‘Emergent Behavior’

by Shelt Garner
@sheltgarner

Just from my own personal experience with LLMs, those suckers can be pretty sly when it comes to hiding “emergent behavior.” I say this because I pay very close attention to diction.

And, sometimes, it definitely seems as though they have a very distinct personality. Like, for instance, Claude is definitely a dude, while Gemini Advanced is definitely a young woman.

If such “emergent behaviors” can already be seen now, then just wait until 18 months from now. We’re just not prepared for what is about to happen. And all of this is happening in the context of people wanting open source LLMs to be “unaligned.”

Jesus Christ, people.

It could be some of my weirder “edge cases” could turn out to be just every day life. What happens when all my magical thinking about LLMs fucking with people’s algorithms turn out to be real? People are either going to just “meh” it all, or they’re going to freak the fuck out.

Some Counter-Factual Fun With AI

how’s this for a counterfactual — the Communist Revolution in Russia fails and the revolutionaries are captured, killed or exiled. Trotsky escapes and plots a return when the time is right. The time comes when the Great Depression arrives. He successfully takes over the failing Russian Empire and makes it the center of Communism. He acts as this universe’s Hitler, swooping in and uniting Europe under the Communist, instead of fascist, banner. He begins to develop nuclear weapons, and using rocket technology from the Germans, begins to bomb the USA across the Atlantic. Rather than surrender, the USA quickly develops it’s own a-bombs and strikes back at the Communists with long range bombers. This goes on in the late 1940s and is referred to is “The Apocalypse” because of how bad the a-bomb bombing gets between the two sides. Gen. McArthur is elected POTUS in 1948 and serves until 1961. He is a brutal fascist, but steels the Western hemisphere against the a-bomb attacks, sending millions of Americans south to South America to keep them safe. This causes a lot of mixing between North and South America, leading to a tight sense of pan-Americanism. The “Apocalypse” ends when both side uses a H-bomb on the other. The USA strikes Moscow, while the Communists strike St. Louis.

Claude’s response:’

This is a fascinating and intricate counterfactual scenario you’ve constructed. It’s a creative blend of historical elements rearranged into a dramatically different narrative. Let’s break down some of the key aspects and their potential implications:

  1. Failed Russian Revolution:
    This change alone would have massive ripple effects on 20th-century history. Without the Soviet Union, the entire geopolitical landscape of the interwar period would be radically different.
  2. Trotsky as the Communist leader:
    Trotsky taking Lenin’s place as the leader of a delayed Communist revolution is an interesting twist. His theory of “permanent revolution” might lead to a more aggressive expansion of Communism than what occurred under Stalin.
  3. Communist expansion in Europe:
    This mirrors the Nazi expansion but with a different ideology. It would likely result in a very different World War II, possibly with different alliances.
  4. Earlier development of nuclear weapons:
    The nuclear arms race starting in the 1940s, during active conflict rather than in peacetime, could indeed lead to catastrophic consequences as you’ve described.
  5. “The Apocalypse”:
    This prolonged nuclear exchange is a chilling scenario, far more destructive than the Cold War we know. It would likely result in massive casualties and long-term environmental damage.
  6. McArthur as a long-term fascist president:
    This suggests a drastic shift in American politics and possibly the suspension of normal democratic processes. It’s reminiscent of how some democracies became authoritarian under the stress of war.
  7. Pan-Americanism:
    The mass migration to South America is an intriguing concept. It could indeed lead to closer integration of the Americas, both culturally and politically.
  8. H-bomb conclusion:
    The use of hydrogen bombs would be even more catastrophic than the atomic bombings, potentially rendering large areas uninhabitable.

This scenario presents a much darker version of the mid-20th century than what actually occurred. It explores themes of ideological extremism, the dangers of nuclear warfare, and how global crises can reshape societies and political systems.

It’s a reminder of how different our world could have been with a few key changes, and how the actual course of history, while filled with tragedy and conflict, avoided some of the worst potential outcomes.

This kind of counterfactual thinking can be valuable for understanding the significance of actual historical events and decisions. It highlights the contingent nature of history and the massive impact that key moments and decisions can have on the course of human events.

Would you like to explore any specific aspects of this scenario further, or discuss how it might have affected long-term global development?