Here's Robin Hanson, a colleague of the longtermist William MacAskill at the Future of Humanity Institute, imagining what a world full of simulated people (or "ems" for "brain emulations") would be like. The word "elite ethnicities" is striking:
Citing Nick Bostrom, the Father of Longtermism, Hanson adds that biotech may enable us to create super-smart designer babies, who would be good candidates to have their brains scanned and uploaded to computers (to live in a virtual reality world full of ems).
Indeed, Hanson claims that ems would be highly intelligent, reflecting the entrepreneurial spirit, freedom, etc. of what he describes as the "smarter nations" (you know which ones he's talking about).
Many "female" ems might be lesbians, Hanson argues, but "disproportionally few male ems may be gay." You really can't make this stuff up:
I could go on, but that's plenty enough for today. These excerpts are from Robin Hanson's "The Age of Em: Work, Love and Life when Robots Rule the Earth," published by Oxford University Press (@OUPAcademic). The point of the book is to try to picture what a world full of
uploaded minds would look like. It explores, in other words, the "world of digital people" possibility at the top of this image from Holden Karnofsky.
Note that MacAskill says in his book "What We Owe the Future" that Karnofsky's "influence on me is so thoroughgoing that it
permeates every chapter." These people are serious about such a future, and indeed many are eager to bring it about. #longtermism
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Friends, can I share something that's been on my mind lately? It's really been eating at me, and I don't know how to make sense of it. When I nearly died last June (yes, that happened, and it was terrible!), not only did my partner leave (who wants to deal with a loved one who's
sick?😖), but not once did they inquire about how I was doing afterwards. We exchanged many emails about me picking up my stuff from their place, yet there wasn't a single, "How are you, Emile?" Nothing. Not one question like that. I can't wrap my head around this: years
and years together, even living together, and just complete indifference as to whether I live or die(!!). Have others experienced this? Is it just a soul-crushing anomaly? Is this how humans treat each other? I can't imagine--not for a moment!--being indifferent to the wellbeing
Will Elon Musk owning Twitter be good for longtermism, which he calls “a close match for my philosophy”? I have no idea. Musk’s reputation has certainly taken a hit over the past few years,
due to his transphobia, censoriousness, history of falsely accusing people of pedophilia, peurile behavior, AND SO ON. See this:
His association with longtermism could thus end up being very bad for the movement (worse than it already is). What I *do know* is that everything Musk does, from trying to make humanity multiplanetary (SpaceX), plug our brains into computers (Neuralink), and create a
More evidence that longtermists like soft criticisms that don't rock the boat 2 much. They pay attention to these, even promote them to give the impression they're open to critique.But hey won't address more trenchant criticisms of fundamental aspects of their worldview/community
After all, if any of these organizations or individuals rejected longtermism, the funding would dry up. MacAskill can't *abandon* longtermism *without jeopardizing his connectioned to billionaires like Bankman-Fried and Musk*.
They love to give the impression that they're open to critique, but so far as I can tell they've yet to take seriously the most *substantive criticisms* that their community is toxic, corrupted by billions and billions of $$, and their ideas could be profound dangerous if taken
Thought I’d share my strange and frustrating journey of coming out as nonbinary earlier this year, at age 39. It consists of three chapters and two main characters, former partners of mine, who I’ll call Person 1 and Person 2. A longish🧵.
Chapter 1: Shut the F*ck Up. My nonbinariness goes back to when I was a wee child, as one might expect, and the gender dysphoria never went away. I thought about it all the time, but never once dared tell anyone, much less explore non-cis gender expressions in public.
(Very religious community growing up, so being nonbinary would have utterly destroyed my life—and I was anxious enough as a kid.) In the 2010s, the trans community started to become more visible (Caitlyn Jenner, Transparent, etc.), and that led to conversations with Person 1