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Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Gentleness and the artificial Other, published by Joe Carlsmith on January 2, 2024 on LessWrong.
(Cross-posted from my website. Audio version here, or search "Joe Carlsmith Audio" on your podcast app.
This is the first essay in a series that I'm calling "Otherness and control in the age of AGI." See here for more about the series as a whole.)
When species meet
The most succinct argument for AI risk, in my opinion, is the "second species" argument. Basically, it goes like this.
Premise 1: AGIs would be like a second advanced species on earth, more powerful than humans.
Conclusion: That's scary.
To be clear: this is very far from airtight logic.[1] But I like the intuition pump. Often, if I only have two sentences to explain AI risk, I say this sort of species stuff. "Chimpanzees should be careful about inventing humans." Etc.[2]
People often talk about aliens here, too. "What if you learned that aliens were on their way to earth? Surely that's scary." Again, very far from a knock-down case (for example: we get to build the aliens in question). But it draws on something.
In particular, though: it draws on a narrative of interspecies conflict. You are meeting a new form of life, a new type of mind. But these new creatures are presented to you, centrally, as a possible threat; as competitors; as agents in whose power you might find yourself helpless.
And unfortunately: yes. But I want to start this series by acknowledging how many dimensions of interspecies-relationship this narrative leaves out, and how much I wish we could be focusing only on the other parts. To meet a new species - and especially, a new intelligent species - is not just scary. It's incredible. I wish it was less a time for fear, and more a time for wonder and dialogue. A time to look into new eyes - and to see further.
Gentleness
"If I took it in hand,
it would melt in my hot tears
heavy autumn frost."
Basho
Have you seen the documentary My Octopus Teacher? No problem if not, but I recommend it. Here's the plot.
Craig Foster, a filmmaker, has been feeling burned out. He decides to dive, every day, into an underwater kelp forest off the coast of South Africa. Soon, he discovers an octopus. He's fascinated. He starts visiting her every day. She starts to get used to him, but she's wary.
One day, he's floating outside her den. She's watching him, curious, but ready to retreat. He moves his hand slightly towards her. She reaches out a tentacle, and touches his hand.
Soon, they are fast friends. She rides on his hand. She rushes over to him, and sits on his chest while he strokes her. Her lifespan is only about a year. He's there for most of it. He watches her die.
A "common octopus" - the type from the film. (Image source here.)
Why do I like this movie? It's something about gentleness. Of earth's animals, octopuses are a paradigm intersection of intelligence and Otherness. Indeed, when we think of aliens, we often draw on octopuses. Foster seeks, in the midst of this strangeness, some kind of encounter. But he does it so softly. To touch, at all; to be "with" this Other, at all - that alone is vast and wild. The movie has a kind of reverence.
Of course, Foster has relatively little to fear, from the octopus. He's still the more powerful party. But: have you seen Arrival? Again, no worries if not. But again, I recommend. And in particular: I think it has some of this gentleness, and reverence, and wonder, even towards more-powerful-than-us aliens.[3]
Again, a bit of plot. No major spoilers, but: aliens have landed. Yes, they look like octopuses. In one early scene, the scientists go to meet them inside the alien ship. The meeting takes place across some sort of transparent barrier. The aliens make deep, whale-like, textured sounds. But the humans can't speak back. So next time, they bring a whiteboard. T...
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