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| | itself.blog
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| | This is a guest post by Joel Kuhlin, doctoral student at the Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Lund University. The present response attempts to think with, rather than about, certain key-aspects of Thomas Lynch'sApocalyptic Political Theology, from the perspective of a philologist. From a philological appreciation ofApocalyptic Political Theology, instead of a purely philosophical...
| | scottaaronson.blog
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| | My good friend Sean Carroll took a lot of flak recently for answering this year's Edge question, "What scientific idea is ready for retirement?," with "Falsifiability", and for using string theory and the multiverse as examples of why science needs to break out of its narrow Popperian cage. For more, seethis blog post of Sean's,...
| | gilkalai.wordpress.com
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| | Update (Jan 21) j) Polymath11 (?) Tim Gowers's proposed a polymath project on Frankl'sconjecture. If it will get off the ground we will have (with polymath10) two projects running in parallel which is very nice. (In the commentsJon Awbrey gave a links for a first in a series posts also on Frankl's conjecture, with the
| | www.greaterwrong.com
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| Eric DrexlerCentre for the Governance of AIUniversity of Oxford This document argues for "open agencies" - not opaque, unitary agents - as the appropriate model for applying future AI capabilities to consequential tasks that call for combining human guidance with delegation of planning and implementation to AI systems. This prospect reframes and can help to tame a wide range of classic AI safety challenges, leveraging alignment techniques in a relatively fault-tolerant context.