I, scientist with Balazs Kegl

Johannes Jaeger

4 snips
Sep 16, 2024
Johannes Jaeger, a philosopher at the University of Vienna, specializes in the philosophy of science and biology. He passionately discusses the duality of AI as both a tool and a potential threat to human agency. The conversation dives into the concepts of relevance realization and non-computability in cognition, critiquing the pan-computationalism view. Jaeger emphasizes the importance of understanding the implications of rapid biotech deployment and advocates for a slow, responsible approach to technology. Their debate sheds light on the intricate relationship between cognition, agency, and the evolving role of AI.
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ANECDOTE

Science As Creative Inspiration

  • Johannes compares scientific creativity to artistic inspiration and recounts scientists admitting their creative sources only informally.
  • He cites Robert Rosen's phrase 'the art of modeling' to emphasize creative frame choice.
INSIGHT

Organizational Emergence Outruns Simulation

  • Organizational emergence creates new higher-level rules (e.g., origin of life) that simulation of lower-level physics doesn't explain.
  • Evolution and constraint-building produce qualitatively new phenomena beyond computational reducibility.
ADVICE

Slow Down High-Risk Research

  • Slow down research and deployment for technologies that reshape biology and society.
  • Prioritize understanding and responsibility over rapid manipulation and market-driven release.
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