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Don't listen to Marc Andreessen about AI

4 pointsby Lironalmost 2 years ago

2 comments

scgalmost 2 years ago
<p><pre><code> Let’s start with a passage from the essay where Marc is 100% objectively wrong, as a matter of pure logic. [...] If you argue that AI won’t kill humanity, while simultaneously arguing that “AI will kill humanity” is a category error, your logic is mistaken. Period. End of story. </code></pre> This isn&#x27;t the airtight argument the author thinks it is.<p>It <i>is</i> logically consistent to dismiss an &quot;AI doomer&quot; claim by positing it&#x27;s based on a category error. That doesn&#x27;t mean you argue for the exact logical negation of the claims, so you don&#x27;t automatically grant that it wasn&#x27;t a category error to begin with.<p><pre><code> Here are examples of what actual category errors look like: - “The number two is blue.” </code></pre> There is a broader, and arguably more common, definition for &quot;category mistake&quot;. A statement can be a &quot;category mistake&quot; or not depending on the context. Quoting from &lt;<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;plato.stanford.edu&#x2F;entries&#x2F;category-mistakes&#x2F;" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;plato.stanford.edu&#x2F;entries&#x2F;category-mistakes&#x2F;</a>&gt;:<p><pre><code> For example, an utterance of ‘That is green’ seems infelicitous in a context where the demonstrative refers (or appears to refer) to the number two, but entirely innocuous in a context in which it refers to a pen.</code></pre>
scgalmost 2 years ago
<p><pre><code> He spends much time labeling and psychoanalyzing the people who disagree with him [...] But in the last few years, as his firm a16z took in $7.6B of capital to make a disastrous bet on “Web3”, while charging LPs an estimated $1B in management fees for the privilege, he’s been putting out a stream of disingenuous and logically-invalid arguments. For those who didn’t follow Marc’s Web3 debacle, I’ve kept the receipts: </code></pre> Criticizing pmarca for not engaging with the core of the argument, while simultaneously bringing up &quot;receipts&quot; for unrelated criticisms is odd. This behavior is more consistent with someone who has an axe to grind than with someone who is offended by &#x27;poor “sportsmanship”&#x27; in discourse.