Hey Will, very excited to see you posting more on viatopia, couldn’t agree more that some conception of viatopia might be an ideal north star for navigating the intelligence explosion.
As crazy as this seems, I just last night wrote a draft of a piece on what I have been calling primary and secondary cruxes/crucial considerations, (in previous work I also used a perhaps even more closely related concept of “robust viatopia proxy targets”) which seems closely related to your “societal version of Rawls’ primary goods,” though I had not been previously aware of this work by Rawls. I continue to be quite literally shocked at the convergence of our research, in this case profoundly (if you happen to be as incredulous as I am, I do by chance have my work on this time-stamped through a few separate modalities I’d be happy to share.)
I believe figuring out primary goods and primary cruxes should be a key priority of macrostrategy research, we don’t need to figure out everything, we just need to get the right processes and intermediate conditions in order to move us progressively in the right direction.
I think what is ultimately most important is that we reach a state of what I have been calling “deep reflection”; a state in which we have both comprehensively reflected to determine how to achieve a high value future, and simultaneously are in such a state in which society is likely to act on that knowledge. This is not quite the same as viatopia, as it’s more of an end state that would occur right before we actualize our potential, hence I think it can act as another useful handle as the kind of thing we should hope viatopia is ultimately moving us toward.
I’m really looking forward to seeing more essays in your series!
Hey Will, very excited to see you posting more on viatopia, couldn’t agree more that some conception of viatopia might be an ideal north star for navigating the intelligence explosion.
As crazy as this seems, I just last night wrote a draft of a piece on what I have been calling primary and secondary cruxes/crucial considerations, (in previous work I also used a perhaps even more closely related concept of “robust viatopia proxy targets”) which seems closely related to your “societal version of Rawls’ primary goods,” though I had not been previously aware of this work by Rawls. I continue to be quite literally shocked at the convergence of our research, in this case profoundly (if you happen to be as incredulous as I am, I do by chance have my work on this time-stamped through a few separate modalities I’d be happy to share.)
I believe figuring out primary goods and primary cruxes should be a key priority of macrostrategy research, we don’t need to figure out everything, we just need to get the right processes and intermediate conditions in order to move us progressively in the right direction.
I think what is ultimately most important is that we reach a state of what I have been calling “deep reflection”; a state in which we have both comprehensively reflected to determine how to achieve a high value future, and simultaneously are in such a state in which society is likely to act on that knowledge. This is not quite the same as viatopia, as it’s more of an end state that would occur right before we actualize our potential, hence I think it can act as another useful handle as the kind of thing we should hope viatopia is ultimately moving us toward.
I’m really looking forward to seeing more essays in your series!