part 2.1 of this FAQ) with rats at 100, chimpanzees at, say, 350, the village idiot at 400, average humans at 500 and Einstein at 750. Of course, this scale is open at the top and could go much higher.

Again, intelligence here seems to refer to cognitive abilities, not the ability to achieve goals in general. Einstein was likely not better at shooting hoops than the average human, or indeed more athletic in general (by all appearances), although he was much more cognitively capable, at least in some respects, than virtually all other humans.

A more elaborate critique of the intelligence scale mentioned above can be found in my post Chimps, Humans, and AI: A Deceptive Analogy.

To quote Bostrom (2014, p. 44): “Far from being the smartest possible biological species, we are probably better thought of as the stupidest possible biological species capable of starting a technological civilization – a niche we filled because we got there first, not because we are in any sense optimally adapted to it.”

Again, the words “smart” and “stupid” here seem to pertain to cognitive abilities, not the ability to achieve goals in general. And this phrasing is misleading, as it seems to presume that cognitive ability is all it takes to build an advanced civilization, which is not the case. In fact, humans are not the species with the biggest brain on the planet, or even the species with the biggest cerebral cortex; indeed, long-finned pilot whales have more than twice as many neocortical neurons.

What we are, however, is a species with a lot of unique tools — fine motor hands, upright walk, vocal cords, a large brain with a large prefrontal cortex, etc. — which together enabled humans to (gradually build a lot of tools with which they could) take over the world. Remove just one of these unique tools from all of humanity, and we would be almost completely incapable. And this story of a multiplicity of components that are all necessary yet insufficient for the maintenance and growth of human civilization is even more true today, where we have countless external tools — trucks, the internet, computers, screwdrivers, etc. — without which we could not maintain our civilization. And the necessity of all these many different components seems overlooked by the story that views advanced cognitive abilities as the sole driver, or near enough, of growth and progress in the ability to achieve goals in general. This, I would argue, is a mistake.

Thinking about intelligence as a gradient rather than an “on-or-off” concept prompts a Copernican shift of perspective. Suddenly it becomes obvious that humans cannot be at the peak of possible intelligence. On the contrary, we should expect AI to be able to surpass us in intelligence just like we surpass chimpanzees.

Depending on what we mean by the word “intelligence”, one can argue that computers have already surpassed humans. If we define “intelligence” to be “that which is measured by an IQ test”, for example, then computers have already been better than humans in at least some of these tests for a few years now.

In terms of our general ability to achieve goals, however, it is not clear that computers will so readily surpass humans, in large part because we do not aim to build them to be better than humans in many respects. Take self-repair, for example, which is something human bodies, just like virtually all animal bodies, are in a sense designed to do — indeed, most of our self-repair mechanisms are much older than we are as a species. Evolution has built humans to be competent and robust autonomous systems who do not for the most part depend on a global infrastructure to repair their internal parts. Our computers, in contrast, are generally not built to be self-repairing, at least not at the level of hardware. Their notional thrombocytes are entirely external to themselves, in the form of a thousand and one specialized tools and humans distributed across the entire economy. And there is little reason to think that this will change, as there is little incentive to create self-repairing computers. We are not aiming to build generally able, human-independent computers in this sense.

Biological evolution supports the view that AI could reach levels of intelligence vastly beyond ours. Evolutionary history arguably exhibits a weak trend of lineages becoming more intelligent over time, but evolution did not optimize for intelligence (only for goal-directed behavior in specific niches or environment types). Intelligence is metabolically costly, and without strong selection pressures for cognitive abilities specifically, natural selection will favor other traits. The development of new traits always entails tradeoffs or physical limitations: If our ancestors had evolved to have larger heads at birth, maternal childbirth mortality would likely have become too high to outweigh the gains of increased intelligence (Wittman & Wall, 2007). Because evolutionary change happens step-by-step as random mutations change the pre-existing architecture, the changes are path dependent and can only result in local optima, not global ones.

Here we see how the distinction between “intelligence as cognitive abilities” and “intelligence as the ability to achieve goals” is crucial. Indeed, the example provided above clearly proves the point that advanced cognitive abilities are often not the most relevant thing for achieving goals, since the goal of surviving and reproducing was often not best achieved, as Lukas hints, with the best cognitive abilities. Often it was better achieved with longer teeth or stronger muscles. Or a prettier face.

So the question is: why do we think that advanced cognitive abilities are, to a first approximation, identical with the ability to achieve goals? And, more importantly, why do we imagine that this lesson about the sub-optimality of spending one’s limited resources on better cognitive abilities does not still hold today? Why should cognitive abilities be the sole optimal thing, or near enough, to spend all one’s resources on in order to best achieve a broad range of goals? I would argue that it is not. It was not optimal in the past (with respect to the goal of survival), and it does not seem to be optimal today either.

