<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0" ><tr><td valign="top" style="font: inherit;">--- On <b>Tue, 6/22/10, Florent Berthet <i><florent.berthet@gmail.com></i></b> wrote:<br><blockquote style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;">Exactly. I'm currently trying to write a screenplay that would show the potential awesomeness of uploading, in a post AGI world. Fact is, I died a little inside each time I searched for a good plot, because any problem can be answered by "the AGI would solve it...". And I don't want to remove the AGI, that's a major point of the project. But for a movie to be good, there must be huge stakes in the plot, at least for the main character. So yeah, that's a real pain...<br><div id="yiv1061261117">
<br>Ideas are welcome. ;)<br></div></blockquote>1. Don't confuse great intelligence with literal omnipotence. *How* does the<br>AGI solve it? It still exists in the physical world, with finite (if large) access to<br>information, materials, and speed. For instance: an asteroid is out of orbit and<br>will crash into Earth - significantly disrupting the AGI's operations there - if not<br>fixed. Yes, the AGI can think of a solution quickly - but then someone actually<br>needs to implement the solution.<br><br>2. Murphy's Law still applies. There will be local variables, not measurable from<br>a distance. Ideally, these can be allowed for. In practice, what says that even<br>an AGI can never be taken by surprise?<br><br>3. Don't assume it must be a monolithic single entity. If the AGI is a gestalt of<br>several human intelligences, augmented by computers, then each of those<br>humans must still do their part to
solve whatever tasks the collective AGI<br>wishes to deal with - including dealing with the rest of the world. (This approach<br>was taken by the Webcomic "A Miracle Of Science" to good effect. It has been<br>used in other recent works as well, including at least one anime series that had<br>broad distribution.) The AGI's components could even form most or all of the<br>cast, with their interactions key to the plot.<br><br>Yes, these require depicting the limitations of an AGI. But uploading does not<br>let one solve everyone's problems instantly. It's the old superhero shtick: yes,<br>the main character gains great power - so the main character is faced with great<br>challenges. Augmented intelligence, on the level we are discussing, easily<br>qualifies as a superpower.<br><br>Alternately, possibly focus on the first few uploads, to keep the focus on "the<br>potential awesomeness of uploading". RoboCop style:
introduce the protagonist<br>while still human. Protagonist dies; uploading is the only way to save.<br>Protagonist gets used to new incarnation. Meanwhile, problems related to the<br>protagonist's death get more intense, to the point where only the protagonist can<br>save the day. Granted, it can be harder to keep interest when focusing on rapid<br>thought than on physical action...although, once again invoking superheroes, you<br>could do worse than study Batman for inspiration (physical abilities aside, his<br>mind is his best power). It is not much of a stretch to imagine his writers putting<br>his brain in the Batmobile, with wireless access to his various computer assets,<br>for an arc (though they would eventually return him to normal), and depicting him<br>taking full advantage of this while it lasts.<br></td></tr></table>