Thanks for your comment. I agree itās possible that ASI could come shortly after AGI, and I do caveat in the piece that if you believe this, most of the takeaways wonāt hold.
What I wanted to do with this post wasnāt necessarily persuade people of any one scenario, but instead describe the actual bottlenecks that cultivated meat faces so that people can calibrate their own views, whatever those views are, against the real landscape. For example, if someone came away from reading this more optimistic about cultivated meat under AGI, but also better able to articulate why (according to how they think AGI solves the bottlenecks), I think thatās still a valuable outcome.
I used a narrow definition of AGI because I think thatās where actionable analysis can be made [edit to add: and I think its not a completely implausible scenario, especially for consumer preferences ā see my reply below], but I agree its not necessarily enough. If you have recommendations for how to reason about worlds where current baselines genuinely donāt extrapolate at all, Iād really welcome them! Itās a problem I find really hard, and I think a lot of others, especially those coming from cause areas outside of AI safety, do too.
Thanks for your reply!
I definitely take your point about āI used a narrow definition of AGI because I think thatās where actionable analysis can be made, but I agree its not necessarily enough.ā ā I think I could have worded that better.
What I meant was that I think the world I discuss is plausible and we can get some actionable analysis from it, which can get us some way to identifying what actions may be more robust across different scenarios. (I agree we wouldnāt want to discuss scenarios that are impossible.)
It seems the difference in our views here is that I think itās possible institutions and consumer preferences are quite sticky, at least for a little while; e.g. society imposes that humans have to be final decision-makers for longer than youād expect (perhaps because legacy rules persist or people strongly prefer slower human-in-the-loop processes, or something else), or consumers really want ātraditionalā food that they know, like, and trust regardless of their economic position. If you think thereās a 0% chance that can happen, then it makes sense not to agree with what I describe above.
I probably wonāt carry on replying here, but I do appreciate you taking the time to explain your view, it made me think about the framing of my post and my viewpoint a lot more.