The Most Important Century: Sequence Introduction

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/yHzDrTCum4rdNRDJJ/the-most-important-century-sequence-introduction

Contents

Roadmap

Our wildly2 important era

All possible views about humanity’s long-term future are wild argues that two simple observations - (a) it appears likely that we will *eventually *be able to spread throughout the galaxy, and (b) it doesn’t seem any other life form has done that yet—are sufficient to make the case that we live in an incredibly important time. I illustrate this with a timeline of the galaxy. The Duplicator explains the basic mechanism by which "eventually" above could become "soon": the ability to "copy human minds" could lead to a productivity explosion. This is background for the next few pieces. Digital People Would Be An Even Bigger Deal discusses how achievable-seeming technology—in particular, mind uploading—could lead to unprecedented productivity, control of the environment, and more. The result could be a stable, galaxy-wide civilization that is deeply unfamiliar from today’s vantage point.

Our century’s potential for acceleration

This Can’t Go On looks at economic growth and scientific advancement over the course of human history. Over the last few generations, growth has been pretty steady. But zooming out to a longer time frame, it seems that growth has greatly accelerated recently; is near its historical high point; and is faster than it can be for all that much longer (there aren’t enough atoms in the galaxy to sustain this rate of growth for even another 10,000 years). The times we live in are unusual and unstable. Rather than planning on more of the same, we should anticipate stagnation (growth and scientific advancement slowing down), explosion (further acceleration) or collapse. Forecasting Transformative AI, Part 1: What Kind of AI? (not yet posted on LW) introduces the possibility of AI systems that automate scientific and technological advancement, which could cause explosive productivity. I argue that such systems would be "transformative" in the sense of bringing us into a new, qualitatively unfamiliar future.

Forecasting transformative AI this century

Forecasting Transformative AI: What’s the Burden of Proof? **(not yet posted on LW) **argues that we shouldn’t have too high a "burden of proof" on believing that transformative AI could be developed this century, partly because our century is already special in many ways that you can see without detailed analysis of AI. Forecasting Transformative AI: Are we "trending toward" transformative AI? (not yet posted on LW) discusses the basic structure of forecasting transformative AI, the problems with trying to forecast it based on trends in "AI impressiveness," and the state of AI researcher opinion on transformative AI timelines. Forecasting transformative AI: the "biological anchors" method in a nutshell (not yet published) summarizes the biological anchors framework for forecasting AI. This framework is the main factor in my specific forecasts. I am forecasting more than a 10% chance transformative AI will be developed within 15 years (by 2036); a ~50% chance it will be developed within 40 years (by 2060); and a ~2/​3 chance it will be developed this century (by 2100). AI Forecasting Expertise (not yet published) addresses the question, "Where does expert opinion stand on all of this?"

Wrapping up

Implications of living in the most important century (not published yet) discusses what we can do to help the most important century go as well as possible. The Most Important Century in a Nutshell (not published yet) will summarize the series in a few pages.

Acknowledgements

I have few-to-no claims to originality. The vast bulk of the claims, observations and insights in this series came from some combination of:

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/yHzDrTCum4rdNRDJJ/the-most-important-century-sequence-introduction?commentId=AzT8pBbgqHzChya2H

Footnotes Container

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Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/yHzDrTCum4rdNRDJJ/the-most-important-century-sequence-introduction?commentId=Ah64vXm8r9PewPnMg
  1. "Wild" is the best simple term I can think of to communicate the idea that a claim seems like it’s "a big deal if true, so much so that it seems a bit hard to believe it’s true." Other synonyms could include "out there," "crazy" or "wacky" (though those have some additional connotations I prefer to avoid), and this gif.
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/yHzDrTCum4rdNRDJJ/the-most-important-century-sequence-introduction?commentId=k7Fy2PF5z7kGxbxSP
  1. For a more detailed elaboration of what I mean by "most important century," see here (not likely to be of interest to most readers).
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/yHzDrTCum4rdNRDJJ/the-most-important-century-sequence-introduction?commentId=QvsCaDZyQs46LtZhx

"The Duplicator (not yet posted on LW)"—now posted, n’est ce-pas?