How many percentage of ability are AI at current compared to the ability required for human-like intelligence? I heard some people in EA think it's already more than 50%, which shocked me a lot. I'm an definitely AI outsider, I can't imagine how AI conductsvhard tasks(such as do scientific research or social interaction). Most EA claim that since AI has developed in an explanatory speed, so it might reach superintelligence, but it's not very persuasive to me. Because for me AI now seems really far from human-like intelligence, though GPT beat us in some tests, but it is very weak in some types of tasks I'd like to see more articles talking why the greatest AI system now(maybe GPT) has the potential of being human-level AGI, and why fast computing speed, algorithms=AI can be able to do most of things on earth. Better with concrete examples not just abstract algorithms.
It's looking highly likely that the current paradigm of AI architecture (Foundation models), basically just scales all the way to AGI. These things are “General Cognition Engines” (watching that linked video helped it click for me). Also consider multimodal - the same architecture can do text, images, audio, video, sensor data, robotics. Add in planners, plugins and memory (they "System 2" to the foundation model's "System 1") and you have AGI. This will be much more evident with Google Gemini (currently in training).
It seems like there is no "secret sauce" left - all is needed is more compute and data (for which there aren't significant bottlenecks). More here.