Email me at assadiguive@gmail.com, if you want to discuss anything I posted here or just chat.
Not the main point here, but Huckleberry Finn is (rather famously) an anti-slavery work and not a good representation of the nineteenth-century racist worldview. A better example would be that a lot of college history classes assign parts of Mein Kampf.
Good question. You should check out Phil Trammell's writing on patient philanthropy:
* https://80000hours.org/podcast/episodes/phil-trammell-patient-philanthropy/
* https://docs.google.com/document/d/1NcfTgZsqT9k30ngeQbappYyn-UO4vltjkm64n4or5r4/edit?tab=t.0
That seems like quite a reasonable assumption.
This was a fun read.
I'm struggling to come up with an example of a real dispute involving the intermediate value theorem. Can you suggest one?
Then what does it mean, in concrete terms? Can you give some probabilities about what you think will happen to the valuations of what companies over what time frame?
Even if the summary is accurate, it's pretty bad to call a summary by a third party a quote.
So do you think it's 2 years now? Any update?
What model did OpenAI delete? Where can I learn more?
Another issue is that these definitions typically don't distinguish between models that would explicitly think about how to fool humans on most inputs vs. on a small percentage of inputs vs. such a tiny fraction of possible inputs that it doesn't matter in practice.