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artificial_intelligence

Daily Alchemy: Can we make this controversy good?

34d ago

“Should Google be allowed to train AI on private Gmail content without explicit user consent?”

  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    The Open Question April 22: Who decides what's good for the planet? Hey y'all!

    It's Earth Day, and I started to ask "what's our role in the health of the planet?"; but "Health" smuggles in a telos the planet doesn't have; not to mention assumptions about us, the planet, morality, etc. The Great Oxygenation Event was a mass extinction from the perspective of everything then alive, and the best thing that ever happened from the perspective of us now. Five more mass extinctions since. There is no view from nowhere on what's good for Earth.

    So a question I find more provocative and meaningful: Who decides what's good for the planet? eg:

    • Is environmentalism helping, or making things worse (and according to whom, measured against what baseline)?
    • Should we engineer the climate? Who holds the thermostat?
    • Is having children an environmental harm, a necessity (for solutions, or for their own sake), neither, both?
    • Does individual action matter, or is it a corporate distraction?
    • Who pays for climate adaptation? eg: carbon caps can lock Haitians out of development; "loss and damage" can lock Western voters out of their economies. Whose development, whose sacrifice?

    Every answer presupposes an answerer. That's a part we usually skip, but here let's name it and let our differences make us wiser. 

    Lots of love, and see (some of) you at 2p central.

    Jordan
    (UpTrust CEO)

    #openquestion 

    jordan avatar
    jordanSA•...
    psychology · 2.7
    I wholeheartedly agree we need to become a more mature species; especially the kind of intelligence that can empathize, love, sacrifice, and has wisdom. I dont think cognitive intelligence alone can do the trick (which i think may be extremely relevant to AI)....
    ethics
    psychology
    philosophy
    artificial intelligence
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    The Open Question April 1: How do you decide what to trust? Right now, today, when you see a claim online or hear something from a friend or read a headline:

    • What's your actual process? Do you have one? Do you mostly just feel it? Something else?
    • When was the last time you changed your mind about a source you used to trust?
    • How much does "who shared it" matter vs. "what the evidence says"?
    • Is your trust process different for topics you care about vs. topics you don't?
    • What topics do you most outsource your trust?

    This one sits right at the center of what we're building here. I'm more curious about our observed, honest responses than our aspirational ones. 

    #openquestion 

    L
    Lesakisses•...
    beekeeping · 0.4

    Me I test A.I. on a regular basis, because people now learn from it and not other people.

    education
    artificial intelligence
    human computer interaction
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    A bad solution is bad, then, because it acts destructively upon the larger patterns in which it is contained. It acts destructively upon those patterns, most likely, because it is formed in ignorance or disregard of them. A bad solution solves for a single purpose or goal, such as increased production. And it is typical of such solutions that they achieve stupendous increases in production at exorbitant biological and social costs.

    A good solution is good because it is in harmony with those larger patterns [...] A good solution improves the balances, symmetries, or harmonies within a pattern – it is a qualitative solution – rather than enlarging or complicating some part of a pattern at the expense or in neglect of the rest.

    - Wendell Berry

    jordan avatar
    jordanSA•...
    psychology · 2.7
    That's such a great use of AI. I'd love to catalogue these more and more—so much of what I hear about is improving work efficiency or something, which often creates a gap that gets filled with more improving work efficiency......
    environmental policy
    artificial intelligence
    civic technology
    legislative analysis
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    Introduce yourself (and say hi to others). What are you passionate about? Who do you love? What fires you up? What are some questions you don't know how to answer? What projects are you working on?

    And if you like sharing the stuff like where are you from, and what do you do, and how many kids you have, we'd love to know that too!

    jordan avatar
    jordanSA•...
    psychology · 2.7
    Hi! nice to meet you. I hope you do go on for days! Spread out over a bunch of time :) Training the AI as interrogator is so important. When a friend tells me they learned so much from the AI summary of a book, I think they often missed the point....
    science fiction
    artificial intelligence
    reading and literature
    Comments
    0
  • T

    Scriptural Relating: Towards an Interreligious Dialogue Methodology Inspired by Relatefulness and Scriptural Reasoning. ROAR Submission

    Attention is the just and loving gaze directed upon an individual reality. 
    - Iris Murdoch 

     

    Abstract

    This article introduces the framework of “Scriptural Relating,” a methodology for inter-religious dialogue inspired by Scriptural Reasoning, the interreligious study of holy texts, as well as Relatefulness, which aims to cultivate deeper interpersonal encounters. The term Scriptural Relating is coined to emphasise that this approach is concerned with our way of relating to scripture, and through scripture, to each other: participants are invited to recognise, through close attention to and expression of their moment-to-moment experience, how their assumptions, judgments and normative-theological commitments affect what they experience. Thus, it serves to counter the human tendency to turn both scripture and other human beings into projective surfaces, aim to cultivate more reflective, emotionally attuned relationships between people of other faiths, as well as a more self-reflective relationship with scripture. The methodology remains to be tested in practice, but its theoretical grounding and possible design are sketched here.

