The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - An OpenAI Researcher on "Techno-Humanism"
Episode Date: November 4, 2023A reading of OpenAI research scientist Richard Ngo's essay "Techno-humanism is techno-optimism for the 21st century." https://www.mindthefuture.info/p/techno-humanism-is-techno-optimism Made in part w...ith ElevenLabs https://elevenlabs.io/ ABOUT THE AI BREAKDOWN The AI Breakdown helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to The AI Breakdown newsletter: https://theaibreakdown.beehiiv.com/subscribe Subscribe to The AI Breakdown on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheAIBreakdown Join the community: bit.ly/aibreakdown Learn more: http://breakdown.network/
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Today on the AI Breakdown, we're reading an essay on techno-humanism and what it means for AI in the 21st century.
The AI breakdown is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
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Hello, friends, happy weekend.
Now, it being the weekend means it is time for an AI long read.
And this week, we have a true spirit of long reads type of long read.
It comes from OpenAI's Richard No, but it was written on his personal blog, Mind the Future.
The pieces called techno-humanism is techno-optimism for the 21st century.
The subtitle is The More Powerful Technology Becomes, the better we must understand both it and ourselves.
Now, as you know, I argued that as soon as Mark Andreessen dropped his techno-optimist manifesto,
it would generate a huge array of responses.
Some of those responses you've heard here, and this is a very different type of response.
Rather than trying to contradict Mark Andreessen point by point, this piece is a more historical look
at the importance and the validation of techno-optimism, as well as the cracks that have shown up
based on specific changes that we're experiencing now. Ultimately, it is a call for something new,
although that new thing, even if it vaguely has a name of techno-humanism, isn't yet exactly defined.
So I'm going to turn this over to AI-NLW, provided, of course, by 11 Labs, and then I will return
with some thoughts from the real non-AI-NLW to wrap things up.
Lately, I've been reading about the history of economic thought, with the goal of understanding
how today's foundational ideas were originally developed. My biggest takeaway has been
that economics is more of a moving target than I'd realized. Early economists were studying
economies which lacked many of the defining features of modern economies. Limited liability
corporations, trade unions, depressions, labor markets, capital markets, and so on. The resulting
theories were often right for their time. But that didn't stop many from being.
being wrong, sometimes disastrously so, for ours. That's also how I feel about the philosophy
of techno-optimism, has recently defended in Mark Andresen's techno-optimist manifesto. I'll start
this post with the many things it gets right, then explore why, over the last century, the power
of technology itself has left straightforward techno-optimism outdated. I'll finish by outlining
an alternative to techno-optimism, techno-humanism, which focuses not just on building powerful
engines of progress, but also on developing a deep scientific understanding of how they can advance
the values we care about most. Section. The Triumphs of Techno-optimism. Here's where I agree with
Andresen. Throughout almost the entirety of human history, techno-optimism was fundamentally correct
as a vision for how humans should strive to improve the world. Technology and markets have given us
health and wealth unimaginable to people from previous centuries, despite consistent opposition to them.
Even now, in the face of overwhelming historical evidence, we still dramatically underrate the potential of
to solve problems ranging from climate change to neglected tropical diseases to extreme poverty
and many more. This skepticism holds back not only speculative technologies, but also ones that are
right in front of us. Miraculous solutions to huge problems like vaccines for COVID and malaria
and gene drives for mosquito eradication are regularly stalled by political or bureaucratic obstructionism,
costing millions of lives. The RTSS-Malaria vaccine spent 23 years bogged down in clinical trials,
with six years of that delay caused by WBHU precautions.
even after other regulators had already approved it.
Fighting against the ideologies and institutional practices
which cause tragedies like these is an incredibly important cause.
We often similarly underrate the other core tenet of techno-optimism, individual liberty.
This was a radical principle when enlightenment thinkers and leaders enshrined it,
and unfortunately it remains a radical principle today,
despite having proven it's worth over and over again.
It turns out that free markets can lead to near-miraculous prosperity,
that free speech is the strongest enemy of tyranny,
and that open-source projects, whether building software or building knowledge, can be extraordinarily
successful. Yet all of this is constantly threatened by the creeping march of centralization and over-regulation.
Opponents of liberty always have high rhetoric about the near-term benefits, but fail to grapple with the extent to which centralized power is inevitably captured or subverted,
sometimes with horrific consequences. To defeat that creep requires a near-pathological focus on freedom,
which, little by little, has added up to a far better world. Even an ideally benevolent government simply couldn't compete with billion,
of humans using the tools available to them to improve their own lives and the lives of those
they interact with, including by discovering solutions that no central planner would have imagined.
