Hi everyone. I am Allison Duettmann, president and CEO of Foresight Institute. Recently, I co-authored the book, 'Gaming the Future: Technologies for Intelligent Voluntary Cooperation' on our own Foresight Press with Christine Peterson and Mark S. Millar.
Also at Foresight, I direct the Intelligent Cooperation, Molecular Machines, Biotech & Health Extension, Neurotech, and Space Groups, Fellowships, Prizes, and Tech Trees. I also share Foresight’s work with the public, for instance at the Wall Street Journal, SXSW, O’Reilly AI, WEF, The Partnership on AI, Effective Altruism Global, and TEDx. Additionally, I founded Existentialhope.com, co-edited Superintelligence: Coordination & Strategy, and co-initiated The Longevity Prize. I advise non-profits, companies, and individuals. I hold an MS in Philosophy & Public Policy from the London School of Economics, focusing on AI Safety, and a BA in Philosophy, Politics, Economics from York University.
Ask me anything! I will be here to answer your questions Monday, March 20. Use the comments below to add questions, and upvote any questions you'd like to see me answer.
Very interesting, thanks for the thoughts!
I realize now that my questions were a bit unclear. I tend to think about the world in terms of trade-offs. So my first question was really about the trade-off of thinking about the future in terms of existential hope vs existential risk.
You already addressed a key upside of thinking in terms of existential hope that I hadn't thought of with your first point, which is that thinking of the future can create a self-fulfilling prophecy, so it's better to have a positive vision of the future than a negative one.
My second question was mostly about my own reticence to posit trade-offs everywhere since I do it too much probably. Sometimes, there is a false dichotomy in thinking about things in dichotomous ways ("both/and" instead of "either/or"). So perhaps it's not best to think of thinking about existential hope vs existential risk as a trade-off at all. That's what I was getting at, about whether I was missing a key point about the way you think about this topic by trying to frame the discussion in terms of a dichotomy.
By the way, I love the idea of existential hope and think it is a beneficial concept, in part to help avoid doomerism. =)