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We’re so used to trying things for ourselves that it seems bizarre to imagine us ever stopping. And yet, more and more, it’s becoming clear that artificial intelligence can relieve us of the burden of trying and trying again. A.I. systems make it trivially easy to take an existing thing and ask for a new iteration. The technology is still developing, and yet already an A.I. can give you a custom recipe based on a photo of what’s in your fridge. Songwriting A.I.s can generate version after version of a new tune; image-creating A.I.s can tweak an image endlessly. Is the automated exploration of alternatives a good substitute for the organic equivalent? Is this kind of variation-creation the same thing as human creativity? These are important questions to ask because, as A.I. grows more powerful, we will be tempted more and more to give up in advance and let it figure things out for us.
100 sats \ 1 reply \ @freetx 4h
We humans have been doing that since forever.
Have we lost our ability to "carry things" once we invented the wheel? Every tool humans ever made is a just a "force multiplier" - bulldozers just do the manual work of 20 men, etc...
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we lost our ability to "carry things" once we invented the wheel?
That's not correct. You haven't lost your ability of anything that's physical by any of the inventions. People still carry a lot of load on their backs where wheels don't go. Also, if we don't "carry things" like the past, we developed gyms and buy dumbell to pull up weights. Don't we still do it?
Inventions making physical activity easier does not disappear our physical activity, but AI might cripple or completely paralyse human power of reasoning/thinking.
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It is very interesting, but I sometimes think about the movie Wall-E, or myself, when I can't perform a simple math problem without a calculator. Further how I can't get from one place to another without Google Maps?
I also think about the movie Idiocracy. As AI gets better and better, humans will need to use less of our brain capacity and it will make us dumber potentially.
Not everyone, but how many people can actually watch a movie start to finish without pulling out their phone? How about reading a chapter from start to finish?
I think naturally AI will help us so much that we will continue to outsource a lot of our thought and thinking to it. People won't exercise their brain muscles, and eventually, it will make the majority of humans incapacitated.
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