Not only is techno-optimism vastly underappreciated, it's often dismissed with shockingly bad
arguments that lack understanding of basic history or economics. Because it's so hard to viscerally
understand how much better the world has gotten, even its most cogent critics fail to grapple
with the sheer scale of the benefits of techno-optimism. Those benefits accrue to billions of people,
and they aren't just incidental gains but increases in health and wealth that would have been inconceivable a few centuries ago.
Familiarity with the past is, in this case, the best justification for optimism about the future.
Almost all of the barriers to progress we face today pale in comparison to the barriers that we've already overcome.
I say all this to emphasize that I very viscerally feel the hope and the beauty of techno-optimism.
The idea that progress and knowledge can grow the pie for everyone is a stunningly powerful one.
So too is the possibility that we live in a world where the principles
of freedom and openness would triumph over any obstacle if we only believed in them. And so when I
criticize techno-optimism, I do so not from a place of scorn, but rather from a place of wistfulness.
I wish I could support techno-optimism without reservations.
Section. Three cracks in techno-optimism. But techno-optimism is not the right philosophy
for the 21st century. Over the last century in particular, cracks have been developing in the
techno-optimist narrative. These are not marginal cracks, not the what-aboutism with which
techno-optimism is usually met. These are cracks which, like the benefits of techno-optimism,
play out at the largest of scales. I'll talk about three. War, exploitation, and civilizational
vulnerability. One, the increasing scale of war. World War I was a bloody protracted mess because of
the deployment of new technologies like machine guns and rapid-firing artillery. World War II
was even worse, with whole cities firebombed and nuked amidst the industrial-scale slaughter of
soldiers and civilians alike. And the Cold War was more dangerous still, leaving the world
teetering on the brink of global nuclear war. Mutually assured destruction wasn't enough to prevent
close calls. Our current civilization owes its existence to the courage of Stanislav Petrov, Vasily Arkupov,
and probably others we don't yet know about. So you cannot be a full-throated techno-optimist
without explaining how to reliably avoid catastrophe from the weapons that techno-optimists construct,
and no such explanation exists yet, because so far we have been avoiding nuclear holocaust through luck
and individual heroism. When the next weapon with planetary scale destructive capabilities is developed,
as it inevitably will be, we need far more robust mechanisms preventing it from being deployed.
2. The increasing scale of exploitation. Technology allows the centralization of power and the use of it
to oppress the less powerful at far larger scales than before. Historical examples abound,
most notably the Atlantic slave trade and the mass deaths of civilians under 20th-century
communist and fascist regimes. But since it's too easy to chalk these up as mistakes of the past,
which were now too enlightened to repeat, I'll focus on an example that continues today.
the mass torture of animals in factory farms. This started less than a century ago in response to
advances in logistics and disease reduction technologies, yet it has grown at a staggering scale since then.
The number of animals killed in factory farms every year is comparable to the number of humans who have
ever lived. The sheer scale of this suffering forces any serious moral thinker to ask,
how can we stop it as soon as possible, and how can we ensure that nothing like it ever happens again?
Three, increasing vulnerability to reckless or malicious use of technology. Markets and technology
have made the world far more robust in many ways. We should be deeply impressed by how supply chains
which crisscrossed the world remained largely intact even at the height of COVID. But there are
other ways in which the world has become more vulnerable to our mistakes. The most prominent
is gain of function research on pathogens. Not only are we now capable of engineering global
pandemics, but China and U.S. funded scientists probably did. And there's no reason that the next one
couldn't be far worse, especially if released deliberately. Nor is bioengineering the sole
domain in which deliberate or accidental offense may overwhelm defense to a catastrophic degree.
Other possibilities include geoengineering, asteroid redirection, nanotechnology, and new fields
that we haven't yet imagined. These cracks all hurt the techno-optimist worldview. But I don't
think they take it down. Techno-optimists have partial responses to all of them. The world has
become far more peaceful as a result of our increasing wealth, even if wars can be far bigger,
they're also far rarer now. Technology will produce tastier meat substitutes and cheap clean meat,
and when it does factory farming will end, and humanity will look back on it in horror.
