Episode #433 from 2:14:55

Artificial life

Is there shortcuts we can take to artificially engineering, living organisms, artificial life, artificial consciousness, artificial intelligence? Maybe just looking pragmatically at the LLMs we have now, do you think those can exhibit qualities of life, qualities of consciousness, qualities of intelligence in the way we think of intelligence? I think they already do, but not in the way I hear popularly discussed. They're obviously signatures of intelligence and a part of a ecosystem of intelligence system of intelligent systems. But I don't know that individually I would assign all the properties to them that people have. It's a little like, so we talked about the history of eyes before and how eyes scaled up into technological forms. Language has also had a really interesting history and got much more interesting I think once we started writing it down and then inventing books and things. But every time that we started storing language in a new way where we were existentially traumatized by it. The idea of written language was traumatic because it seemed like the dead were speaking to us even though they were deceased. Books were traumatic because suddenly there were lots of copies of this information available to everyone and it was going to somehow dilute it.

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Is there shortcuts we can take to artificially engineering, living organisms, artificial life, artificial consciousness, artificial intelligence? Maybe just looking pragmatically at the LLMs we have now, do you think those can exhibit qualities of life, qualities of consciousness, qualities of intelligence in the way we think of intelligence? I think they already do, but not in the way I hear popularly discussed. They're obviously signatures of intelligence and a part of a ecosystem of intelligence system of intelligent systems. But I don't know that individually I would assign all the properties to them that people have. It's a little like, so we talked about the history of eyes before and how eyes scaled up into technological forms. Language has also had a really interesting history and got much more interesting I think once we started writing it down and then inventing books and things. But every time that we started storing language in a new way where we were existentially traumatized by it. The idea of written language was traumatic because it seemed like the dead were speaking to us even though they were deceased. Books were traumatic because suddenly there were lots of copies of this information available to everyone and it was going to somehow dilute it.

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Artificial life chapter timestamp | Sara Walker: Physics of Life, Time, Complexity, and Aliens | EpisodeIndex