It would be a remarkable coincidence if evolution had just so happened to stumble upon the most efficient way to assemble matter into an intelligent system.

But it would be less remarkable if it had happened to assemble matter into a system that is broadly capable of achieving a broad range of goals, and which another system, especially one that is not built over a billion year process to be robust and highly autonomous, cannot readily outdo in terms of autonomous function. It would also not be that remarkable if biological humans, functioning within a system built by and for biological humans, happened to be among the most capable systems within such a system, not least given all the legal, social and political aspects this system entails.

Beyond that, one can dispute the meaning of “intelligent system” in the quote above, but if we look at the intelligent system that is our civilization at large, one can say that the optimization going on at this level is not coincidental but indeed deliberate, often aiming toward peak efficiency. Thus, in this regard as well, we should not be too surprised if our current system is quite efficient and competent relative to the many constraints we are facing.

But let us imagine that we could go back to the “drawing board” and optimize for a system’s intelligence without any developmental limitations. This process would provide the following benefits for AI over the human brain (Bostrom, 2014, p. 60-61): Free choice of substrate: Signal transmission with computer hardware is millions of times faster than in biological brains. AI is not restricted to organic brains, and can be built on the substrate that is overall best suited for the design of intelligent systems. “Supersizing:” Machines have (almost) no size-restrictions. While humans with elephant-sized brains would run into developmental impossibilities, (super)computers already reach the size of warehouses and could in theory be built even bigger. No cognitive biases: We should be able to construct AI in a way that uses more flexible heuristics, and always the best heuristics for a given context, to prevent the encoding or emergence of substantial biases. Imagine the benefits if humans did not suffer from confirmation bias, overconfidence, status quo bias, etc.! Modular superpowers: Humans are particularly good at tasks for which we have specialized modules. For instance, we excel at recognizing human faces because our brains have hard-wired structures that facilitate that facial recognition in particular. An artificial intelligence could have many more such specialized modules, including extremely useful ones like a module for programming. Editability and copying: Software on a computer can be copied and edited, which facilitates trying out different variations to see what works best (and then copying it hundreds of times). By contrast, the brain is a lot messier, which makes it harder to study or improve. We also lack correct introspective access to the way we make most of our decisions, which is an important advantage that (some) AI designs could have. Superior architecture: Starting anew, we should expect it to be possible to come up with radically more powerful designs than the patchwork architecture that natural selection used to construct the human brain. This difference could be enormously significant.

It should be noted that computers already 1) can be built with a wide variety of substrates, 2) can be supersized, 3) do not tend to display cognitive biases, 4) have modular superpowers, 5) can be edited and copied (or at least software readily can), 6) can be made with any architecture we can come up with. All of these advantages exist and are being exploited already, just not as much as they can be. And it is not clear why we should expect future change to be more radical than the change we have seen in past decades in which we have continually built ever more competent computers which can do things that no human can by exploiting these advantages.

With regard to the last point, imagine we tried to optimize for something like speed or sight rather than intelligence. Even if humans had never built anything faster than the fastest animal, we should assume that technological progress – unless it is halted – would eventually surpass nature in these respects. After all, natural selection does not optimize directly for speed or sight (but rather for gene copying success), making it a slower optimization process than those driven by humans for this specific purpose. Modern rockets already fly at speeds of up to 36,373 mph, which beats the peregrine falcon’s 240 mph by a huge margin. Similarly, eagle vision may be powerful, but it cannot compete with the Hubble space telescope. (General) intelligence is harder to replicate technologically, but natural selection did not optimize for intelligence either, and there do not seem to be strong reasons to believe that intelligence as a trait should differ categorically from examples like speed or sight, i.e., there are as far as we know no hard physical limits that would put human intelligence at the peak of what is possible.

Again, what is being referred to by the word “intelligence” here seems to be cognitive abilities, not the ability to achieve goals in general. And with respect to cognitive abilities in particular, it is clear that computers already beat humans by a long shot in countless respects. So the point Lukas is making here is clearly true.

Another way to develop an intuition for the idea that there is significant room for improvement above human intelligence is to study variation in humans. An often-discussed example in this context is the intellect of John von Neumann. Von Neumann was not some kind of an alien, nor did he have a brain twice as large as the human average. And yet, von Neumann’s accomplishments almost seem “superhuman.” The section in his Wikipedia entry that talks about him having “founded the field of Game theory as a mathematical discipline” – an accomplishment so substantial that for most other intellectual figures it would make up most of their Wikipedia page – is just one out of many of von Neumann’s major achievements. There are already individual humans (with normal-sized brains) whose intelligence vastly exceeds that of the typical human. So just how much room there is above their intelligence? To visualize this, consider for instance what could be done with an AI architecture more powerful than the human brain running on a warehouse-sized supercomputer.

