Living at a wild time, but HoH-argument is mistaken
Living at HoH
“Wild time” is almost as unlikely as HoH. Holden is trying to suggest it’s comparably intuitively wild, and it has pretty similar anthropic / “base rate” force.
So if your arguments look solid, “All futures are wild” makes hypothesis 2 look kind of lame/improbable—it has to posit a flaw in an argument, and also that you are living at a wildly improbable time. Meanwhile, hypothesis 1 merely has to posit a flaw in an argument, and hypothesis 3 merely has to a posit HoH (which is only somewhat more to swallow than a wild time).
So now if you are looking for errors, you probably want to focus for errors in the argument that we are living at a “wild time.” Realistically, I think you probably need to reject the possibility that the stars are real and that it is possible for humanity to spread to them. In particular, it’s not too helpful to e.g. be skeptical of some claim about AI timelines or about our ability to influence society’s trajectory.
This is kind of philosophically muddled because (I think) most participants in this discussion already accept a simulation-like argument that “Most observers like us are mistaken about whether it will be possible for them to colonize the stars.” If you set aside the simulation-style arguments, then I think the “all futures are wild” correction is more intuitively compelling.
(I think if you tell people “Yes, our good skeptical epistemology allows us to be pretty confident that the stars don’t exist” they will have a very different reaction than if you tell them “Our good skeptical epistemology tells us that we aren’t the most influential people ever.”)
Basically you’re saying that if we already know things are pretty wild (In Buck’s version: that we’re early humans) it’s a much less fishy step from there to very wild (‘we’re at HoH’) than it would be if we didn’t know things were pretty wild already.
Thanks for the clarification! I still feel a bit fuzzy on this line of thought, but hopefully understand a bit better now.
At least on my read, the post seems to discuss a couple different forms of wildness: let’s call them “temporal wildness” (we currently live at an unusually notable time) and “structural wildness” (the world is intuitively wild; the human trajectory is intuitively wild).[1]
I think I still don’t see the relevance of “structural wildness,” for evaluating fishiness arguments. As a silly example: Quantum mechanics is pretty intuitively wild, but the fact that we live in a world where QM is true doesn’t seem to substantially undermine fishiness arguments.
I think I do see, though, how claims about temporal wildness might be relevant. I wonder if this kind of argument feels approximately right to you (or to Holden):
Step 1: A priori, it’s unlikely that we would live even within 10000 years of the most consequential century in human history. However, despite this low prior, we have obviously strong reasons to think it’s at least plausible that we live this close to the HoH. Therefore, let’s say, a reasonable person should assign at least a 20% credence to the (wild) hypothesis: “The HoH will happen within the next 10000 years.”
Step 2: If we suppose that the HoH will happen with the next 10000 years, then a reasonable conditional credence that this century is the HoH should probably be something like 1⁄100. Therefore, it seems, our ‘new prior’ that this century is the HoH should be at least .2*.01 = .002. This is substantially higher than (e.g.) the more non-informative prior that Will’s paper starts with.
Fishiness arguments can obviously still be applied to the hypothesis presented in Step 1, in the usual way. But maybe the difference, here, is that the standard arguments/evidence that lend credibility to the more conservative hypothesis “The HoH will happen within the next 10000” are just pretty obviously robust — which makes it easier to overcome a low prior. Then, once we’ve established the plausibility of the more conservative hypothesis, we can sort of back-chain and use it to bump up our prior in the Strong HoH Hypothesis.
I suppose it also evokes an epistemic notion of wildness, when it describes certain confidence levels as “wild,” but I take it that “wild” here is mostly just a way of saying “irrational”?
Ben, that sounds right to me. I also agree with what Paul said. And my intent was to talk about what you call temporal wildness, not what you call structural wildness.
