←back to thread

Human

(quarter--mile.com)
717 points surprisetalk | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.407s | source
Show context
l33tbro ◴[] No.43991582[source]
Doesn't really make much sense. It states that this is a purely mechanistic world with no emotion. So why would a machine be "bored" and wish to create a human?
replies(6): >>43991626 #>>43991690 #>>43992605 #>>43992818 #>>43997598 #>>43998101 #
disambiguation ◴[] No.43991690[source]
My headcanon is that "boredom" and "fear" are probabilities in a Markov chain - since it's implied the machine society is not all-knowing, they must reconcile uncertainty somehow.
replies(1): >>43991800 #
l33tbro ◴[] No.43991800[source]
How would a machine know that it doesn't know?
replies(2): >>43992152 #>>43992611 #
1. jcims ◴[] No.43992152[source]
Probably by comparing what it experiences to what it can explain.
replies(1): >>43992231 #
2. l33tbro ◴[] No.43992231[source]
Sure, but I'm still not sure it would realistically function. All data in this scenario is obviously synthetic data. It could certainly identify gaps in its "experience" between prediction and outcome. But what it predicts would be limited by what it already represents. So anything novel in its environment would likely confound it.

It's a cool sci-fi story. But I don't think it works as a plausible scenario, which I feel it may be going for.