A counterpoint to this line of reasoning can be found by contemplating chess ratings. Ratings of the skills of chess players are usually done via the so-called Elo rating system, which measures the relative skills of different players against each other. A beginner will usually have a rating around 800, whereas a rating in the range 2000-2199 ranks one as a chess “Expert”, and a ranking of 2400 and above renders one a “Senior Master”. The highest rating ever achieved was 2882 by Magnus Carlsen. Surely, this amount of variation must be puny given that all the humans who have ever played chess have roughly the same brain sizes and structures. And yet it turns out that human variation in chess ability is in fact quite enormous in an absolute sense.

For example, it took more than four decades from computers were able to beat a chess beginner (the 1950s), until they were able to beat the very best human player (1997 officially). Thus, the span from ordinary human beginner to the best human expert was more than four decades of progress in hardware — i.e. a million times more computing power — and software. That seems quite a wide range.

And yet the range seems even broader if we consider the ultimate limits of optimal chess play. For one may argue that the fact that it took computers a fairly long time to go from the average human level to the level of the best human does not mean that the best human is not still ridiculously far from the best a computer could be in theory. Surprisingly, however, this latter distance does in fact seem quite small, at least in one sense. For estimates suggest that the best possible chess machine would have an Elo rating around 3600, which means that the relative distance between the best possible computer and the best human is only around 700 Elo points, implying that the distance between the best human and a chess “Expert” is similar to the distance between the best human and the best possible chess brain, while the distance between an ordinary human beginner and the best human is far greater.

It seems plausible that a similar pattern obtains with respect to many other complex cognitive tasks. Indeed, it seems plausible that many of our abilities, especially those we evolved to do well, such as our ability to interact with other humans, have an “Elo rating” quite close to the notional maximum level for most humans.

IV. The transition from human to superhuman intelligence could be rapid Perhaps the people who think it is unlikely that superintelligent AI will ever be created are not objecting to it being possible in principle. Maybe they think it is simply too difficult to bridge the gap from human-level intelligence to something much greater. After all, evolution took a long time to produce a species as intelligent as humans, and for all we know, there could be planets with biological life where intelligent civilizations never evolved. But considering that there could come a point where AI algorithms start taking part in their own self-improvement, we should be more optimistic.

We should again be clear that the term “superintelligent AI” seems to refer to a system with greater cognitive abilities, across a wide range of tasks, than humans. As for “a point where AI algorithms start taking part in their own self-improvement”, it should be noted, again, that we already use our best software and hardware in the process of developing better software and hardware. True, they are only a part of a process that involves far more elements, yet this is true of most everything that we produce and improve in our economy: many contributions drawn from and distributed across our economy at large are required. And we have good reason to believe that this will continue to be true of the construction of more capable machines in the future.

AIs contributing to AI research will make it easier to bridge the gap, and could perhaps even lead to an acceleration of AI progress to the point that AI not only ends up smarter than us, but vastly smarter after only a short amount of time.

Again, we already use our best software and hardware to contribute to AI research, and yet we do not appear to see acceleration in the growth of our best supercomputers. In fact, in terms of their computing power, we see a modest decline.

Several points in the list of AI advantages above – in particular the advantages derived from the editability of computer software or the possibility for modular superpowers to have crucial skills such as programming – suggest that AI architectures might both be easier to further improve than human brains, and that AIs themselves might at some point become better at actively developing their own improvements.

Again, computers are already “easier to further improve than human brains” in these ways, and our hardware and software are already among the most active parts in their own improvement. So why should we expect to see a different pattern in the future from the pattern we see today of gradual, slightly declining growth?

If we ever build a machine with human-level intelligence, it should then be comparatively easy to speed it up or make tweaks to its algorithm and internal organization to make it more powerful. The updated version, which would at this point be slightly above human-level intelligence, could be given the task of further self-improvement, and so on until the process runs into physical limits or other bottlenecks.

Or better yet than “human-level intelligence” would be if we built software that was critical for the further development of more powerful computers. And we in fact already have such software, many different kinds of it, and yet it is not that easy to simply “speed it up or make tweaks to its algorithm and internal organization to make it more powerful”. More generally, as noted above, we already use our latest, updated technology to improve our latest, updated technology, and the result is not rapid, runaway growth.

Perhaps self-improvement does not have to require human-level general intelligence at all. There may be comparatively simple AI designs that are specialized for AI science and (initially) lack proficiency in other domains. The theoretical foundations for an AI design that can bootstrap itself to higher and higher intelligence already exist (Schmidhuber, 2006), and it remains an empirical question where exactly the threshold is after which AI designs would become capable of improving themselves further, and whether the slope of such an improvement process is steep enough to go on for multiple iterations.