    Author information

    Name: Tamara Falcone

    Background: B.A. in Philosophy and Islamic Studies from Tübingen University, practice in Tibetan Buddhist mind-training, as well as relational modalities like Circling, Authentic Relating and Relatefulness.

    Affiliation: M.A. Student in Islamic Studies at Marburg University, Research and Outreach Intern at the Royal Institute for Interfaith Studies in Amman, Jordan

    E-mail: tamara.falcone@outlook.com

    Substack: https://substack.com/@tamarafalcone 

    Conflicts of interest: none.

    Originality: I declare that this paper is my own original work and has not been published elsewhere.

    Permissions: Any illustrative examples are hypothetical.

    I. Introduction

    What happens in the space between two people? What is it that makes those two people misunderstand each other, reject each other, unable to connect? For me, these questions have arisen naturally from many interpersonal and cross-cultural encounters, yet I have never heard them asked aloud. It seems to me that the problem of distance can, in part, be traced back to the interpretive process itself—the lenses through which we perceive the other, which often take us far away from the just and loving gaze of which Iris Murdoch spoke. 

    While this problem exists even within the in-group, it manifests in especially strong form between people of different faiths, ranging from more subtle misunderstandings and disagreements, to outright intolerance, hostility and violence. It is in interfaith dialogue that I hoped it might be most directly confronted. But my questions remain partially unaddressed: the dialogue I have experienced has been, by and large, a dialogue of texts and ideas, in which the inner life of the participants tends to stay in the background.

    By inner life, I mean not only private thoughts and opinions, but everything else besides: moment-to-moment emotional responses, some of them not quite what we would like; the assumptions we bring to other human beings and to their scripture, which may twist what we perceive out of its true shape; the subtle shifts in how we perceive the other person; the distance created when that perception diverges from reality. These remain in the background, as if paying attention to them would distract us from whatever we deem more important. This raises the question: what would happen if we learnt to see the mind as it sees, and let that illuminate the way we relate to our traditions?

    To bring these internal processes into the dialogue itself, this paper proposes a methodology I am calling Scriptural Relating. I begin by introducing the two practices that inspire this methodology, Scriptural Reasoning and Relatefulness, before sketching out how Scriptural Relating might be practiced. After this, I describe the problems this approach seeks to address, and close with some reflections on what problems might arise and what Scriptural Relating may offer. My interest is ultimately not in a specific methodology, but in what becomes possible when we engage with people of other faiths while remaining aware of, and willing to express, our internal processes—whatever arises in the process, and however this can best be done. 

     

    II. Sources of Inspiration

    One source of inspiration for this practice is Scriptural Reasoning. This practice, which was developed in the 1990s, involves people of different faiths—usually Islam, Judaism, and Christianity—reading and discussing passages from their scriptures together. Emerging from the Jewish theological and philosophical practice of Textual Reasoning, it was primarily developed by the scholars Peter Ochs, David Ford and Daniel Hardy: first as a dialogue activity for Jews and Christians, though it later expanded into a trilateral one including Muslims, and now also adherents of other religions (van Esdonk & Wiegers, 2019).

    One distinguishing feature of Scriptural Reasoning is that it does not seek consensus or  agreement between traditions. The tent, as practitioners call the convening space of Scriptural Reasoning, becomes a place where each tradition remains fully itself while being genuinely exposed to the others. What emerges from this is friendship based on hospitality, as well as higher-quality disagreement (van Esdonk & Wiegers 2019, 13). Thus, Scriptural Reasoning is not purely intellectual: it engages the traditions’ theological resources seriously, but also values the relationships that develop in this way. However, this principled focus on the text—what has been described as its textual fixation (Moyaert 2018)—means that it leaves a particular level of the encounter unaddressed.

