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EA - Dispelling the Anthropic Shadow by Eli Rose
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This is a linkpost for Dispelling the Anthropic Shadow by Teruji Thomas.
Abstract:
There are some possible events that we could not possibly discover in our past. We could not discover an omnicidal catastrophe, an event so destructive that it permanently wiped out life on Earth. Had such a catastrophe occurred, we wouldn't be here to find out. This space of unobservable histories has been called the anthropic shadow.
Several authors claim that the anthropic shadow leads to an 'observation selection bias', analogous to survivorship bias, when we use the historical record to estimate catastrophic risks. I argue against this claim.
Upon a first read, I found this paper pretty persuasive; I'm at >80% that I'll later agree with it entirely, i.e. I'd agree that "the anthropic shadow effect" is not a real thing and earlier arguments in favor of it being a real thing were fatally flawed. This was a significant update for me on the issue.
Anthropic shadow effects are one of the topics discussed loosely in social settings among EAs (and in general open-minded nerdy people), often in a way that assumes the validity of the concept[1]. To the extent that the concept turns out to be completely not a thing - and for conceptual rather than empirical reasons - I'd find that an interesting sociological/cultural fact.
1. ^
It also has a tag on the EA Forum.
Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org
2437 Episoden
Fetch error
Hmmm there seems to be a problem fetching this series right now. Last successful fetch was on October 09, 2024 12:46 ()
What now? This series will be checked again in the next hour. If you believe it should be working, please verify the publisher's feed link below is valid and includes actual episode links. You can contact support to request the feed be immediately fetched.
Manage episode 439020796 series 3314709
This is a linkpost for Dispelling the Anthropic Shadow by Teruji Thomas.
Abstract:
There are some possible events that we could not possibly discover in our past. We could not discover an omnicidal catastrophe, an event so destructive that it permanently wiped out life on Earth. Had such a catastrophe occurred, we wouldn't be here to find out. This space of unobservable histories has been called the anthropic shadow.
Several authors claim that the anthropic shadow leads to an 'observation selection bias', analogous to survivorship bias, when we use the historical record to estimate catastrophic risks. I argue against this claim.
Upon a first read, I found this paper pretty persuasive; I'm at >80% that I'll later agree with it entirely, i.e. I'd agree that "the anthropic shadow effect" is not a real thing and earlier arguments in favor of it being a real thing were fatally flawed. This was a significant update for me on the issue.
Anthropic shadow effects are one of the topics discussed loosely in social settings among EAs (and in general open-minded nerdy people), often in a way that assumes the validity of the concept[1]. To the extent that the concept turns out to be completely not a thing - and for conceptual rather than empirical reasons - I'd find that an interesting sociological/cultural fact.
1. ^
It also has a tag on the EA Forum.
Thanks for listening. To help us out with The Nonlinear Library or to learn more, please visit nonlinear.org
2437 Episoden
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