Rationality: From AI to Zombies
Un pódcast de Eliezer Yudkowsky
342 Episodo
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Failing to Learn from History
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
My Wild and Reckless Youth
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Lawful Uncertainty
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Positive Bias-Look Into the Dark
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Say Not "Complexity"
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
The Futility of Emergence
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Mysterious Answers to Mysterious Questions
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Semantic Stopsigns
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Fake Causality
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Science as Attire
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Guessing the Teacher's Password
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Fake Explanations
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Hindsight Devalues Science
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Conservation of Expected Evidence
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Absence of Evidence is Evidence of Absence
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Your Strength as a Rationalist
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Occam's Razor
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Einstein's Arrogance
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
How Much Evidence Does It Take?
Publicado: 2/3/2015 -
Scientific Evidence, Legal Evidence, Rational Evidence
Publicado: 2/3/2015
What does it actually mean to be rational? The kind of rationality where you make good decisions, even when it's hard; where you reason well, even in the face of massive uncertainty; where you recognize and make full use of your fuzzy intuitions and emotions, rather than trying to discard them. In Rationality: From AI to Zombies, Eliezer Yudkowsky explains the science underlying human irrationality with a mix of fables, argumentative essays, and personal vignettes. These eye-opening accounts of how the mind works (and how, all too often, it doesn't) are then put to the test through some genuinely difficult puzzles: questions in computer science about the future of artificial intelligence (AI), questions in physics about the relationship between the quantum and classical worlds, questions in philosophy about the metaphysics of zombies and the nature of morality, and many more.
