I get bored by long form discussions and gain a lot from seeing people discuss in person. There are lots of contextual cues that we lose if it's just blocks of text going back and forth. What's more, many of these discussions need some time pressure, otherwise they become self-indulgent and even longer.
I want to organise some zoom debates
But:
- Standard debate rules suck. They are about winning, not finding truth. If I run debates, each debater will get to lead the discussion in 10 minute chunks, rather than making speeches. My suggested debate format.
- I am not interested in vague questions. I want actual tangible questions with real answers.
With that in mind, what concrete questions would you like to see two people debate, in real time, in a format that encourages them to understand and engage with one another and that is time-boxed.
This house believes that if digital minds are built, they will:
I think this is an important debate to have because, as has been pointed out here and here, EA seems to largely ignore prioritization considerations around digital sentience and suffering risk.[1]
To argue against the motion, I suggest David Pearce: see his view explained here. To argue for the motion, maybe—aiming high—David Chalmers: see his position outlined here.
See the linked posts’ bullet points titled “I think EA ignores digital sentience too much,” and “Suffering-focused longtermism stuff seems weirdly sidelined,” respectively.
I think "digital minds can't be conscious" is an uncommon position among EAs