If re-running evolution requires simulating the weather and if this is computationally too difficult then re-running evolution may not be a viable path to AGI.
There are many things that prevent us from literally rerunning human evolution. The evolution anchor is not a proof that we could do exactly what evolution did, but instead an argument that if something as inefficient as evolution spit out human intelligence with that amount of compute, surely humanity could do it if we had a similar amount of compute. Evolution is very inefficient — it has itself been far less optimized than the creatures it produces.
(I’d have more specific objections to the idea that chaos-theory-in-weather in particular would be an issue: I think that a weather-distribution approximated with a different random generation procedure would be as likely to produce human intelligence as a weather distribution generated by Earth’s precise chaotic behavior. But that’s not very relevant, because there would be far bigger differences between Earthly evolution and what-humans-would-do-with-1e40-FLOP than the weather.)
There are many things that prevent us from literally rerunning human evolution. The evolution anchor is not a proof that we could do exactly what evolution did, but instead an argument that if something as inefficient as evolution spit out human intelligence with that amount of compute, surely humanity could do it if we had a similar amount of compute. Evolution is very inefficient — it has itself been far less optimized than the creatures it produces.
(I’d have more specific objections to the idea that chaos-theory-in-weather in particular would be an issue: I think that a weather-distribution approximated with a different random generation procedure would be as likely to produce human intelligence as a weather distribution generated by Earth’s precise chaotic behavior. But that’s not very relevant, because there would be far bigger differences between Earthly evolution and what-humans-would-do-with-1e40-FLOP than the weather.)