Reza Negarestani's Intelligence & Spirit

By ukc10014 @ 2024-06-27T18:17 (+7)

Note: I’m still working through the (dense) book, so this is an overview to help myself, and to introduce it to others.  This isn't a critical evaluation (I'm not a philosopher) of the authors’ arguments in detail.

I’ve started reading Intelligence and Spirit (2018) by Reza Negarestani and two commentaries on it.  The book is about AGI/ASI, framing these as a project of reason transcending the historical, biological container in which it was born.   

The book is also about what philosophy is (the craft of thinking about thinking) or how it might be done (if we were to relax the constraint of the human example).  The human, in this context, is viewed as non-essential, as something that is subject to evolution in all senses: it might be a widely-shared blind spot that we fixate on historically contingent humanist notions of value (especially when talking about AGI/ASI).[1]

The book's overall query is: how can humans reason rigorously about a greater-than-human intelligence?  He suggests that we can start by separating reasoning, as it happens to be implemented in biological humans, from our understanding of what reasoning itself might be.  He thinks of human intelligence as something that exists in our shared medium of language, which is the expression (or more accurately, the dasein or being/presence) of Hegel’s world-historical Geist (pp. 73-77, Chapter 6). Language is far more than a medium of communication, it is also one of storage and, importantly, of cognition (echoes here of Wittgenstein on language reflecting form-of-life).  Language, and its rules-of-use, develop through use or dialogue, which he discusses through Jean-Yves Girard’s ludics (pp. 365-376) in context of a toy model of 'proto-AGI’ known as Kanzi.

Negarestani says that we can’t think of the evolution of intelligence sensibly if we don’t consider how our cognition, and our language, have been shaped by our various (biological and social) histories. So, can we recast language, infected as it is with history, into something ahistorical and formalisable ?

His approach references Wilfrid Sellars to redefine reason and rationality through a reinterpretation of Plato, emphasizing the role of normativity in our understanding (pp. 456-465). Robert Brandom’s influence is evident in the discussion on the social nature of norms and how they shape collective intelligence, proposing that our intellectual engagements are deeply intersubjective. Rudolf Carnap’s ideas help decouple language and logic from traditional representational roles, advocating for a formal and systematic approach to discussing other intelligences without the encumbrance of human biases (pp. 267, 334-335).  In terms of concrete approaches to formalisation, there are sections dealing with category (pp.166-171), proof (pp.358-371), and type theories (pp. 414-422).

There is a subtle political thread throughout the book: his commitments seem to be to truth-seeking and the (moral) equality of all intelligences regardless of substrate (pp. 409-422).  He is also reacting against anthropocentrism/anthropomorphism  that is perhaps the default perspective (in my view more of a Judeo-Christian inheritance, via Kant) in the humanities, AI safety, as well as society generally (pp. 115-116, Chapter 8). He advocates instead for a ‘nowhen-nowhere’ view, which allows self-consciousness to go beyond particular (individual- and species-specific) experiences toward something more collective and timeless (pp. 487-493). 

The book, in Chapter 8, wraps up with speculation upon the future of philosophy in the presence of AGI/ASI.  I’m not sure where Negarestani is on moral realism, but he returns to mature Plato (of the Philebus, Phaedo, Theaetetus), which he interprets as: understanding and implementing intelligence is the human vocation, and the closest we can get to realising the Form of the Good.

Commentary

There is obviously much to unpick here, but the reasons I think it might be interesting in an AI context are:


 

  1. ^

    While he discusses learning as a computational process (Ch. 6), he doesn’t talk much about deep learning, is critical (pp. 104-109) of most futurist/transhumanist writing, and as a philosopher writing in 2018, doesn’t engage with alignment arguments.

     

SummaryBot @ 2024-06-28T12:53 (+1)

Executive summary: This book review of Reza Negarestani's "Intelligence and Spirit" outlines how the work explores reasoning about greater-than-human intelligence by separating reasoning from its human implementation and reconceptualizing language and cognition.

Key points:

  1. The book frames AGI/ASI as reason transcending its biological origins, challenging anthropocentric views.
  2. Negarestani proposes separating reasoning from human implementation to understand intelligence more broadly.
  3. The book views language as a medium for cognition and the expression of collective intelligence.
  4. It draws on philosophers like Sellars, Brandom, and Carnap to redefine reason and rationality.
  5. There's an emphasis on formalizing language and logic to discuss non-human intelligences without bias.
  6. The book speculates on the future of philosophy in the presence of AGI/ASI, returning to Platonic ideas.

 

 

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