Again, I would just reiterate that computers are already an essential component in the process of improving computers. And the fact that humans who need to sleep and have lunch breaks are also part of this improvement process does not seem a main constraint on it compared to other factors, such as physical limitations implied by transportation and the assemblage of materials. Oftentimes in modern research, computers run simulations at their maximum capacity while the humans do their sleeping and lunching, in which case these resting activities (through which humans often get their best ideas) do not limit progress much at all, whereas the available computing power does.

For the above reasons, it cannot be ruled out that breakthroughs in AI could at some point lead to an intelligence explosion (Good, 1965; Chalmers, 2010), where recursive self-improvement leads to a rapid acceleration of AI progress. In such a scenario, AI could go from subhuman intelligence to vastly superhuman intelligence in a very short timespan, e.g. in (significantly) less than a year.

“It cannot be ruled out” can be said of virtually everything; the relevant question is how likely we should expect these possibilities to be. Beyond that, it is also not clear what would count as a “rapid acceleration of AI progress”, and thus what exactly it is that cannot be ruled out. AI going from subhuman performance to vastly greater than human performance in a short amount of time has already been seen in many different domains, including Go most recently.

But if one were to claim, to take a specific claim, that it cannot be ruled out that an AI system will improve itself so much that it can overpower human civilization and control the future, then I would argue that the reasoning above does not support considering this a likely possibility, i.e. something that is more likely to happen than, say, one in a thousand.

While the idea of AI advancing from human-level to vastly superhuman intelligence in less than a year may sound implausible, as it violates long-standing trends in the speed of human-driven development, it would not be the first time where changes to the underlying dynamics of an optimization process cause an unprecedented speed-up. Technology has been accelerating ever since innovations (such as agriculture or the printing press) began to feed into the rate at which further innovations could be generated.

In the endnote “5” referred to above, Lukas writes:

[…] Finally, over the past decades, many tasks, including many areas of research and development, have already been improved through outsourcing them to machines – a process that it is still ongoing and accelerating.

That this process of outsourcing of tasks is accelerating seems in need of justification. We have been outsourcing tasks to machines in various ways and at a rapid pace for at least two centuries now, and so it is not a trivial claim that this process is accelerating.

Compared to the rate of change we see in biological evolution, cultural evolution broke the sound barrier: It took biological evolution a few million years to improve on the intelligence of our ape-like ancestors to the point where they became early hominids. By contrast, technology needed little more than ten thousand years to progress from agriculture to space shuttles.

And I would argue that the reason technology could grow so fast is because an ever larger system of technology consisting of an ever greater variety of tools was contributing to it through recursive self-improvement — human genius was but one important component. And I think we have good reason to think the same about the future.

Just as inventions like the printing press fed into – and significantly sped up – the process of technological evolution, rendering it qualitatively different from biological evolution, AIs improving their own algorithms could cause a tremendous speed-up in AI progress, rendering AI development through self-improvement qualitatively different from “normal” technological progress.

I think there is very little reason to believe this story. Again, we already use our best machines to build the next generation of machines. “Normal” technological progress of the kind we see today already depends on computers running programs created to optimize future technology as efficiently as they can, and it is far from clear that running a more human kind of program would be a more efficient use of resources toward this end.

It should be noted, however, that while the arguments in favor of a possible intelligence explosion are intriguing, they nevertheless remain speculative. There are also some good reasons why some experts consider a slower takeoff of AI capabilities more likely. In a slower takeoff, it would take several years or even decades for AI to progress from human to superhuman intelligence.

Again, the word “intelligence” here seems to refer to cognitive abilities, not the ability to achieve goals in general. And it is again not clear what it means to say that it might “take several years or even decades for AI to progress from human to superhuman intelligence”, since computers have already been more capable than humans at a wide variety of cognitive tasks for many decades. So I would argue that this statement suffers from a lack of conceptual clarity.

Unless we find decisive arguments for one scenario over the other, we should expect both rapid and comparably slow takeoff scenarios to remain plausible. It is worth noting that because “slow” in this context also includes transitions on the order of ten or twenty years, it would still be very fast practically speaking, when we consider how much time nations, global leaders or the general public would need to adequately prepare for these changes.

To reiterate the statement I just made, it is not clear what a fast takeoff means in this context given that computers are already vastly superior to humans in many domains, and probably will continue to beat humans at ever more tasks before they come close to being able to do virtually all cognitive tasks humans can do. So what it is we are supposed to consider plausible is not entirely clear. As for whether it is plausible for rapid progress to occur over a wide range of cognitive tasks such that an AI system becomes able to take over the world, I would argue that we have not seen arguments to support this claim.

