Thinking about AI Doom: Cheerful, Right?

July 22, 2024

green-dino_thumb_thumbThis essay is the work of a dumb humanoid. No smart software required.

I am not much of a philosopher psychologist academic type. I am a dinobaby, and I have lived through a number of revolutions. I am not going to list the “next big things” that have roiled the world since I blundered into existence. I am changing my mind. I have memories of crouching in the hall at Oxon Hill Grade School in Maryland. We were practicing for the atomic bomb attack on Washington, DC. I think I was in the second grade. Exciting.

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The AI powered robot want the future experts in hermeneutics to be more accepting of the technology. Looks like the robot is failing big time. Thanks, MSFT Copilot. Got those fixes deployed to the airlines yet?

Now another “atomic bomb” is doing the James Bond countdown: 009, 008, and then James cuts the wire at 007. The world was saved for another James Bond sequel. Wow, that was close.

I just read “Not Yet Panicking about AI? You Should Be – There’s Little Time Left to Rein It In.” The essay seems to be a trifle dark. Here’s a snippet I circled:

With technological means, we have accomplished what hermeneutics has long dreamed of: we have made language itself speak.

Thanks to Dr. Francis Chivers, one of my teachers at Duquesne University, I actually know a little bit about hermeneutics. May I share?

Hermeneutics is the theory and methodology of interpretation of words and writings. One should consider content in its historical, cultural, and linguistic context. The idea is to figure out the the underlying messages, intentions, and implications of texts doing academic gymnastics.

Now the killer statement:

Jacques Lacan was right; language is dark and obscene in its depths.

I presume you know well the work of Jacques Lacan. But if you have forgotten,  the canny psychologist got himself kicked out of the International Psychoanalytic Association (no mean feat as I recall) for his ideas about desire. Think Freud on steroids.

The write up uses these everyday references to make the point:

If our governments summon the collective will, they are very strong. Something can still be done to rein in AI’s powers and protect life as we know it. But probably not for much longer.

Okay. AI is going to screw up the world. I think I have heard that assertion when my father told me about the computer lecture he attended at an accounting refresher class. That fear he manifested because he thought he would lose his job to a machine attracted me to the dark unknown of zeros and ones.

How did that turn out? He kept his job. I think mankind has muddled through the computer revolution, the space revolution, the wonder drug revolution, the automation revolution, yada yada.

News flash: The AI revolution has been around long before the whiz kids at Google disclosed Transformers. I think the author of this somewhat fearful write up is similar to my father’s projecting on computerized accounting his fear that he would be harmed by punched cards.

Take a deep breath. The sun will come up tomorrow morning. People who know about hermeneutics and Jacques Lacan will be able to ponder the nature of text and behavior. In short, worry less. Be less AI-phobic. The technology is here and it is not going away, getting under the thumb of any one government including China’s, and causing eternal darkness. Sorry to disappoint you.

Stephen E Arnold, July 22, 2024

Comments

One Response to “Thinking about AI Doom: Cheerful, Right?”

  1. AI Balloon: Losing Air and Boring People : Stephen E. Arnold @ Beyond Search on August 22nd, 2024 5:09 am

    […] of Mr. Musk, how do those who say AI will kill us all respond to the potential AI downturn? […]

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