SmLnine

SmLnine t1_jdmftzs wrote

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SmLnine t1_jdlxego wrote

There are complex mammals that effectively don't get cancer, and there are less complex animals and organisms that effectively don't age. So I'm curious what your opinion is based on.

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SmLnine t1_jdlwhtu wrote

>but unless you take the philosophical stance that "if we just made AGI they'd be able to solve every problem we have, so everything is effectively an ML problem", it doesn't seem like it'd be fair to say the bottlenecks to solving either of those are even related to ML in the first place. It's essentially all a matter of bioengineering coming up with the tools required.

We're currently using our brains (a general problem solver) to build bioengineering tools that can cheaply and easily edit the DNA of a living organism. 30 years ago this would have sounded like magic. But there's no magic here. This potential tool has always existed, we just didn't understand it.

It's possible that there are other tools in the table that we simply don't understand yet. Maybe what we've been doing the last 60 years is the bioengineering equivalent of bashing rocks together. Or maybe it's close to optimal. We don't know, and we can't know until we aim an intellectual superpower at it.

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SmLnine t1_jdlgtl8 wrote

If an intelligence explosion happens, there's really no telling what's possible. Maybe these problems are trivial to a 1 million IQ machine, maybe not. The only question really is if the explosion will happen. Two years ago I would have said 1% in the next ten years, now I'm up to 10%. Maybe in two more years it'll look like 30%.

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