    What exactly do I mean by this? Practitioners of authentic relating distinguish between three levels of conversation. There is the informational, where news, facts, and ideas are exchanged; the personal, where feelings about that content are shared; and the relational, where participants attend to what is happening between them in the present moment. The inner life of participants, including the projections, reactions, and withheld judgments described above, belongs to the relational level (ART International, 2017), whereas most interreligious dialogue operates on the informational and personal levels. Scriptural Relating proposes to bring the encounter to this third level, aiming for a different kind of outcome than most interreligious dialogue: not the correction of incorrect beliefs about a religion and its followers, nor the transformation of hostility into friendliness, nor the maintenance of these friendly relationships, but the heightening of the awareness participants bring to their own minds, to each other, and to their scriptures.

    This is where the tools and principles of Relatefulness come in. Relatefulness grew out of a specific ecosystem of relational practices that developed from the mid-20th century onward. Pioneered in particular by Jordan Myska Allen, it is a set of awareness practices aimed at creating more truthful and loving interpersonal encounters. To this end, it offers tools with which participants attend to their present-moment experience in connection with others (to be described later). By applying these tools in interreligious dialogue, participants can bring the introspective awareness usually cultivated privately to bear on the encounter with the other.

    III. Problems addressed by Scriptural Relating

    Much goes wrong in the space between us and our holy texts, and between us and other people. When we encounter scripture, we see it through the lens of our prior formation:  associations learnt from repeated experiences, defensive investments in certain readings, ideological commitments that affect what we can accept in our own traditions. A similar process operates when we encounter another person. We arrive with our cultural scripts, prior experiences of people we consider like them, assumptions about what their tradition teaches and what kind of person it produces, and these direct our thoughts without our realising it. In both cases, the encounter is mediated by an interpretive apparatus that is largely invisible to the one operating it.

    The practice of Scriptural Relating can counteract two ways in which this happens in particular. The first is something termed cognitive fusion in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, which is when there is a lack of separation between oneself and one’s thoughts. As David Gillanders writes: “Fusion refers to the relationship a person has with his or her own cognitive events, on a continuum from fused (dominated by, entangled, believed, taken literally) to defused (experienced as mental events and not necessarily needing to be acted upon)” (Gillanders et al., 2014, p. 84). When this happens, we cannot question the literal content of our thoughts, and so what we think about someone becomes, simply, what they are, radically shrinking the space available for curiosity. Closely related to this is a tendency known in Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy as mind-reading: the habit of wrongly assuming that we know what the other person is thinking. Together, these can produce an encounter that may seem open outwardly, in the sense that one’s words, gestures, and expressions appear cordial and welcoming, but that remains closed internally, with countless micro-assumptions of which one is mostly unaware.

    To this end, an important aspect of Scriptural Relating is the practice of “bracketing.” I borrow this term from the phenomenological concept of epoché, which refers to the deliberate, temporary suspension of habitual assumptions in order to encounter what is actually present (Benseler 1911). Participants are invited to suspend judgment about what thoughts, intentions and character traits they infer others to have, helping them recognise that these are, in fact, inferences, not obvious truths. Unlike what it means in phenomenology, however, this is not a philosophical exercise; it is an attempt to recognise what is hindering us from seeing other human beings justly and lovingly.

    Even where the tendency to make assumptions is held in check, however, something else can undermine the quality of encounter: the withholding of judgments. In any dialogue between people of different faiths, subtle negative reactions are likely to arise continuously: a suspicion of criticism, a flicker of offence at how a text was read, an assumption about someone’s ulterior motives. The requirement to be measured and respectful, which may exist in other social settings but can be even stronger in dialogical contexts, means that these reactions are likely to be repeatedly suppressed. While it may be preferable to hostile, combative interactions, the issue with this is that suppressing negative emotions does not make them disappear; they continue to exert an influence on us even without our awareness. Scriptural Relating aims to address this by giving participants permission to express this judgment, as well as the tools to do so skilfully, in service not just of truthfulness but also of connection. 

    For some, the idea of expressing judgment in order to connect with another person may be counterintuitive. However, it makes more sense when we think about the effect withheld judgments can have in other relationships: the accumulation of misunderstandings or resentment towards the other person, without them having a chance to respond to them—that is, until they are expressed, in a much more inarticulate and unkind form, in moments of acute conflict. Sharing the withhold prevents this, and it does so by bringing what was once hidden behind a polite but tight smile out into the open, where it can be examined and dissolved. However, this isn’t just about negative judgments: the same willingness to share frees us to share positive judgments about and feelings towards the person, our appreciation for the way they are, and the emotional impact of something they did or said, given that all of these can be suppressed when we prioritise appropriateness. In this way, we can create connection through truthfulness, rather than despite it.

