So, here's our narrative: First, the Big Bang. Then 10 billion years of boredom (give or take). Then life! An explosion of learning! And 4 billion years later, here we are.
-
Show this thread
-
Now, what if we want to refine this picture? What if we allowed ourselves TWO events in our history of the universe? What's the second most important thing?
1 reply 1 retweet 11 likesShow this thread -
I know, there are many perspectives. But again, I think it's clear: humans are the next most important thing. And once again it comes down to learning. Before humans, all cumulative learning took place in genomes. But humans introduced an entirely new modality: culture.
2 replies 0 retweets 43 likesShow this thread -
Yes, brains can learn, and brains existed before humans. But brains die with their hosts, and all their hard-won knowledge has to be re-learned from scratch by the next generation.
1 reply 1 retweet 29 likesShow this thread -
Some animals pass knowledge from parents to children. But the carrying capacity of this "culture" is small and fixed. Humans were the first species with the ability to ACCUMULATE knowledge in culture, in an open-ended way.
1 reply 1 retweet 39 likesShow this thread -
So, again, our story: Big Bang. 10 billion years of boredom. Then life! And 4 billion years of natural selection. Then brains+culture! And a ~million years of cultural evolution later, with all of our farms and factories and computing devices, here we are.
1 reply 5 retweets 30 likesShow this thread -
If this view of history has merit, it suggests that the next truly transformative step will involve a new modality for cumulative learning. Is this AI? Machine learning? The answer is "definitely maybe." But we're certainly not there yet.
5 replies 1 retweet 35 likesShow this thread -
AI systems of today are like the brains of early animals. They're capable of some cool feats of learning, but there's nothing cumulative about them. They're built, they learn a few things, and then they dead-end. Where feedback loops exist, they all pass through human culture.
2 replies 2 retweets 38 likesShow this thread -
The big thing to watch for, then, are AI systems capable of self-sustaining knowledge accumulation. An open-ended machine culture. It's a ways off — but it's coming, and it's very important.
5 replies 11 retweets 92 likesShow this thread -
Replying to @KevinSimler
Assuming agriculture was a prerequisite for industry, an analogy might be made with the relationship between agricultural and nomadic societies in history.
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
I just bought James C. Scott's "Against the Grain," so be prepared for those analogies to flow soon :)https://www.amazon.com/Against-Grain-History-Earliest-States/dp/0300182910 …
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.