And while we can't yet robustly prevent the accidental or deliberate deployment of
catastrophically powerful weapons like nuclear weapons or engineered pandemics, we might yet
stumble through regardless as we have so far. So if the cracks above were the main problems
with techno-optimism, I would still be a techno-optimist. I would have compunctions about the
development of even more powerful weapons, and about all the sentient beings, whether
farmed animals or wild animals or future people or artificial minds, which remained outside
our circle of concern. But I'd still believe that any cure to those problems which undermine
techno-optimism would be worse than the disease. Yet I'm not a techno-optimist, because we are about
to leave the era in which humans are the most intelligent beings on Earth. And the era of artificial
intelligence will prize open these cracks until the deeper holes in the techno-optimist worldview become
clear. Section. AI and techno-optimism. Until now, the primary force of
Shapes shaping the world have been human intelligence and human agency, which allow us to
envisage the outcomes we want, identify paths towards them, and consistently pursue them.
Soon, artificial intelligence and artificial agency will match ours, and soon after that,
AI will far surpass us. I'll describe at a very high level how I expect this to play out in two stages.
Firstly, AI's used as tools will supercharge the dynamics I described above. The benefits of individual
freedom will expand as individuals become far more empowered and can innovate far faster. But so too will the
tracks enabled by technology, war, exploitation, and civilizational vulnerability. Which effect will be
bigger? I simply don't know. And nobody else does either. Predicting the offense-defense balance of new
technology is incredibly difficult, because it requires accounting for all the different uses that
future innovators will come up with. What we can predict is that the stakes will be higher than ever
before. Twenty-ones-century technology could magnify the worst disasters of the 20th century, like world
wars and totalitarianism. Perhaps despite that, the best path is still to rush ahead. To prioritize
building new technology now and assume that we can sort out the rest later. This is a very fragile
strategy, though. Even if you and your government will use it responsibly, many others will not.
And there's still relatively little attention and effort focused on trying to avert the large-scale
risks of new technologies directly. So the techno-optimist response to risks like the ones I've
described above is shallow. In theory, it's opposed, but in practice it may well make things worse.
Secondly, we'll develop AI agents with values of their own, as AIs automate more and more
complex tasks over longer and longer timeframes, they'll need to make more and more value-laden
judgment calls about which actions and outcomes to favor. Eventually, viewing them as tools will be
clearly inadequate, and we'll need to treat them as agents in their own right, agents whose values
may or may not align with our own. Note that this might only happen once they've significantly
surpassed human intelligence. But given how fast progress in the field has been, this is something we
should be planning for well in advance. Humans who are free to make their own decisions tend to push
the world to be better in terms of our values. That's the techno-optimist position. But artificial agents
who are making many decisions will push the world to be better in terms of their values. This isn't
necessarily a bad thing. Humans are hypocritical, short-sighted, often selfish, sometimes sadistic,
and so it's possible that AIs will be better custodians of our moral values than we are. We
might train them to be wise and kind and consistently nudge us towards a better world, not by
overriding human judgments, but rather by serving as teachers and mentors, giving us the help we need,
to become better people and build a better civilization. I think this is the most likely outcome,
and it's one we should be incredibly excited about. But it's also possible that AIs will develop
alien values which conflict with those of humans. If so, when we give them instructions, they'll
appear to work towards our ends, but consistently make choices which bolster their power and undermine
our own. Of course, AIs will start off with very little power. We'll be able to shut them down
whenever we detect misbehavior, but AIs will be able to coordinate with each other far better than humans can,
communicate in ways we're incapable of interpreting and carry out tasks that were incapable of overseeing.
They'll become embedded in our economies in ways that amplify the effects of their decisions.
Hundreds of millions of people will use copies of a single model on a daily basis.
And as AIs become ever more intelligent, the risks will grow.
When agents are far more capable than the principles on whose behalf they act,
principal agent problems can become very severe.
When it comes to superhuman AI agents, we should think about the risks less in terms of financial costs,
or even human costs, and more in terms of political instability. Careless principles risk losing
control entirely. How plausible is this scenario, really? That's far too large a question to address here.
Instead, see this open letter, this position paper, and this curriculum. But although there's
disagreement on many details, there's a broad consensus that we simply don't understand how
AI motivations develop, or how those motivations generalize to novel situations. And although
there's widespread disagreement about the trajectory of AI capabilities, what's much less controversial is
that when AI does significantly surpass human capabilities, we should be wary of putting it in
positions where it can accumulate power unless we have very good reasons to trust it. It's also
worth noting that Andresen's version of techno-optimism draws heavily from Nick Land's philosophy
of accelerationism, which expects us to lose control, and is actively excited about it. Nothing
human makes it out of the near future, Land writes, and celebrates, the planet has been run by
imbeciles for long enough. I read those words in shudder, land displays a deep contempt for the
things that make us ourselves. His philosophy is fundamentally anti-humanist, as Scott Alexander argues
more extensively in his meditations on Moloch. And while his position is extreme, it reflects a problem
at the core of techno-optimism. The faster you go, the less time you have to orient to your
surroundings, and the easier it is to diverge from the things you actually care about. Nor does
speed even bias very much. On a cosmic scale, we have plenty of time, plenty of resources available to
us, and plenty of space to expand. The one thing we don't have is a reset button for if we lose
control.
