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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 27, 2023

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I have no idea what you're arguing or advocating for in the rest of your reply - something about how if the world has surprising aspects that could change everything, that's probably bad and a stressful situation to be in? I agree, but I'm still going to roll up my sleeves and try to reason and plan, anyways.

Of course, that's what you do if you're sane, and I wouldn't suggest anything different. It's more just a feeling of frustration toward most people in these circles, that they hardly seem to find an iota of value of living in a world not full of surprises on a fundamental level. That is, if I had a choice between a fundamentally unsurprising world like the present one and a continually surprising world with [insert utopian characteristics], then I'd choose the former every time (well, as long as it meets a minimum standard of not everyone being constantly tortured or whatever); I feel like no utopian pleasures are worth the infinite risk such a world poses.

(And that goes back to the question of what is a utopia, and what is so good about it? Immortality? Growing the population as large as possible? Total freedom from physical want? Some impossibly amazing state of mind that we speculate is simply better in every way? I'm not entirely an anti-utopian Luddite, I acknowledge that such things might be nice, but they're far from making up for the inherent risk posed if it were even possible to implement them via magical means.)

As a corollary, I'd feel much worse about an AI apocalypse through known means than an AI apocalypse through magical means, since the former would at least have been our own fault for not properly securing the means of mass destruction.

My problem is really with your "there never was, and never will be" sentiment: I believe that only holds under the premise of the universe containing future surprises. I believe in fates far worse than death, but thankfully, in the unsurprising world that is our present one, they can't really be implemented at any kind of scale. A surprising world would be bound by no such limitations.

I think I understand. You're saying that you don't feel compelled to invite dangerous new possibilities into our lives to make them meaningful or even good enough. I'm not clear if you're mad at the accelerationists for desiring radical change, or for trying to achieve it.

In any case, I'm not an accelerationist, but I think we're in a fundamentally surprising world. On balance I wish we weren't, but imo it doesn't really matter how we wish the world was.