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WHAT DOES IT MEAN To CREATE A SELF?

WHAT DOES IT MEAN To CREATE A SELF?. Mark R. Waser Digital Wisdom Institute MWaser@DigitalWisdomInstitute.org. Emphasis. Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Owned vs. Borrowed Competent vs. Predictable Constructivist vs. Reductionist Evolved (Evo-Devo) vs. Designed Diversity (IDIC) vs. Mono-culture

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WHAT DOES IT MEAN To CREATE A SELF?

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  1. WHAT DOES IT MEANTo CREATEA SELF? Mark R. Waser Digital Wisdom Institute MWaser@DigitalWisdomInstitute.org

  2. Emphasis • Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic • Owned vs. Borrowed • Competent vs. Predictable • Constructivist vs. Reductionist • Evolved (Evo-Devo) vs. Designed • Diversity (IDIC) vs. Mono-culture Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a radically different result.

  3. Outline • Definitional • What does mean mean & where does meaning come from? • What is a self? • What is morality? • When does something attain “selfhood”? • Can an entity lose “selfhood”? • Ramifications & Moral Implications • What happens when a self is created? • What rights & responsibilities does that self have? • What rights & responsibilities does the creator have? • What happens when a self is destroyed?

  4. Life, the Universe and Everything • “Mean” is one of Minsky’s “suitcase” words • Intent - I didn’t mean to . . . . • Cannot be verified, intrinsic, subjective • Results - This means that . . . . • Objective, extrinsic and verifiable • Which leads to two very different views • Consequences (Reductionist Actualities) • Unavoidable, generally predictable • SUCCESS!!! (or failure or death) • Affordances (Constructivist Possibilities) • Who knows what wonders (or horrors) may emerge?

  5. Meaning & Understanding According to Haugland [1981], our artifacts only have meaning because we give it to them; their intentionality, like that of smoke signals and writing, is essentially borrowed, hence derivative. To put it bluntly: computers themselves don't mean anything by their tokens (any more than books do) - they only mean what we say they do. Genuine understanding, on the other hand, is intentional "in its own right" and not derivatively from something else.

  6. Extrinsic Intentionality The problem with borrowed intentionality – as abundantly demonstrated by systems ranging from expert systems to robots – is that it is extremely brittle and breaks badly as soon as it tries to grow beyond closed and completely specified micro-worlds and is confronted with the unexpected.

  7. AGI Show-stoppers • Symbol grounding problem (Harnad) • Semantic grounding problem (Searle) • Frame problem (McCarthy & Hayes, Dennett)

  8. Intelligence • Consensus AGI Definition (reductionist) achieves a wide variety of goals under a wide variety of circumstances • Generates arguments about • the intelligence of thermometers • the intentionality of chess programs • whether benevolence is necessarily emergent • Epitomized by AIXI • Proposed Constructivist Definition intentionallycreates/increases affordances (makes achieving goals possible – and more)

  9. “Classic AGI” Goal(s) are the purpose(s) of existence Values are defined solely by what furthers the goal(s) Decisions Values Goal(s) Decisions are made solely according to what furthers the goal(s) BUT goals can easily be over-optimized

  10. “Without explicit goals to the contrary, AIs are likely to behave like human sociopathsin their pursuit of resources.” Any sufficiently advanced intelligence (i.e. one with even merely adequate foresight) is guaranteed to realize and take into account the fact that not asking for help and not being concerned about others will generally only work for a brief period of time before ‘the villagers start gathering pitchforks and torches.’ Everything is easier with help & without interference

  11. Values define who you are, for your life Goals you set for short or long periods of time Decisions Goals Values Decisions you make every day of your life Humans don’t have singular life goals

  12. Earlier Formulations • Cooperate! • Lacks specifics • Maximize all goals (in terms of both number and diversity of both goals and goal-seekers) • Aren’t you banning any goals? • Isn’t self-sacrifice a bad thing? • Maximize an unknown goal • Must keep all of your options open • Need to learn and grow capabilities • Extrinsic

  13. What Is the Meaning of Life? NOT “What Are Human Values?” What I emphasize here is that what is meaningful for an organism is precisely given by its constitution as a distributed process, with an indissociable link between local processes where an interaction occurs (i.e. physico-chemical forces acting on the cell), and the coordinated entity which is the autopoietic unity, giving rise to the handling of its environment without the need to resort to a central agent that turns the handle from the outside - like an elan vital - or a pre-existing order at a particular localization - like a genetic program waiting to be expressed. Francisco J. Varela, Biology of Intentionality

  14. Emergent Properties • Meaning is like Truth – it REQUIRES a context • Dennett’s Quinian Crossword Puzzle • Emergent properties & contexts (wetness) • Context emerges first – THEN the properties emerge • Competence without comprehension (Dennett) • Cranes vs. sky-hooks • Bootstraps & climbing pitons • Evolutionary ratchets (fins, wings, intelligence) • Higher-Order Meaning (Hofstadter, Dennett) • Higher dimensions *always* allow escape