Section, AI and techno-humanism.
So we need a philosophy which combines an appreciation for the incredible track record of both
technology and liberty, with a focus on ensuring that they actually end up promoting
our values.
This mindset is common amongst effective altruists.
But effective altruism is an agglomeration of many very different perspectives, drawn
together not by a shared vision about the future, but by shared beliefs about how we're
obliged to act.
I'd like to point more directly to an overarching positive vision of what human
should aim towards. Transhumanism offers one such vision, but it's so radically individualist that
it glosses over the relationships and communities that are the most meaningful aspects of most
people's lives. Note, for example, how Bostrom's letter from Utopia barely mentions the existence
of other people, while his introduction to transhumanism relegates relationships to the final paragraph
of the postscript. So I'll borrow a term coined by Yuval Harari, and call the philosophy that I've
been describing techno-humanism. Harari describes techno-humanism as an ideation.
theology focused on upgrading humans to allow our actions and values to remain relevant in an
AI-dominated future. I broadly agree with his characterization, and we'll explore it more in future
posts, but both the benefits and the risks of re-engineering human brains are still a long way
away. On a shorter time frame, I think a different way of upgrading our minds is more relevant,
developing a deep understanding of our values and how technology can help achieve them. Flying cars
and rockets are cool, but the things we ultimately care about are far more complex and far more
opaque to us. We understand machines, but not minds. Algorithms but not institutions. Economies,
but not communities. Prices, but not values. Insofar as we face risks from poor political decisions or
misaligned AIs or society becoming more fragile, from a techno-humanist perspective, it's because we
lack the understanding to do better. This is a standard criticism of techno-optimism, and usually an
unproductive one, since the main alternative typically given is to defer to academic humanities
departments which produce far more ideology than understanding. But techno-humanism instead advocates
trying to develop this understanding using the most powerful tools we have, science and technology.
To give just a few examples of what this could look like, studying artificial minds and their
motivations will allow us to build more trustworthy AIs, teach us about our own minds, and help us
figure out how the two should interface. The internet should be full of experiments in how humans can interact.
prediction markets, delegative democracies, adversarial collaborations, and many more,
whose findings can then improve existing institutions.
We should leverage insights from domains like game theory, voting theory, network theory,
and bargaining theory to help understand and reimagine politics,
starting with better voting systems and ideally going far further,
and we should design sophisticated protocols for testing and verifying the knowledge that will be generated by AIs
so that we can avoid replicating the replication crises that currently plague many fields.
This may sound overly optimistic, but some of the most insightful fields of knowledge, like economics
and evolutionary biology, uncovered deep structure and incredibly complex domains via
identifying just a few core insights. And we'll soon have AI assistance in uncovering patterns
and principles that would otherwise be beyond our grasp. Meanwhile, platforms like Wikipedia
and Stack Overflow have been successful beyond all expectations. It's likely that there are
others which could be just as valuable if only there were more people trying to build them.
So I think that the techno-humanist project has a huge
amount of potential, and will only become more important over time.
Section. Balancing the trade-offs. So far I've described techno-humanism primarily in terms of
advances that techno-optimists would also be excited about. But inevitably, there will also be clashes
between those who prioritize avoiding the risks I've outlined and those who don't. From a techno-optimist
perspective, a perspective that has proven its worth over and over again during the last few centuries,
slowing down technological progress has a cost measured in millions of lives. This is an
invisible graveyard, which is brushed aside even by the politicians and bureaucrats most responsible for
it. No wonder many techno-optimists feel driven to push for unfettered acceleration. But from a
techno-humanist perspective, reckless technological progress has a cost measured in expected fractions of
humanity's entire future. Human civilization used to be a toddler, constantly tripping over and
hurting itself but never putting itself in any real danger. Now human civilization is a teenager,
driving fast, experimenting with mind-altering substances, and genuinely capable of wrecking itself.
We don't need the car to go faster. It's already constantly accelerating. Instead, we need to ensure
that the steering wheel and brakes are working impeccably, and that we're in a fit state to use them
to prevent non- or anti-human forces controlling the direction of our society. How can people who are
torn between these two perspectives weigh them against each other? On a purely numerical level,
humanity's potential to build an intergalactic civilization renders fractions of humanity's future
bigger by far. But that math is too blazay. It's the same calculation that can, and often has,
been used to justify centralization of power, totalitarianism, and eventual atrocities.
