But Gebru and Torres don’t object to “the entire ideology of progress and technology” so much as accuse a certain [loosely-defined] group of making nebulous fantasy arguments about progress and technology to support their own ends, suggest they’re bypassing a load of lower level debates about how actual progress and technology is distributed and accuse them of being racist. It’s a subset of the “TESCREALs” who want AI development stopped altogether, and I don’t think they’re subliminally influenced by ancient debates on divine purpose either.
It’s something of an understatement to suggest that it’s not just Catholics and Anglicans opposed to ideas they disagree with gaining too much power and influence,[1] and it would be even more tendentious to argue that secular TESCREALs’ interest in shaping the future and consequentialism is aligned in any way with Calvinist predestination.
If Calvin were to encounter any part of the EA movement he’d be far more scathing than Gebru and Torres or people writing essays about how utilitarianism is bunk.[2] Maybe TESCREALism is just anti-Calvinism ;) …
Calvin was opposed to them too, although he believed heretics should suffer the death penalty rather than merely being invited to read thousand word blogs and papers about how they were bad people.
But Gebru and Torres don’t object to “the entire ideology of progress and technology” so much as accuse a certain [loosely-defined] group of making nebulous fantasy arguments about progress and technology to support their own ends, suggest they’re bypassing a load of lower level debates about how actual progress and technology is distributed and accuse them of being racist. It’s a subset of the “TESCREALs” who want AI development stopped altogether, and I don’t think they’re subliminally influenced by ancient debates on divine purpose either.
It’s something of an understatement to suggest that it’s not just Catholics and Anglicans opposed to ideas they disagree with gaining too much power and influence,[1] and it would be even more tendentious to argue that secular TESCREALs’ interest in shaping the future and consequentialism is aligned in any way with Calvinist predestination.
If Calvin were to encounter any part of the EA movement he’d be far more scathing than Gebru and Torres or people writing essays about how utilitarianism is bunk.[2] Maybe TESCREALism is just anti-Calvinism ;) …
Calvin was opposed to them too, although he believed heretics should suffer the death penalty rather than merely being invited to read thousand word blogs and papers about how they were bad people.
and be equally convinced that the e-accelerationists and Timnit and Emile were condemned to eternal damnation.