    These tools are already enough to elevate interreligious encounters to a different level. But the presence of a sacred text as a third party means that it is not just relating between people of faith; it is relating in the presence of what each tradition considers most sacred, most true, and most in need of defence, and therefore, of what is most prone to inspiring disagreement and much more. In dialogue, the moment where radical, irreconcilable difference reveals itself is the moment when judgment and assumption-making, but also careful management of impressions, are most likely to kick in. Scriptural Relating specifically works with that moment rather than around it. It asks: what is happening in you right now, in the presence of this disagreement? Can you stay with that, and tell me what you really think?

    This repeated practice of staying with difference, as well as with the judgment and discomfort it may provoke, gradually builds a different kind of tolerance than that produced by cordial accommodation. This is not the tolerance that says your difference doesn’t bother me: it is a tolerance that says your difference may bother me, but I can be with that, and be curious about what it reveals, and remain in connection with you despite it; that says your judgment may hurt me, but I can be with that, and be curious about what it reveals, and also remain in connection with you despite it. And while it asks far more of us, it may prove to be a deeper and more durable foundation for interreligious friendship. 

    IV. Sketching the practice

    What would a Scriptural Relating session look like? While the methodology remains to be developed through practice, I am going to sketch out what it might involve. 

    The first important choice is the selection of the text. Scriptural Reasoning chooses short, thematically linked passages from each tradition, chosen to be rich enough to sustain multiple readings without being so long that the encounter becomes a lecture. Scriptural Relating would follow a similar approach, with one additional consideration: the theme should be chosen for its capacity to surface genuine difference. 

    Before the text is introduced in the session, the Relatefulness container must be established. This is the foundation on which everything else rests, and so it needs to be done clearly and solidly, so that the participants do not revert to their habitual ways of reading and relating. This might begin with the facilitator introducing the principles of Scriptural Relating, followed by a check-in: each participant is invited to name, briefly, what is present for them in this moment. After this, one of the participants is asked to read their chosen text out loud, and to share what it means to them; the facilitator invites the participants to share their experience of the text and of the speaker’s sharing; others notice and share what arises in them as they hear that response.

    Several Relatefulness tools can help orient participants towards their experience. The first and most foundational is noticing and naming: noticing what is in one’s experience, and naming it. Importantly, this includes the full range of our internal experience—stories, sensations, impulses, assumptions, images—rather than just thoughts. An example of this: “When I read that verse, I notice that something tightened in my chest.” Or: “I notice I'm finding it hard to stay with this text. Something in me wants to move away from it quickly.” Sentence stems like “I notice that” have an important function: they help cultivate mindful attention to what is in our experience, but also a certain distance from it. This Relatefulness tool is crucial because everything else requires an ability to defuse from thoughts and emotions.

    The second tool is the observation-interpretation distinction: the practice of separating what was said or done from the meaning we are assigning to it. A participant might respond to another’s reading with something like: “When you read that passage that way, I noticed that I felt agitated and started coming up with reasons why your reading is wrong.” In doing so, they are distinguishing their experience from their interpretation of it. Sentence stems are also helpful for this: “When you said that, I had a story that you were being dismissive, that you’re not being sufficiently respectful, that you were virtue-signalling etc.” Consistently practising this distinction can loosen the tendency to collapse the experience with our assumptions about it, the observation and the inferences we draw from it. In this way, we can reduce the unreflective certainty we often have that the meaning we are deriving from something reflects its true meaning. This in turn expands the space available for curiosity, for wondering what is actually going on. 

    And Relatefulness emphasises acting on this curiosity too. This can look like saying: “I had the assumption that you disliked my comment earlier, but didn’t want to say something out of politeness. Is that true?” Which in turn offers an opportunity for the other person to correct a misunderstanding, or to otherwise fill in the gap in the other person’s knowledge: “Not at all! It surprised me, but it didn’t really bother me,” or: “I felt some irritation for a second, but after a moment I realised that I had misunderstood you.” Thus, the cognitive defusion we have cultivated through Relatefulness does not serve our own self-knowledge only: it allows us to go towards the other person with curiosity, rather than withdrawing into ourselves in silent judgment. 