And so we should be extremely, extremely careful when using arguments that appeal to humanity's
entire future to override time-tested principles. That doesn't imply that we should never do so.
But wherever possible, techno-optimists and techno-humanists should try to cooperate rather
than fight. After all, techno-humanism is also primarily about making progress, specifically the
type of progress that will be needed to diffuse the crises sparked by other types of progress.
The disagreement isn't about where we should end up. It's about the ordering of steps along the way.
The two groups should also challenge each other to do better in areas where we disagree, so that we can eventually reach a synthesis.
One challenge that techno-humanists should pose to techno-optimists. Be more broadly ambitious.
We know that technology and markets can work incredibly well and have a near-miraculous ability to overcome obstacles.
And so it's easy and natural to see them as solutions to all the challenges confronting us.
But the most courageous and ambitious version of techno-optimism needs to grapple with the possibility
that our downfall will come not from lack of technology, but rather overabundance of technology.
And the possibility that to prevent it, we need progress on the things that have historically
been hardest to improve, like the quality of political decision-making.
In other words, techno-humanism aims to harness human ingenuity and technological progress
to make steering wheels and brakes more sophisticated and discerning, rather than the blunt
cudgels that they often are today.
My other challenge for techno-optimists, be optimistic not just about the benefits of technological
growth, but also about its robustness. The most visceral enemy of techno-optimism is stagnation,
and it's easy to see harbingers of stagnation all around us, over-regulation, nimbism,
illiberalism, de-growth, advocacy, and so on. But when we zoom out enough to see the millennia-long
exponential curve leading up to our current position, it seems far less plausible that these
setbacks will actually derail the long-term trend, no matter how outrageous the latest news cycle is.
On the contrary, taking AGI seriously implies that innovation is on the cusp of speeding up dramatically,
as improvements generated by AI's feed back into the next generation of AIs.
In light of that, a preference for slower AI progress is less like Luddism,
and more like carefully breaking as we approach a sharp bend in the road.
Techno-optimists should challenge techno-humanists to improve as well.
I can't speak for them, but my best guess for the challenges that techno-optimists should pose to techno-humanists.
1. Technohumanists need to articulate a compelling positive vision, one which inspires people to fight for it.
Above, I've listed some ideas which have potential to improve our collective understanding and
decision-making abilities, but there's far more work to be done in actually fleshing out those
ideas and pushing towards their implementation. And even if we succeeded, what then?
What would it actually look like for humanity to make consistently sensible decisions
and leverage technology to promote our long-term flourishing? Knowing that would allow us to
better steer towards those good futures.
2. Technohumanists should grapple more seriously with the incredible track record of techno-optimism.
Throughout history, people have consistently dramatically underrated how valuable scientific and technological
progress can be. That's not a coincidence at all, because characterizing which breakthroughs are
possible is often a big chunk of the work required to actually make those breakthroughs.
Nor is it a coincidence that people dramatically underrate the value of liberty.
Decentralization works so well precisely because there are so many things that central planners
can't predict. So even if you find my art,
arguments above compelling, we should continue to be very wary of falling into the same trap.
The purpose of this blog is to meet those challenges.
Few of the ideas in this post are original to me, but they lay the groundwork for future posts
which will explore more novel territory. My next post will build on them by arguing that an
understanding first approach is feasible, even when it comes to the biggest questions facing
us, that we can look ahead to see the broad outlines of where humanity is going, and use that
knowledge to steer towards a future that is both deeply human and deeply humane.
Okay, back to non-AI-NLW here.
This piece is very clearly more of an entry point into a conversation than a conclusion.
And that's actually what I like about it.
I think what Richard is uncovering and starting to unpack is that the scale and magnitude
and significance of the changes that are being wrought and will be wrought by artificial
intelligence require not just a reimagination of technology policy or jobs policy or
economic policy, but in many ways a reevaluation of the social contract, of our very sense of self.
In other words, AI is a technology that brings up philosophical questions.
What's quite clear if you've been listening to my shows this week about the growing tension
between various factions of the AI safety and AI risk and open source communities is that
the immediate term political ramifications of these questions are growing in significance
and getting more caustic in the debate.
I think what Richard's adding is a broader, more deep-lying, more long-term sort of conversation,
which, while not immediately changing how things are going to happen and be made into policy in the next month,
still is extremely important for how we adapt to the changes that are coming.
So I will leave us there, of course, operating on very high levels, but hey, that's what Saturdays are for.
I appreciate you listening as always, and until next time, peace.
