"Climate change is not an x-risk" is the kind of thing you can easily (and correctly) prove to yourself in a matter of hours
How do you do that? I've spent several hours researching the topic and I'm still not convinced, but I think there's a lot I'm still missing, too.
My current thinking is
Bees are more social than salmon. I haven't put serious thought into it, but I can see an argument that sociality is an important factor in determining intensity-of-consciousness. (Perhaps because sociality requires complex neuron interactions that give rise to certain conscious experiences?)
I've spoken to grantmakers about this in the past and I got the impression that they see it as a largely unavoidable problem:
I thought price wars was false, although I haven't been paying that much attention to companies' pricings. GPT was $20/month in 2023 and it's still $20/month. IIRC Gemini/Claude were available in 2023 but they only had free tiers so I don't know how to judge them.
What evidence led you to believe this? In my experience, ~all non-forecasting-focused social groups are bad at making aggregate predictions.
Also why does Rational wiki hate LW so much? What is the source of all that animosity? Reply
I am not too familiar with RationalWiki but my impression is the editors come from a certain mindset where you always disbelieve anything that sounds weird, and LWers talk about a lot of weird stuff, which to them falls in the same bucket as religion / woo / pseudoscience. And I would think they especially dislike people calling themselves "rationalists" when in actuality they're just doing woo / pseudoscience.
Hm, that's a good point. I don't know how to express that cleanly, but there are other intermediate options in which the US moves slower, but still enough that there's a >50% chance of them getting TAI first, or they pull the brakes & alarms so that the PRC also slows down.
You could model it as a binary P(US wins | US races) and P(US wins | US does not race). A continuum would be more accurate but I think a binary is basically fine.
I saw your model on squigglehub, but didn't dig into it too deeply. I encourage you to post it on here with or without an explanation :-)
Posting the model is on my to-do list but I am not very satisfied with it right now so I want to fix it up some more. I want to make a bigger model that looks at all the main effects of slowing down, not just race dynamics, although perhaps that's too ambitious.
I think we are on the same page, I was trying to agree with what you said and add commentary on why I'm concerned about "CEV with humans as the primary source of values". Although I was only responding to your first paragraph not your second paragraph. I think your second paragraph also raises fair concerns about what a "CEV for all sentient beings" looks like.
I expect that the CEV of human values would indeed accord moral status to animals. But including humans-but-not-animals in the CEV still seems about as silly to me as including Americans-but-not-foreigners and then hoping that the CEV ends up caring about foreigners anyway.
Do you think you can learn something useful about existential risk from reading the IPCC report?
FWIW I only briefly looked at the latest report but from what I saw, it seemed hard to learn anything about existential risk from it, except for some obvious things like "humans will not go extinct in the median outcome". I didn't see any direct references to human extinction in the report, nor any references to runaway warming.