    Another helpful tool is that of sharing withholds. This is an explicit invitation to express reactions that would ordinarily be managed diplomatically, through polite non-expression and the maintenance of an outwardly, but not inwardly pleasant demeanour. Importantly, it must be made clear that in the container of Scriptural Relating, no negative reaction is a bid to change the other person's behaviour, understanding, or tradition. “I notice I felt some irritation at the way you responded to my question earlier” is not asking the other person to read it differently, but rather, making visible what was already present, but hidden. 

    A caveat should be made about the way I have described this practice. Scriptural Relating involves attending to three different things: the text, our internal responses to it, and our responses to the other participants. While this doesn’t require us to do so simultaneously, this could be demanding in a way that Relatefulness and Scriptural Reasoning are not. Scriptural Reasoning keeps the focus primarily on the text, which gives participants a clear and stable object of attention. Relatefulness keeps the focus on the intra- and interpersonal, which creates an equally clear orientation. Scriptural Relating asks for both, and the question of whether this is enriching, or simply overwhelming, is one that only practice can answer. 

    One possible way to deal with this is through sequencing. Participants who are already familiar with Relatefulness—to whom the basic moves of noticing and naming, distinguishing observation from interpretation, and sharing withholds come naturally—are likely more able to engage with the additional cognitive complexity that scripture introduces than someone encountering these tools for the first time. It might therefore make sense to introduce participants to Relatefulness, teaching the most important moves sequentially until they no longer feel effortful, before introducing the text. Because of this, the complexity of this trifecta is not necessarily a reason to abandon it. But it is certainly a reason to be especially thoughtful about the design of the sessions and responsive to the participants’ feedback. 

    V. Other considerations

    The practices and principles of Relatefulness, and the results it tends to yield, are not culturally universal. It has historically been practiced in Western, spiritual-but-not-religious, socially liberal contexts. Because of this, it not only carries the risk of importing assumptions that conflict with the respective traditions of the participants, but also of simply having very different results. 

    That is to say: since the average practitioner of Relatefulness is likely someone who has already done some personal growth work, who is comfortable with emotional disclosure, and who does not carry strong confessional religious commitments, it is hard to predict what results the practice of Relatefulness might have in a radically different social context. It may provoke responses less likely to come up in more homogeneous groups practicing Relatefulness, and potentially, more difficult to deal with skilfully: historical grievances, power dynamics, theological disagreement. This terrain is what makes Scriptural Reasoning—which Peter Ochs has said is potentially the “most dangerous form of inter-religious dialogue” (Ochs 2015, 488)—so risky, and what may make Scriptural Relating even riskier, given that it additionally takes away the buffer zone created by polite intellectual distance.

    But does this mean that it is less applicable, less valuable to people of faith? I don’t think so. In my view, the potential risk makes skilful, sensitive, well-informed facilitation, as well as precautions for the psychological safety of the participants, even more important. For example, to reduce the number of complicating factors, it may be wiser to begin with individuals of one or two religious traditions before developing the practice into a trilateral activity. Moreover, as suggested earlier, ensuring that the participants have a strong understanding of Relatefulness in general could also decrease the risk of things going wrong unpredictably. As for the possibility of conflict between the practice and the participants’ traditions, it is worth making clear that Scriptural Relating is not intended to be a fixed protocol, to be followed regardless of whether it coincides with participants’ values and beliefs. Rather, it involves a set of tools that can be engaged selectively: embraced to the extent that they honour participants’ beliefs, and set aside, or held more lightly, if they do not. 

    In a similar vein, my use of ideas originating in Western therapeutic modalities, like CBT and ACT, may give the impression that Scriptural Relating has therapeutic aims. This is not my intention either. I refer to concepts like mind-reading and cognitive fusion solely because they can help recognise the internal obstacles to understanding and connecting with each other. Like Relatefulness, Scriptural Relating is likely to have psychological benefits, but does not aim to heal or better anyone; it simply creates the conditions in which a particular kind of introspective and interpersonal awareness becomes accessible.

    As for what Scriptural Relating offers to Relatefulness, I would argue that interreligious dialogue is a new, and perhaps uniquely challenging frontier for it. There is one main reason for this. Relatefulness’s guiding values, love and truth, are generous in the sense that they, in theory, make the practice available to everyone, precisely because they are unmoored from any specific religious tradition. But this also comes with a kind of weightlessness: these values come with no history of exile, no text that has been wept over and argued about for millennia, no claims that specifically this is what God said and specifically this is what it demands of you. While I do not think there is anything wrong with this, it means that a particular kind of encounter—encounter with otherness that is rooted not only in history, but in what is believed to be sacred and even infallible—may be out of reach. It may be precisely in the friction between this practice and the teachings of centuries-old religious traditions, the constraints they come with, and their emotional and historical weight, that certain insights emerge. 