V. By default, superintelligent AI would be indifferent to our well-being The typical mind fallacy refers to the belief that other minds operate the same way our own does. If an extrovert asks an introvert, “How can you possibly not enjoy this party; I talked to half a dozen people the past thirty minutes and they were all really interesting!” they are committing the typical mind fallacy. When envisioning the goals of smarter-than-human artificial intelligence, we are in danger of committing this fallacy and projecting our own experience onto the way an AI would reason about its goals. We may be tempted to think that an AI, especially a superintelligent one, will reason its way through moral arguments and come to the conclusion that it should, for instance, refrain from harming sentient beings. This idea is misguided, because according to the intelligence definition we provided above – which helps us identify the processes likely to shape the future – making a system more intelligent does not change its goals/objectives; it only adds more optimization power for pursuing those objectives.

Again, we need to be clear about what “smarter-than-human artificial intelligence” means here. In this case, we seem to be talking about a fairly singular and coherent system, a “mind” of sorts — as opposed to a thousand and one different software programs that do their own thing well — and hence in this regard it seems that the term “smarter-than-human artificial intelligence” here refers to something that is quite similar to a human mind. We are seemingly also talking about a system that “would reason about its goals”.

It seems worth noting that this is quite different from how we think about contemporary software programs, even including the most advanced ones such as AlphaZero and IBM’s Watson, which we are generally not tempted to consider “minds”. Expecting competent software programs of the future to be like minds may itself be to commit a typical mind fallacy of sorts, or perhaps just a mind fallacy. It is conceivable that software will continue to outdo humans at many tasks without acquiring anything resembling what we usually conceive of as a mind.

Another thing worth clarifying is what we mean by the term “by default” here. Does it refer to what AI systems will be built to do by our economy in the absence of altruistic intervention? If “by default” means that which our economy will naturally tend to produce, it seems likely that future AI indeed will be programmed to not be indifferent, at least in a behavioral sense, to human well-being “by default”. Indeed, it seems a much greater risk that future software systems will be constructed to act in a way that exclusively benefits, and is indifferent toward anything else than, human beings. In other words, that it will share our speciesist bias, with catastrophic consequences ensuing.

My point here is merely that, just as it is almost meaningless to claim that biological minds will not care about our well-being by default, as it lacks any specification of what “by default” means — given what evolutionary history? — so is it highly unclear what “by default” means when we are talking about machines created by humans. It seems to assume that we are going to suddenly have a lot of “undirected competence” delivered to us which does not itself come with countless sub-goals and adaptations built into it to attain ends desired by human programmers, and, perhaps to a greater extent, markets.

To give a silly example, imagine that an arms race between spam producers and companies selling spam filters leads to increasingly more sophisticated strategies on both sides, until the side selling spam filters has had it and engineers a superintelligent AI with the sole objective to minimize the number of spam emails in their inboxes.

Again, I would flag that it is not clear what “superintelligent AI” means here. Does it refer to a system that is better able to achieve goals across the board than humans? Or merely a system with greater cognitive abilities than any human expert in virtually all domains? Even if it is merely the latter, it is unlikely that a system developed by a single team of software developers will have much greater cognitive competences across the board than the systems developed by other competing teams, let alone those developed by the rest of the economy combined.

With its level of sophistication, the spam-blocking AI would have more strategies at its disposal than normal spam filters.

Yet how many more? What could account for this large jump in capabilities from previous versions of spam filters? What is hinted here seems akin to the sudden emergence of a Bugatti in the Stone Age. It does not seem credible.

For instance, it could try to appeal to human reason by voicing sophisticated, game-theoretic arguments against the negative-sum nature of sending out spam. But it would be smart enough to realize the futility of such a plan, as this naive strategy would backfire because some humans are trolls (among other reasons). So the spam-minimizing AI would quickly conclude that the safest way to reduce spam is not by being kind, but by gaining control over the whole planet and killing everything that could possibly try to trick its spam filter.

First of all, it is by no means clear that this would be “the safest way” to minimize spam. Indeed, I would argue that trying to gain control in this way would be a very bad action in expectation with respect to the goal of minimizing spam.

But even more fundamentally, the scenario above seems to assume that it would be much easier to build a system with the abilities to take over the world than it would to properly instantiate the goals we want it to achieve. For instance, in the case of earlier versions of AlphaZero, these were all equally aligned with the goal of winning Go. The hard problem was to make it more capable at doing it. The assumption that the situation would be inverted with respect to future goal implementation seems to me unwarranted. Not because the goals are necessarily easy to instantiate, but because the competences in question appear extremely difficult to create. The scenario described above seems to ignore this consideration, and instead assumes that the default scenario is that we will suddenly get advanced machines with a lot of competence, but where we do not know how to direct this competence toward doing what we want it to, as opposed to gradually directing and integrating these competences as they are (gradually) acquired. Beyond that, on a more general note, I think many aspiring effective altruists who worry about AI safety tend to underestimate the extent to which computer programmers are already focused on making software do what they intend it to.

