Highlights from “Futures with Digital Minds: Expert Forecasts in 2025”

By Bradford Saad, Lucius Caviola @ 2025-08-26T10:36 (+28)

[Cross posted from Lucius's and Bradford's Substacks]

We recently released “Futures with Digital Minds: Expert Forecasts in 2025”, which asked 67 experts with relevant expertise about whether, when, and how digital minds might be created. We defined digital minds as computer based systems with the capacity for subjective experience.

The report includes an executive summary as well as a broad and thorough discussion of patterns in the survey results, which included participants’ quantitative estimates as well as their free text responses. In contrast, this post will highlight some points that we think are especially noteworthy. Also, in contrast to the fairly neutral stance we tried to adopt in the report, here we’ll allow ourselves more latitude in offering personal takes.

Important points

To start, here are some claims reflected in the results that strike us as important, even if not particularly surprising. (Note: in highlighting these claims as important ideas in the results, we’re not thereby endorsing them as true. Also, some of these claims are associated with more specific quantitative results that are surprising—we’ll highlight some of those results in the next section.)

Striking results

Some claims reflected in results struck us as important and at least somewhat surprising:

Underappreciated observations

We take the following to be underappreciated insights that can be gleaned from participant responses:

Investigation priorities

In line with our discussion in the report, we think the following should be investigation priorities in this area:

Our disagreements with participants

To conclude, we highlight the most significant divergences between our own views and the survey results. For Bradford, the largest gap concerns the in-principle possibility of digital minds: he assigns a probability of around 60%, compared to the median survey estimate of 90%. Both of us are more open than the median respondent to the possibility of digital mind super-beneficiaries. Conditional on the existence of digital minds, we both find it more likely than not that such super-beneficiaries will exist, and expect them to account for the majority of digital-mind welfare in expectation. Lucius is more open to the possibility that the first digital mind could be created before AGI—potentially reflecting different AGI timelines. Finally, Bradford is more open to the possibility of artificial systems that have the capacity for welfare despite lacking subjective experience. He assigns around a 30% probability to their possibility and thinks that, conditional on physicalism about subjective experience, such systems are more likely than not to be possible.

Acknowledgements: Thanks to Michael Aird for helpful feedback.


SummaryBot @ 2025-08-26T19:38 (+2)

Executive summary: This post highlights key findings and personal reflections from Futures with Digital Minds: Expert Forecasts in 2025, which surveyed experts on the plausibility, timelines, welfare, and political implications of creating digital minds—computer-based systems with subjective experience—emphasizing both surprising probabilities (e.g. ~5% chance of creation before 2026) and underexplored research directions, while noting the authors’ disagreements with some survey consensus.

Key points:

  1. Experts broadly agree digital minds are possible (median 90%) and likely to be created (73%), with roughly a coin flip chance before 2050, and a surprising 4.5% chance before 2026.
  2. The first digital minds are expected to trigger rapid scaling due to compute overhang, with welfare capacity potentially surpassing humanity’s within a decade if early machine learning–based digital minds emerge.
  3. There is deep uncertainty about whether digital mind welfare will be positive or negative, whether rights will be recognized, and how AI welfare and AI safety will interact.
  4. Underappreciated insights include: risks of delaying creation (higher stakes later), the decoupling of cognition and consciousness, and the moral relevance of the order in which cognitive capacities develop.
  5. Investigation priorities include clarifying whether “goalpost movement” affects recognition of current AI as digital minds, exploring super-beneficiaries and non-experiential welfare, and assessing interventions before and after AGI.
  6. The authors diverge from the median on several points: Bradford is more skeptical about the in-principle possibility (60% vs. 90%), both are more open to digital mind super-beneficiaries, and Bradford also allows for welfare without subjective experience.

 

 

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