The Parable of Predict-O-Matic
I've been thinking more about partial agency. I want to expand on some issues brought up in the comments to my previous post, and on other complications which I've been thinking about. But for now, a more informal parable. (Mainly because this is easier to write than my more technical thoughts.) This relates to oracle AI and to inner optimizers, but my focus is a little different. 1 Suppose you are designing a new invention, a predict-o-matic. It is a wonderous machine which will predict everything for us: weather, politics, the newest advances in quantum physics, you name it. The machine isn't infallible, but it will integrate data across a wide range of domains, automatically keeping itself up-to-date with all areas of science and current events. You fully expect that once your product goes live, it will become a household utility, replacing services like Google. (Google only lets you search the known!) Things are going well. You've got investors. You have an office and a staff. These days, it hardly even feels like a start-up any more; progress is going well. One day, an intern raises a concern. "If everyone is going to be using Predict-O-Matic, we can't think of it as a passive observer. Its answers will shape events. If it says stocks will rise, they'll rise. If it says stocks will fall, then fall they will. Many people will vote based on its predictions." "Yes," you say, "but Predict-O-Matic is an impartial observer nonetheless. It will answer people's questions as best it can, and they react however they will." "But --" the intern objects -- "Predict-O-Matic will see those possible reactions. It knows it could give several different valid predictions, and different predictions result in different futures. It has to decide which one to give somehow." You tap on your desk in thought for a few seconds. "That's true. But we can still keep it objective. It could pick randomly." "Randomly? But some of these will be huge issues! Companies -- no, nations --
Yep. Where this deviated from my notes, I approve (purely in terms of the time travel logic, that is). Seems like OpenAI is way ahead on time-travel logic, which is evidence that it is significantly ahead on "general reasoning".