Crossposted from https://kirstensnotebook.blogspot.com/2021/04/biblical-advice-for-people-with-short.html?m=1
I have a surprising number of friends, or friends of friends, who believe the world as we know it will likely end in the next 20 or 30 years.
They believe that transformative artificial intelligence will eventually either: a) solve most human problems, allowing humans to live forever, or b) kill/enslave everyone.
A lot of people honestly aren't sure of the timelines, but they're sure that this is the future. People who believe there's a good chance of transformative AI in the next 20-30 years are called people with "short timelines."
There are a lot of parallels between people with short AI timelines and the early Christian church. Early Christians believed that Jesus was going to come back within their lifetimes. A lot of early Christians were quitting their jobs and selling their property to devote more to the church, in part because they thought they wouldn't be on earth for much longer! Both early Christians and people with short AI timelines believe(d):
-you're on the brink of eternal life,
-you've got a short window of opportunity to make things better before you lock in to some kind of end state, and
-everything's going to change in the next 20 or 30 years, so you don't need a pension!
So what advice did early church leaders give to Christians living with these beliefs?
Boldly tell the truth: Early church leaders were routinely beaten, imprisoned or killed for their controversial beliefs. They never told early Christians to attempt to blend in. They did, however, instruct early Christians to...
Follow common sense morality: The Apostle Paul writes to the Romans that they should "Respect what is right in the sight of all people." Even though early Christians had a radically different worldview from others at the time, they're encouraged to remain married to their unbelieving spouses, be good neighbours, and generally act in a way that would be above reproach. As part of that, church leaders also advised early Christians...
Don't quit your day job: In Paul's second letter to the Thessalonians, he had to specifically tell them to go get jobs again, because so many of them had quit their jobs and become busybodies in preparation for the apocalypse. Even Paul himself, while preaching the Gospel, sometimes worked as a tentmaker. Early Christians were advised to work. A few of them worked full time on the mission of spreading the good news of Christ with the support and blessing of their community. Most of them worked on the normal boring jobs that they had before. In the modern day, this would likely also include making sure you have a pension and do other normal life admin.
I am uncertain how much relevance Christian teachings have for people with short AI timelines. I don't know if it's comforting or disturbing to know that you're not the first community to experience life that you believe to be at the hinge of history.
Summary: The difference between early Christianity and modern movements focused on reducing prospective existential risks is to that to publicly and boldly speak one's beliefs that go against the ruling ideology was considered against common sense morality during the Cold War. Modern x-risk movements can't defend themselves from suppression as well because their small communities subject to severe conditions in modern police/surveillance states.
Some scientists and whistleblowers in the Soviet Union and the United States not only lost their jobs but were imprisoned for a number of years, or were otherwise legally punished or politically persecuted in ways that had severe consequences beyond the professional. As far as I'm aware, none of them were killed and I'd be very surprised if any of them were.
Please don't concern yourself to write more on this subject on my behalf. I'm satisfied with the conclusion that the difference between early Christians and the modern whistleblowers in question is that for the whistleblowers to publicly and boldly express their honest beliefs was perceived as a betrayal of good citizenship. The two major conditions that come to mind that determined these different outcomes are:
1. The Authoritarianism on Both Sides of the Iron Curtain During the Cold War.
Stalinist Russia is of course recognized as being totalitarian but history has been mythologized to downplay how much liberal democracy in the United States was at risk of failing during the same period. I watched a couple documentaries on that subject produced to clarify the record about the facts of the matter during the McCarthyist era. The anti-communism of the time was becoming extreme in a way well-characterized in a speech Harry S. Truman addressed to Congress. I forget the exact quote but to paraphrase it, it went something like: "we didn't finish beating fascism only for us to descend into fascism ourselves."
2. The Absence of an Authoritative Organization on the Part of the Defectors
(Note: In this case, I don't mean "defector" to be pejorative but only to indicate that members of the respective communities took actions defying rules established by the reigning political authority.)
As I understand it, Christianity began dramatically expanding even within a few years of Jesus' crucifixion. Over the next few decades, it became a social/religious organization that grew enough that it became harder and harder for the Roman Empire to simply quash. There was not really an organization for Cold War whistleblowers that had enough resources to meaningfully defend its members from being suppressed or persecuted.