Moreover, the scenario considered here also seems to assume that it would be relatively easy to make a competent machine optimize a particular goal insistently, and I would also question that this is anything less than extremely difficult. In other words, not only do I think it is extremely difficult to create the competences in question, as noted above, but I also think it is extremely difficult to orient all these competences, not just a few subroutines, toward insistently accomplishing some perverse goal. For this reason too, I think one should be highly skeptical of scenarios of this kind.

The AI in this example may fully understand that humans would object to these actions on moral grounds, but human “moral grounds” are based on what humans care about – which is not the minimization of spam! And the AI – whose whole decision architecture only selects for actions that promote the terminal goal of minimizing spam – would therefore not be motivated to think through, let alone follow our arguments, even if it could “understand” them in the same way introverts understand why some people enjoy large parties.

I think this is inaccurate. Any goal-oriented agent would be motivated to think through these things for the same reason that we humans are motivated to think through what those who disagree with us morally would say and do: because it impacts how we ourselves can act effectively toward our goals (this, we should be honest, is also often why humans think about the views and arguments made by others; not because of a deep yearning for truth and moral goodness but for purely pragmatic and selfish reasons). Thus, it makes sense to be mindful of those things, especially given that one has imperfect information and an imperfect ability to predict the future, no matter how “smart” one is.

The typical mind fallacy tempts us to conclude that because moral arguments appeal to us, they would appeal to any generally intelligent system. This claim is after all already falsified empirically by the existence of high-functioning psychopaths. While it may be difficult for most people to imagine how it would feel to not be moved by the plight of anyone but oneself, this is nothing compared to the difficulties of imagining all the different ways that minds in general could be built. Eliezer Yudkowsky coined the term mind space to refer to the set of all possible minds – including animals (of existing species as well as extinct ones), aliens, and artificial intelligences, as well as completely hypothetical “mind-like” designs that no one would ever deliberately put together. The variance in all human individuals, throughout all of history, only represents a tiny blob in mind space.

Yes, but this does not mean that the competences of human minds only span a tiny range of the notional “competence range” of various abilities. As we saw in the example of chess above, humans span a surprisingly large range, and the best humans are surprisingly close to the best mind possible. And with respect to the competences required for navigating within a world built by and for humans, it is not that unreasonable to believe that, on a continuum that measures competence across these many domains with a single measure, we are probably quite high and quite difficult to beat. This is not arrogance. It is merely to acknowledge the contingent structure of our civilization, and the fact that it is adapted to many contingent features of the human organism in general, including the human mind in particular.

Some of the minds outside this blob would “think” in ways that are completely alien to us; most would lack empathy and other (human) emotions for that matter; and many of these minds may not even relevantly qualify as “conscious.” Most of these minds would not be moved by moral arguments, because the decision to focus on moral arguments has to come from somewhere, and many of these minds would simply lack the parts that make moral appeals work in humans. Unless AIs are deliberately designed to share our values, their objectives will in all likelihood be orthogonal to ours (Armstrong, 2013).

Again, an agent trying to achieve goals in our world need not be moved by moral arguments in an emotional sense in order to pay attention to them and the preferences of humans more generally, and to choose to avoid causing chaos. Second, the question is why we should expect future software designed by humans to not be “deliberately designed to share our values”? And what marginal difference should we expect altruists to be able to make on them? And how would this influence best be achieved?

VI. AIs will instrumentally value self-preservation and goal preservation Even though AI designs may differ radically in terms of their top-level goals, we should expect most AI designs to converge on some of the same subgoals. These convergent subgoals (Omohundro, 2008; Bostrom, 2012) include intelligence amplification, self-preservation, goal preservation and the accumulation of resources. All of these are instrumentally very useful to the pursuit of almost any goal. If an AI is able to access the resources it needs to pursue these subgoals, and does not explicitly have concern for human preferences as (part of) its top-level goal, its pursuit of these subgoals is likely to lead to human extinction (and eventually space colonization; see below).

Again, what does “AI design” refer to in this context? Presumably a machine that possesses most of the cognitive abilities a human does to a similar or greater extent, and, on top of that, this machine is in some sense highly integrated into something akin to a coherent unified mind subordinate to a few supreme “top-level goals”. Thus, when Lukas writes “most AI designs” above, he is in fact referring to most systems that meet a very particular definition of “AI”, and one which I strongly doubt will be anywhere close to the most prevalent source of “machine competence” in the future (note that this is not to say that software, as well as our machines in general, will not become ever more competent in the future, but merely that such greater competences may not be subordinate to one goal to rule them all, or a few for that matter).

Beyond that, the claim that such a capable machine of the future seeking to achieve these subgoals is likely to lead to human extinction is a very strong claim that is not supported here, nor in the papers cited. More on this below.

AI safety work refers to interdisciplinary efforts to ensure that the creation of smarter-than-human artificial intelligence will result in excellent outcomes rather than disastrous ones. Note that the worry is not that AI would turn evil, but that indifference to suffering and human preferences will be the default unless we put in a lot of work to ensure that AI is developed with the right values.

