Stewart Brand thinks big and long. He thinks on a planetary scale – as suggested by the title of his celebrated Whole Earth Catalog – and on the longest of timeframes, as with his Long Now Foundation, which looks forward to the next 10,000 years of human civilisation. He has had a lifelong fascination with the future, and anything that could get us there faster, from space travel to psychedelic drugs to computing. In fact, he was arguably the bridge between the San Francisco counterculture of the 60s and present-day Silicon Valley: in his commencement speech at Stanford University in 2005, Steve Jobs eulogised the Whole Earth Catalog and Brand’s philosophy, and echoed its farewell mantra: “Stay hungry. Stay foolish.”
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The history of gesture, in other words, bears directly upon the question of AI alignment. Humans across cultures and times intuitively maintain a set of semantic and ethical judgements rooted in our physicality, our learned and instinctive gestures, and the affordances of the natural world. There is just something “knockable” about wood. LLMs don’t have childhood memories of jumping over cracks in pavement or their grandmother teaching them gestures. Moreover, such things are not really in their training data either.
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