I agree with both you and Arden that there is a certain sense in which the “conservative” view seems significantly less “wild” than my view, and that a reasonable person could find the “conservative” view significantly more attractive for this reason. But I still want to highlight that it’s an extremely “wild” view in the scheme of things, and I think we shouldn’t impose an inordinate burden of proof on updating from that view to mine.
We were previously comparing two hypotheses:
HoH-argument is mistaken
Living at HoH
Now we’re comparing three:
“Wild times”-argument is mistaken
Living at a wild time, but HoH-argument is mistaken
Living at HoH
“Wild time” is almost as unlikely as HoH. Holden is trying to suggest it’s comparably intuitively wild, and it has pretty similar anthropic / “base rate” force.
So if your arguments look solid, “All futures are wild” makes hypothesis 2 look kind of lame/improbable—it has to posit a flaw in an argument, and also that you are living at a wildly improbable time. Meanwhile, hypothesis 1 merely has to posit a flaw in an argument, and hypothesis 3 merely has to a posit HoH (which is only somewhat more to swallow than a wild time).
So now if you are looking for errors, you probably want to focus for errors in the argument that we are living at a “wild time.” Realistically, I think you probably need to reject the possibility that the stars are real and that it is possible for humanity to spread to them. In particular, it’s not too helpful to e.g. be skeptical of some claim about AI timelines or about our ability to influence society’s trajectory.
This is kind of philosophically muddled because (I think) most participants in this discussion already accept a simulation-like argument that “Most observers like us are mistaken about whether it will be possible for them to colonize the stars.” If you set aside the simulation-style arguments, then I think the “all futures are wild” correction is more intuitively compelling.
(I think if you tell people “Yes, our good skeptical epistemology allows us to be pretty confident that the stars don’t exist” they will have a very different reaction than if you tell them “Our good skeptical epistemology tells us that we aren’t the most influential people ever.”)
Am I right in thinking Paul your argument here is very similar to Buck’s in this post? https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/j8afBEAa7Xb2R9AZN/thoughts-on-whether-we-re-living-at-the-most-influential.
Basically you’re saying that if we already know things are pretty wild (In Buck’s version: that we’re early humans) it’s a much less fishy step from there to very wild (‘we’re at HoH’) than it would be if we didn’t know things were pretty wild already.
Thanks for the clarification! I still feel a bit fuzzy on this line of thought, but hopefully understand a bit better now.
At least on my read, the post seems to discuss a couple different forms of wildness: let’s call them “temporal wildness” (we currently live at an unusually notable time) and “structural wildness” (the world is intuitively wild; the human trajectory is intuitively wild).[1]
I think I still don’t see the relevance of “structural wildness,” for evaluating fishiness arguments. As a silly example: Quantum mechanics is pretty intuitively wild, but the fact that we live in a world where QM is true doesn’t seem to substantially undermine fishiness arguments.
I think I do see, though, how claims about temporal wildness might be relevant. I wonder if this kind of argument feels approximately right to you (or to Holden):
Fishiness arguments can obviously still be applied to the hypothesis presented in Step 1, in the usual way. But maybe the difference, here, is that the standard arguments/evidence that lend credibility to the more conservative hypothesis “The HoH will happen within the next 10000” are just pretty obviously robust — which makes it easier to overcome a low prior. Then, once we’ve established the plausibility of the more conservative hypothesis, we can sort of back-chain and use it to bump up our prior in the Strong HoH Hypothesis.
I suppose it also evokes an epistemic notion of wildness, when it describes certain confidence levels as “wild,” but I take it that “wild” here is mostly just a way of saying “irrational”?
Ben, that sounds right to me. I also agree with what Paul said. And my intent was to talk about what you call temporal wildness, not what you call structural wildness.
I agree with both you and Arden that there is a certain sense in which the “conservative” view seems significantly less “wild” than my view, and that a reasonable person could find the “conservative” view significantly more attractive for this reason. But I still want to highlight that it’s an extremely “wild” view in the scheme of things, and I think we shouldn’t impose an inordinate burden of proof on updating from that view to mine.