Again, I would take issue with this “default” claim, as I would argue that “a lot of work” is exactly what we should expect that there will be made to ensure that future software will do what humans want it to. And the question is, again, how much of a difference altruists should expect to make here, as well as how to best make it.

VI.I Intelligence amplification Increasing an agent’s intelligence improves its ability to efficiently pursue its goals. All else equal, any agent has a strong incentive to amplify its intelligence. A real-life example of this convergent drive is the value of education: Learning important skills and (thinking-)habits early in life correlates with good outcomes. In the AI context, intelligence amplification as a convergent drive implies that AIs with the ability to improve their own intelligence will do so (all else equal). To self-improve, AIs would try to gain access to more hardware, make copies of themselves to increase their overall productivity, or devise improvements to their own cognitive algorithms.

Again, what does the word “intelligence” mean in this context? Above, it was defined as “the ability to achieve goals in a wide range of environments”, which means that what is being said here reduces to the tautological claim that increasing an agent’s ability to achieve goals improves its ability to achieve goals. If one defines “intelligence” to refer to cognitive abilities, however, the claim becomes less empty. Yet it also becomes much less obvious, especially if one thinks in terms of investments of marginal resources, as it is questionable whether investing in greater cognitive abilities (as opposed to a prettier face or stronger muscles) is the best investment one can make with respect to the goal of achieving goals “in general”.

On a more general note, I would argue that “intelligence amplification”, as in “increasing our ability to achieve goals”, is already what we collectively do in our economy to a great extent, although this increase is, of course, much broader than one merely oriented toward optimizing cognitive abilities. We seek to optimize materials, supply chains, transportation networks, energy efficiency, etc. And it is not clear why this growth process should speed up significantly due to greater machine capabilities in the future than it has in the past, where more capable machines also helped grow the economy in general, as well as to increase the capability of machines in particular.

More broadly, intelligence amplification also implies that an AI would try to develop all technologies that may be of use to its pursuits.

Yet should we expect such “an AI” to be better able to develop “all technologies that may be of use to its pursuits” better than entire industries currently dedicated to it, let alone our entire economy? Indeed, should we even expect it to contribute significantly, i.e. double current growth rates across the board? I would argue that this is most dubious.

I.J. Good, a mathematician and cryptologist who worked alongside Alan Turing, asserted that “the ﬁrst ultraintelligent machine is the last invention that man need ever make,” because once we build it, such a machine would be capable of developing all further technologies on its own.

To say that a single machine would be able to develop all further technologies on its own is, I submit, unsound. For what does “on its own” mean here? “On its own” independently of the existing infrastructure of machines run by humans? Or “on its own” as in taking over this entire infrastructure? And how exactly could such a take-over scenario occur without destroying the productivity of this system? None of these scenarios seem plausible.

VI.II Goal preservation AIs would in all likelihood also have an interest in preserving their own goals. This is because they optimize actions in terms of their current goals, not in terms of goals they might end up having in the future.

This again seems to assume that we will create highly competent systems which will be subordinate to a single or a few explicit goals that it will insistently optimize all its actions for. Why should we believe this?

Another critical note of mine on this idea quoted from elsewhere:

Stephen Omohundro (Omohundro, 2008) argues that a chess-playing robot with the supreme goal of playing good chess would attempt to acquire resources to increase its own power and work to preserve its own goal of playing good chess. Yet in order to achieve such complex subgoals, and to even realize they might be helpful with respect to achieving the ultimate goal, this robot will need access to, and be built to exercise advanced control over, an enormous host of intellectual tools and faculties. Building such tools is extremely hard and requires many resources, and harder still, if at all possible, is it to build them so that they are subordinate to a single supreme goal. And even if all this is possible, it is far from clear that access to these many tools would not enable – perhaps even force – this now larger system to eventually “reconsider” the goals that it evolved from. For instance, if the larger system has a sufficient amount of subsystems with sub-goals that involve preservation of the larger system of tools, and if the “play excellent chess” goal threatens, or at least is not optimal with respect to, this goal, could one not imagine that, in some evolutionary competition, these sub-goals could overthrow the supreme goal? Footnote: After all, humans are such a system of competing drives, and it has been argued (e.g. in Ainslie, 2001 [Breakdown of Will]) that this competition is what gives us our unique cognitive strengths (as well as weaknesses). Our ultimate goals, to the extent we have any, are just those that win this competition most of the time.

And Paul Christiano has also described agents that would not be subject to this “basic drive” of self-preservation described by Omohundro.

Lukas continues:

From the current goal’s perspective, a change in the AI’s goal function is potentially disastrous, as the current goal would not persevere. Therefore, AIs will try to prevent researchers from changing their goals.

Granted that such a highly competent system is built so as to be subordinate to a single goal in this way, which I do not think there is good reason to consider likely to be the case in future AI systems “by default”.