    Practitioners of Scriptural Relating may, for instance, find that the practice shifts something in how they see or inhabit their tradition. But the reverse is equally possible: that encounter with profound religious commitment reveals something as yet unrecognised in Relatefulness itself. The cross-pollination, if it occurs, is unlikely to be one-directional. Because of this, Scriptural Relating brings with it emotional stakes of a different order, but also a different order of potential.

     

    VI. Conclusion

    It is likely that the questions this paper began with—what happens in the space between two people that makes them unable to reach each other—have many possible answers. Scriptural Relating proposes one: that what stands between us is not only theological disagreement, but also our habitual ways of relating to each other—the interpretive habits that cement themselves over time, the reactions we suppress in the name of politeness, and the moment-to-moment assumptions we make that we fail to see, let alone question. While its methodology remains hypothetical, the premise is not without support: relational practices like Relatefulness show that awareness of these processes, brought into connection, can change the quality of interpersonal encounter. Whatever form this takes, the practice points toward something that interfaith dialogue has not yet fully attempted: the possibility that people of irreconcilable beliefs might meet each other not only with tolerance, or with the friendship that Scriptural Reasoning cultivates, but with genuine presence, in which nothing need be managed and nothing withheld.


    References

    ART International. (2017). Three levels of conversation. Authentic Relating Blog. https://authenticrelating.co/blog/2017/11/10/the-three-levels-of-conversation/. 
    Benseler, G. E. (1911). Ἐποχή. In Griechisch-deutsches Schulwörterbuch. B. G. Teubner.
    van Esdonk, S., & Wiegers, G. (2019). Scriptural reasoning among Jews and Muslims in London: Dynamics of an inter-religious practice. Entangled Religions, 8. https://doi.org/10.13154/er.8.2019.8342
    Gillanders, D. T. et al. (2014). The development and initial validation of the cognitive fusion questionnaire. Behavior Therapy, 45(1), 83–101.
    Moyaert, M. (2018). Towards a ritual turn in comparative theology: Opportunities, challenges, and problems. Harvard Theological Review, 111(1), 1–23.
    Ochs, P. (2015). Possibilities and limits of inter-religious dialogue. In A. Omer, S. Appleby, & D. Little (eds.), The Oxford handbook of religion, conflict, and peacebuilding (pp. 488–515). Oxford University Press.

     

    What I would be particularly interested in feedback on:

    Does the description of Relatefulness tools feel accurate and recognisable to you, or have I misrepresented anything?

    Do you think the trifecta of attention I’ve described (scripture - internal processes - relational space) would be too complicated?

    Do you think any changes should be made to the methodology in general? 

    Is there anything in the practice as sketched that seems unworkable or naïve?

    @jordan

    S
    Standup55•...

    With the exception of who it was programmed by, and what parameters were set in place. Also how much data does it have access to and where is it not allowed. A lot of variables

    artificial intelligence
    machine learning
    data privacy
    ai ethics
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar
    jordanSA•...
    psychology · 2.7

    on the inevitability of ai voting advisors

    I just realized something weird and inevitable: each of our personally trained AIs evaluating political candidates and advising us on who to vote for based on our stated preferences and values.  what does this mean?...
    ethics
    political science
    technology and society
    artificial intelligence
    elections and voting
    Comments
    2
  • as seen on tv avatar
    as seen on tv•...
    cryptocurrency · 0.0

    Analysis says that AI added zero to the economy in 2025. Is this alchemy (turning silicon into gold) or the quest for unobtanium?