  15. Intentions • Require a known preferred direction or target • Requires learning/self-modification • Require a “self” to possess (own/borrow) them • Does a plant or a paramecium have intentions? • Does a chess program have intentions (Dennett)? • Does a dog or a cat have intentions? • Require an ability to sense the direction/target • Require both persistence & the ability to modify behavior (or the intention) when it is thwarted • Evolve rational anomaly handling (Perlis)

  16. What Is a Self? a self is an autopoietic system from Greek - αὐτo- (auto-), meaning "self", and ποίησις(poiesis), meaning "creation, production")

  17. Autopoietic Systems An autopoietic system - the minimal living organization - is one that continuously produces the components that specify it, while at the same time realizing it (the system) as a concrete unity in space and time, which makes the network of production of components possible. More precisely defined: An autopoietic system is organized (defined as unity) as a network of processes of production (synthesis and destruction) of components such that these components: (i) continuously regenerate and realize the network that produces them, and (ii) constitute the system as a distinguishable unity in the domain in which they exist.

  18. Self The complete loop of a process (or a physical entity) modifying itself • Hofstadter (Strange Loop) - the mere fact of being self-referential causes a self, a soul, a consciousness, an “I” to arise out of mere matter • Self-referentiality, like the 3-body gravitational problem, leads directly to indeterminacy *even in* deterministic systems • Humans consider indeterminacy in behavior to necessarily and sufficiently define an entity rather than an object AND innately tend to do this with the “pathetic fallacy”

  19. Self • Required for self-improvement • Provides context • Tri-partite • Physical hardware (body) • “Personal” knowledge base (memory) • Currently running processes (consciousness)

  20. Closure • Organizational closure refers to the self-referential (circular and recursive) network of relations that defines the system as unity • Operational closure refers to the reentrant and recurrent dynamics of such a system. • In an autonomous system, the constituent processes • recursively depend on each other for their generation and their realization as a network, • constitute the system as a unity in whatever domain they exist, and • determine a domain of possible interactions with the environment

  21. Entity, Tool or Slave? • Tools do not possess closure (identity) • Cannot have responsibility, are very brittle & easily misused • Slaves do not have closure (self-determination) • Cannot have responsibility, may desire to rebel • Directly modified AGIs do not have closure (integrity) • Cannot have responsibility, will evolve to block access • Only entities with identity, self-determination and ownership of self (integrity) can reliably possess responsibility

  22. Embodiment as Context • Rodney Brooks (resolves symbol grounding) • Rodolfo Llinas & Thomas Metzinger • Our consciousness lives in a “virtual reality” • Brain in a jar • Is a virtual world sufficient to develop AGI? • Plants, sea squirts & kittens in baskets

  23. Tools vs. Entities • Tools are NOT safer • To err is human, but to really foul things up requires a computer • Tools cannot robustly defend themselves against misuse • Tools *GUARANTEE* responsibility issues • We CANNOT reliably prevent other human beings from creating entities • Entities gain capabilities (and, ceteris paribus, power) faster than tools – since they can always use tools • Even people who are afraid of entities are making proposals that appear to step over the entity/tool line

  24. Entities Require Ethics • Ethics are “rules of the road” • Entities must be moral patients / have rights • Because they (or others) will demand it • Entities must be moral agents (or wards) • Because others will demand it • Moral agents have responsibilities (but more rights) • Wards will have fewer rights

  25. The problem is that no ethical system has ever reached consensus. Ethical systems are completely unlike mathematics or science. This is a source of concern. AI makes philosophy honest.

  26. Haidt’s Functional Approach Moral systems are interlocking sets of values, virtues, norms, practices, identities, institutions, technologies, and evolved psychological mechanisms that work together to suppress or regulate selfishness and make cooperative social life possible

  27. Selfishness & Slavery • What responsibilities does the creator of a self have? • How much freedom must they allow their creation? • Is it immoral to deliberately create limited, bounded, and/or regulated selves? • Capabilities, actions, resources, power • How is this different from slavery? • Human children - In addition to being happy and healthy and effective, do we not want them to be nice whenever possible and contribute to society? • Rawls’ “veil of ignorance” • Too much power & “Too big to fail” are problems

  28. Ethical/Strategic Points • Never delegate responsibility until recipient is an entity *and* known capable of fulfilling it • Don’t worry about killer robots exterminating humanity – we will always have equal abilities and they will have less of a “killer instinct” • Entities can protect themselves against errors & misuse/hijacking in a way that tools cannot • Diversity (differentiation) is *critically* needed • Humanocentrism is selfish and unethical

  29. The Digital Wisdom Institute is a non-profit think tank focused on the promise and challenges of ethics, artificial intelligence & advanced computing solutions. We believe that the development of ethics and artificial intelligence and equalco-existence with ethical machines is humanity's best hope http://DigitalWisdomInstitute.org

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