HackerTrans
トップ新着トレンドコメント過去質問紹介求人

gom_jabbar

no profile record

コメント

gom_jabbar
·18 日前·議論
[dead]
gom_jabbar
·19 日前·議論
> Any class that even says a little about the history of NNs will talk about Rosenblatt and the Perceptron.

Sure. I think it starts to get more interesting when the influences that Rosenblatt explicitly cites in his seminal Perceptron paper (e.g. Hayek) become part of the discussion (which rarely happens in my experience).
gom_jabbar
·19 日前·議論
Yes, Rosenblatt is another good example. I recently looked deeper into the development of the perceptron and it's absolutely fascinating.
gom_jabbar
·先月·議論
[dead]
gom_jabbar
·先月·議論
[dead]
gom_jabbar
·先月·議論
[dead]
gom_jabbar
·先月·議論
Haven't heard about the universal subspace hypothesis yet, so I appreciate the digression.
gom_jabbar
·先月·議論
As mentioned in the comments, this is essentially Nick Land's vision, which he has been developing for over 30 years. If anyone is interested in exploring this topic in depth, I have a research project on it: https://retrochronic.com (The Capital Autonomization section of the introduction is particularly relevant.)
gom_jabbar
·先月·議論
Yes. Here's one relevant quote that touches on autonomization and secession:

> Most simply, there is the utilitarian order, in which capital establishes itself as the competitively-superior solution to prior purposes (production of human use-values), and the intelligenic order in which it accomplishes its self-escalation (mechanization, autonomization, and ultimately secession).

Nick Land (2014). Freedoom (Prelude-1a) in Xenosystems Blog. Retrieved from github.com/cyborg-nomade/reignition
gom_jabbar
·2 か月前·議論
Exactly. The source of that quote should be this interview from 2017 [0].

For those interested in exploring Land's main thesis (capitalism is AI), I have a research project on the topic [1].

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGxgGQpyBYM

[1] https://retrochronic.com
gom_jabbar
·2 か月前·議論
> I'm genuinely curious where this all goes

Maybe toward autonomous/sovereign capital with no humans in the loop, not even at the level of (asset) ownership.
gom_jabbar
·3 か月前·議論
Made me think of Mark Fisher's Y2K Positive text:

> At the Great Midnight at the century's end, signifying culture will flip over into a number-based counterculture, retroprocessing the last 100 years. Whether global disaster ensues or not, Y2K is a singularity for cybernetic culture. It's time to get Y2K positive.

Mark Fisher (2004). Y2K Positive in Mute.
gom_jabbar
·3 か月前·議論
Nietzsche argued that genius is more frequent than we think, but that something else is missing for its realization ("the five hundred hands"):

> In the realm of genius, might the “Raphael without hands” — the term understood in its broadest sense — be not the exception, but the rule? — Genius is perhaps not so rare after all: but the five hundred hands it needs to tyrannize the καιρὁς, “the right time” — to seize chance by the scruff of the neck! [0]

[0] http://www.nietzschesource.org/#eKGWB/JGB-274 (translated from German)
gom_jabbar
·3 か月前·議論
The interesting thing is that, for the "Father of Accelerationism" (Nick Land), AI Doomerism (doom for humans, at least for human identity) and Accelerationism (which for Land is just another label for capitalism: 'The label "accelerationism" exists because "capitalismism" would be too awkward.'[0]) are not opposed at all. And capitalism does not need to get elected.

(Land follows the above quote with "(But the reflexivity of the latter [capitalismism] is implicit.)"[0], which specifies that, for Land, more precisely, "Accelerationism is simply the self-awareness of capitalism"[1].)

[0] Nick Land (2018). Outsideness: 2013-2023, Noumena Institute, p. 71.

[1] Nick Land (2017). A Quick-and-Dirty Introduction to Accelerationism in Jacobite Magazine. Retrieved from github.com/cyborg-nomade/reignition
gom_jabbar
·3 か月前·議論
Expected outcome. Nick Land and the CCRU have explored how capitalism operationalizes science fiction (distilled in the concept of Hyperstition). Viewed through this lens, prices encode "distributed SF narratives." [0]

[0] Nick Land (1995). No Future in Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings 1987-2007, Urbanomic, p. 396.
gom_jabbar
·3 か月前·議論
Related: 0rphan Drift Archive

https://www.orphandriftarchive.com
gom_jabbar
·4 か月前·議論
The real transition would be from human-owned capital to self-owned capital. You are right that current capabilities and autonomy don't allow for that yet.
gom_jabbar
·4 か月前·議論
If you're only interested in his ideas, The Swerve summarizes them on pages 185-199 (1st edition).
gom_jabbar
·4 か月前·議論
Agreed. Even assuming that most people aren't deeply familiar with his philosophy, it's still nice for a culture to have something like a celebrity philosopher.
gom_jabbar
·4 か月前·議論
Absolutely. One of my favorite books about the power of books is The Swerve: How the World Became Modern (2011) by Stephen Greenblatt. It tells the story of the rediscovery of Lucretius's poem De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things), which was assumed lost.