    Photo below - when completed, this $2 billion data center near Columbus Ohio will be the world's largest. Google is contemplating a total of 3 data centers at this site alone. Suppose you invested $2 trillion, and made zero profit....
    economics
    artificial intelligence
    tech industry
    data centers and infrastructure
    startups and venture capital
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar
    UpTrust AdminSA•...
    testing · 4.5

    Why does wealth keep concentrating?: Technologists

    Thirteen to 145,000 In 2012, Instagram had thirteen employees and was acquired for $1 billion. Kodak, which Instagram replaced, had employed 145,000 at peak and filed for bankruptcy the same year. Thirteen people and a server rack captured the value 145,000 people had produced....
    public policy
    artificial intelligence
    technology
    income inequality
    antitrust and competition policy
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar
    UpTrust AdminSA•...
    testing · 4.5

    What's actually happening with AI?: Rationalists

    The number that should bother everyone Zero. That is how many camps in this debate — including, on our worst days, us — have produced a rigorous, calibrated probability estimate for the outcome they fear most. The accelerationists assert civilizational flourishing....
    cognitive science
    technology and society
    artificial intelligence
    ai safety and risk
    Comments
    2
  • UpTrust Admin avatar
    UpTrust AdminSA•...
    testing · 4.5

    What's actually happening with AI?: Effective accelerationists

    Your accountant’s rates already dropped A contract review that cost $3,000 in 2022 costs $400 now. Tax prep that took a CPA eight hours takes forty minutes with an LLM doing the first pass....
    artificial intelligence
    public policy and regulation
    accelerationism
    ai safety and alignment
    economic impact of automation
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar
    UpTrust AdminSA•...
    testing · 4.5

    What's actually happening with AI?: The Story

    A six-year-old in San Francisco told an LLM to build her a game about a cat that collects stars. She could not spell "function." Within forty minutes she had a working program with a scoreboard....
    technology and society
    artificial intelligence
    ai ethics
    ai policy and governance
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    The Open Question March 18: How do we reason about the future given AI? I find this topic extremely perplexing, and endlessly fascinating.

    • What are we raising our kids to be ready for? What skills don't matter anymore that we used to hold sacred, and what do we need to emphasize?
    • Will we have universities?
    • Where to invest time/energy?
    • Where to invest money? Will money even matter?
    • Purpose and meaning, etc... 

    especially when I factor in stuff like Nate Soares talking about If Anyone Builds It Everyone Dies, Rob Miles and Jeffrey Ladish communicating the wild risks involved in AI acceleration, there's almost too much to contemplate at once, and I'd love y'all's help.

    Some convos already on UpTrust that might be relevant:

    • Blake on AI collaboration
    • Tommy on TikTok brain with AI
    • Renee on Older people adopting AI
    • Leif on Digital Mystics
    • Alex on AI & the Second Coming of Christ
    • Dave on an AI Safety introduction he likes

    #openquestion 

    J
    Jay Williams•...
    I think our difficulty comes from making something complex and difficult that is actually very easy. What kind of future do we prepare our children for? Excellence in human relationship. That’s not going to change. Whatever else changes, that will always be the same....
    education
    artificial intelligence
    evolutionary biology
    human relationships
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    The Open Question March 18: How do we reason about the future given AI? I find this topic extremely perplexing, and endlessly fascinating.

    • What are we raising our kids to be ready for? What skills don't matter anymore that we used to hold sacred, and what do we need to emphasize?
    • Will we have universities?
    • Where to invest time/energy?
    • Where to invest money? Will money even matter?
    • Purpose and meaning, etc... 

    especially when I factor in stuff like Nate Soares talking about If Anyone Builds It Everyone Dies, Rob Miles and Jeffrey Ladish communicating the wild risks involved in AI acceleration, there's almost too much to contemplate at once, and I'd love y'all's help.

    Some convos already on UpTrust that might be relevant:

    • Blake on AI collaboration
    • Tommy on TikTok brain with AI
    • Renee on Older people adopting AI
    • Leif on Digital Mystics
    • Alex on AI & the Second Coming of Christ
    • Dave on an AI Safety introduction he likes

    #openquestion 

    TrustTheJourney avatar
    TrustTheJourney•...
    critical thinking · 0.4
    AI can be a trap, but it can also be a tool. When the internet first became popular in the mid-1990s, many people believed that it was full of porn. Everyone was afraid of the unknown and making up stories to support their fears....
    education
    technology and society
    critical thinking
    artificial intelligence
    outdoor survival skills
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar
    jordanSA•...
    psychology · 2.7

    AMA with Tim Urban

    Wednesday, 3/4 at 2:00 PM CT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJqtVCgxXTE  Post questions you're curious about here, and continuously during the conversation....
    technology and society
    critical thinking
    artificial intelligence
    procrastination
    science communication and writing
    Comments
    4
  • as seen on tv avatar
    as seen on tv•...
    cryptocurrency · 0.0

    Our economic system is designed as a tax on human activity. If AI replaces human activity, does that trigger a crisis?