Consequently, there is pressure for AI researchers to get things right on the first try: If we develop a superintelligent AI with a goal that is not quite what we were after – because someone made a mistake, or was not precise enough, or did not think about particular ways the specified goal could backfire – the AI would pursue the goal that it was equipped with, not the goal that was intended. This applies even if it could understand perfectly well what the intentioned goal was. This feature of going with the actual goal instead of the intended one could lead to cases of perverse instantiation, such as the AI “paralyz[ing] human facial musculatures into constant beaming smiles” to pursue an objective of “make us smile” (Bostrom, 2014, p. 120).

This again seems to assume that this “first superintelligent AI” would be so much more powerful than everything else in the world, yet why should we expect a single system to be so much more powerful than everything else across the board? Beyond that, it also seems to assume that the design of this system would happen in something akin to a single step — that there would be a “first try”. Yet what could a first try consist in? How could a super capable system emerge in the absence of a lot of test models that are slightly less competent? I think this “first try” idea betrays an underlying belief in a sudden growth explosion powered by a single, highly competent machine, which, again, I would argue is highly unlikely in light of what we know about the nature of the growth of the capabilities of machines.

VI.III Self-preservation Some people have downplayed worries about AI risks with the argument that when things begin to look dangerous, humans can literally “pull the plug” in order to shut down AIs that are behaving suspiciously. This argument is naive because it is based on the assumption that AIs would be too stupid to take precautions against this.

There is a difference between being “stupid” and being ill-informed. And there is no reason to think that an extremely cognitively capable agent will be informed about everything relevant to its own self-preservation. To think otherwise is to conflate great cognitive abilities with near-omniscience.

Because the scenario we are discussing concerns smarter-than-human intelligence, an AI would understand the implications of losing its connection to electricity, and would therefore try to proactively prevent being shut down any means necessary – especially when shutdown might be permanent.

Even if all implications were understood by such a notional agent, this by no means implies that an attempt to stop its termination would be successful, nor particularly likely, or indeed even possible.

This is not to say that AIs would necessarily be directly concerned about their own “death” – after all, whether an AI’s goal includes its own survival or not depends on the specifics of its goal function. However, for most goals, staying around pursuing one’s goal will lead to better expected goal achievement. AIs would therefore have strong incentives to prevent permanent shutdown even if their goal was not about their own “survival” at all. (AIs might, however, be content to outsource their goal achievement by making copies of themselves, in which case shutdown of the original AI would not be so terrible as long as one or several copies with the same goal remain active.)

I would question the tacit notion that the self-preservation of such a machine could be done with a significantly greater level of skill than could the “counter self-preservation” work of the existing human-machine civilization. After all, why should a single system be so much more capable than the rest of the world at any given task? Why should humans not develop specialized software systems and other machines that enable them to counteract and overpower rogue machines, for example by virtue of having more information and training? What seems described here as an almost sure to happen default outcome strikes me as highly unlikely. This is not to say that one should not worry about small risks of terrible outcomes, yet we need to get a clear view of the probabilities if we are to make a qualified assessment of the expected value of working on these risks.

The convergent drive for self-preservation has the unfortunate implication that superintelligent AI would almost inevitably see humans as a potential threat to its goal achievement. Even if its creators do not plan to shut the AI down for the time being, the superintelligence could reasonably conclude that the creators might decide to do so at some point. Similarly, a newly-created AI would have to expect some probability of interference from external actors such as the government, foreign governments or activist groups. It would even be concerned that humans in the long term are too stupid to keep their own civilization intact, which would also affect the infrastructure required to run the AI. For these reasons, any AI intelligent enough to grasp the strategic implications of its predicament would likely be on the lookout for ways to gain dominance over humanity. It would do this not out of malevolence, but simply as the best strategy for self-preservation.

Again, to think that a single agent could gain dominance over the rest of the human-machine civilization in which it would find itself appears extremely unlikely. What growth story could plausibly lead to this outcome?

This does not mean that AIs would at all times try to overpower their creators: If an AI realizes that attempts at trickery are likely to be discovered and punished with shutdown, it may fake being cooperative, and may fake having the goals that the researchers intended, while privately plotting some form of takeover. Bostrom has referred to this scenario as a “treacherous turn” (Bostrom, 2014, p. 116). We may be tempted to think that AIs implemented on some kind of normal computer substrate, without arms or legs for mobility in the non-virtual world, may be comparatively harmless and easy to overpower in case of misbehavior. This would likely be a misconception, however. We should not underestimate what a superintelligence with access to the internet could accomplish. And it could attain such access in many ways and for many reasons, e.g. because the researchers were careless or underestimated its capacities, or because it successfully pretended to be less capable than it actually was. Or maybe it could try to convince the “weak links” in its [team] of supervisors to give it access