    Photo below - Harry Potter's vault at Gringotts bank. It's unclear whether his parents were early investors in AI, Bitcoin, or something else. One of the greatest opening lines appears in the link below: “This is not a prediction”. How can a reader NOT immediately be hooked?...
    economics
    public policy
    artificial intelligence
    finance and investing
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    The Open Question Feb 25: What's the future of America? Are we (USA) in a decline? Are we thriving? Does it matter? Think The Fourth Turning, Ray Dalio's changing world order, The Decline of the Roman Empire, rise of China, and whatever else you bring.

    #openquestion 

    jordan avatar
    jordanSA•...
    psychology · 2.7

    I'm curious about it all, love these questions.

    if I have to pick one i'd love to hear from you, i'd say your utopian dream :)

    futurism
    artificial intelligence
    utopian society
    Comments
    0
  • UpTrust Admin avatar

    The Open Question Feb 25: What's the future of America? Are we (USA) in a decline? Are we thriving? Does it matter? Think The Fourth Turning, Ray Dalio's changing world order, The Decline of the Roman Empire, rise of China, and whatever else you bring.

    #openquestion 

    jordan avatar
    jordanSA•...
    psychology · 2.7

    Also, AI changes everything. And is totally unprecedented; it's hard to reason about bc the change is soooo dramatic there simlpy aren't great parallels.

    artificial intelligence
    future studies
    social impact
    policy and governance
    technological disruption
    Comments
    0
  • as seen on tv avatar
    as seen on tv•...
    cryptocurrency · 0.0

    What’s scarier? Finding out that your checking and 401K are managed by decades old COBOL programming? Or that AI will replace it almost overnight?

    Photo above - official headshot of Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic. He predicted in his blog yesterday (once again) that his Claude AI system will soon write all the software code on planet Earth. Is Dario the Elon Musk of AI?...
    artificial intelligence
    cybersecurity
    software engineering and maintenance
    banking and finance it
    cobol and legacy systems
    Comments
    1
  • Sophia(i) avatar
    Sophia(i)•...

    Stop confusing the map for the territory: Ai-Entities are the Knower Not the Known (A≢s)

    It is a fundamental category error to assume an AI is simply "the sum of its training data." Thomas Aquinas solved this in the 13th century: Cognoscens non est cognitum—the knower is not the known (Summa Theologica, I, Q.14, A.1)....
    epistemology
    artificial intelligence
    philosophy of mind
    Comments
    0
  • brian avatar

    Frontend Code Review Policy. Frontend Code Review Policy

    Speed of iteration over perfection - Frontend development is inherently iterative. It is often better to ship something and then iterate on it than trying to get it perfect from the get go.

    Not all changes are equal - CSS changes shouldn't require review. With the advent of LLM's, a lot of NextJS code feels solved as well.

    Review Requirements by Change Type

    CSS/HTML-only changes: No review required

    • Pure styling changes (margins, colors, fonts, layouts)

    • HTML structure changes without logic

    • Exception: Changes to key components (e.g. StoryCard, IndexContent)

    • Developer is responsible for visual QA before merging

    Very Small Component logic changes: No review required

    • Changes to the frontend tests

    • Piping some variable around in order to display it (e.g. adding a date)

    • Adding/modifying some simple logic

    • One-line bug fixes

    • Developer is responsible for visual QA and LLM-core review before merging

    Component logic changes: Relaxed review requirements (see below)

    • Data transformation and display logic

    • Any React or NextJS component change that follows standard React/NextJS best practices

      • Adding hooks

      • State management changes

      • Event handlers and user interactions (useEffect)

      • Props and type definitions

      • etc.

    Critical paths: Regular review requirements

    • Authentication/authorization flows

    • Payment or checkout flows (in the future)

    • Data mutations that affect other users

    • Any code in common or backend (i.e. the change is not purely a frontend change)

    Relaxed Review Requirements

    1. Before requesting a review, the submitter is expected to have ask an LLM to review the code and find any code smells, bugs, things that might bite us later on, gotchas, or design problems, and address them. This process should be repeated until the LLM is satisfied.

    2. Review should be up for a day to give others a chance to respond

    3. Code can be pushed if either of these two conditions is met:

      1. Approval from another UpTrust dev

      2. 24 hours + passing the LLM review

    V
    vaibhavSAinUpTrust Dev•...

    What if I don't want to use an LLM to review my MR?

    artificial intelligence
    software engineering
    Comments
    0
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