Sean

2.3K posts

Sean

Sean

@seamsay

(he/him) PhD candidate in ultrafast (atomic) physics. Research Software Engineer. Trying to find the sweet spot between physics, comp maths, and software.

South West, England Katılım Mayıs 2016
981 Takip Edilen121 Takipçiler
Sean
Sean@seamsay·
@Michael_Druggan @littmath And maybe I'm wrong, maybe Sam Altman is out there lobbying the government for it and I've just not seen. But all I have seen are nebulous promises, with no actionable plans to improve things for people who are struggling _today_.
English
0
0
0
15
Sean
Sean@seamsay·
@Michael_Druggan @littmath Don't get me wrong, I'm not anti-AI at all, I think it's an incredibly interesting technology and I'm excited to see how it affects the future of science. I am not excited by the lack of concrete social improvements I've seen, or the lack of leaders taking such things seriously.
English
1
0
0
12
Michael Druggan
Michael Druggan@Michael_Druggan·
> If these AI advances were coupled with a push for better social welfare They are though. The leaders of every frontier lab (Sam Altman, Elon Musk, Dario amodei, Demomis Hadabi);have expressed that if we achieve AGI/ASI that gives us great economic abundance they want that to be shared with all humanity. Even today you can spend a paltry sum ($20/mo) to get access to an amazingly useful tool that even billionaires from just a decade ago would be envious of
English
1
0
2
74
Sean
Sean@seamsay·
@littmath I like the idea, I just don't see a future where we get to bear the fruits of it. If these AI advances were coupled with a push for better social welfare then maybe I'd feel mildly optimistic, but as it stands I just don't see how anyone gets to research in 10 years time.
English
1
0
0
55
Daniel Litt
Daniel Litt@littmath·
Fully endorse this view. I have some worries about how AI tools will change the profession of mathematics, specifically around training. But the fundamental goal has to be to do good science, and clearly AI tools can help with that.
Acer@AcerFur

@hakunamakunana @0ranguchad The reason I do math is because I want to know what is true and understand why that’s the case, and it doesn’t matter to me whether that comes from a human or a machine. You are right that problems being solved spawns more problems, but those new problems are often much deeper!

English
15
24
300
22.6K
Sean
Sean@seamsay·
@ObscuredLotus @loserbent Not much, TBH... It was all too long ago for me to remember. I don't remember anything about pedophilia though!
English
0
0
2
426
sammy
sammy@loserbent·
they're saying i'm autistic on the internet *crowd boos* but they say i have the girl autism *crowd cheers* but the person saying it is... steven "destiny" bonnell? *crowd murmurs in confusion*
English
13
43
3.2K
212K
Sean retweetledi
Pádraig Murchadhfinn
Pádraig Murchadhfinn@murchadhfinn·
Trump would have to do something really bad, like spray paint a plane, before Starmer will condemn him.
English
76
3K
19K
172.7K
Sean retweetledi
Zack Polanski
Zack Polanski@ZackPolanski·
Spray paint a plane and they'll detain you without trial and call you a terrorist. Kidnap the foreign head of state - and Keir Starmer will make it clear we've played no part in it but will wait for the scheduled press conference in a few hours before potentially condemning it.
English
2.7K
6.7K
33.5K
1.2M
Sean retweetledi
owl
owl@owl_posting·
it is official. david budden has solved the Navier–Stokes existence and smoothness problem. and, much like grigori perelman, has left the internet, left society, and is now retired, a recluse, living in a hut at the top of small mountain in the midwest
English
19
20
1K
119K
Sean retweetledi
LUCIL∀
LUCIL∀@denpanopticon·
it's important to not dehumanize war criminals. Not because they deserve empathy, but because calling them subhuman and monsters naturalizes their actions and tacitly absolves them of their misdeeds. You have to remember that they are made of the same material as you.
English
18
3.4K
17.8K
291.5K
Sean retweetledi
Paul Novosad
Paul Novosad@paulnovosad·
Yes, AI will accelerate inequality. But the tech-enabled generous welfare state is unlikely. The wealthy don't want it, and they will control the politics more than ever. The zeitgeist is already shrinking the circle of social responsibility—illegal immigrants are out, legal immigrants are not far behind, and next it will the poor. We have the most tech-wealth-aligned adminstration ever and they are shrinking the welfare state and the circle of our responsibility. The working class has had some power over the generations, because masses were needed to grow food and run machines. It's hard to predict whether the labor share will continue falling, but it sure looks like a possibility! It's naive to think we'll respond by ever expanding the welfare state to low-productivity people around the world. More likely the powerful will build higher walls and tell themselves it's not their problem. Happy 2026!
Dwarkesh Patel@dwarkesh_sp

New blog post w @pawtrammell: Capital in the 22nd Century Where we argue that while Piketty was wrong about the past, he’s probably right about the future. Piketty argued that without strong redistribution of wealth, inequality will indefinitely increase. Historically, however, income inequality from capital accumulation has actually been self-correcting. Labor and capital are complements, so if you build up lots of capital, you’ll lower its returns and raise wages (since labor now becomes the bottleneck). But once AI/robotics fully substitute for labor, this correction mechanism breaks. For centuries, the share of GDP that goes to paying wages has been 2/3, and the share of GDP that’s been income from owning stuff has been 1/3. With full automation, capital’s share of GDP goes to 100% (since datacenters and solar panels and the robot factories that build all the above plus more robot factories are all “capital”). And inequality among capital holders will also skyrocket - in favor of larger and more sophisticated investors. A lot of AI wealth is being generated in private markets. You can’t get direct exposure to xAI from your 401k, but the Sultan of Oman can. A cheap house (the main form of wealth for many Americans) is a form of capital almost uniquely ill-suited to taking advantage of a leap in automation: it plays no part in the production, operation, or transportation of computers, robots, data, or energy. Also, international catch-up growth may end. Poor countries historically grew faster by combining their cheap labor with imported capital/know-how. Without labor as a bottleneck, their main value-add disappears. Inequality seems especially hard to justify in this world. So if we don’t want inequality to just keep increasing forever - with the descendants of the most patient and sophisticated of today’s AI investors controlling all the galaxies - what can we do? The obvious place to start is with Piketty’s headline recommendation: highly and progressively tax wealth. This might discourage saving, but it would no longer penalize those who have earned a lot by their hard work and creativity. The wealth - even the investment decisions - will be made by the robots, and they will work just as hard and smart however much we tax their owners. But taxing capital is pointless if people can just shift their future investment to lower tax countries. And since capital stocks could grow really fast (robots building robots and all that), pretty soon tax havens go from marginal outposts to the majority of global GDP. But how do you get global coordination on taxing capital, when the benefits to defecting are so high and so accessible? Full automation will probably lead to ever-increasing inequality. We don’t see an obvious solution to this problem. And we think it’s weird how little thought has gone into what to do about it. Many more thoughts from re-reading Piketty with our AGI hats on at the post in the link below.

English
12
21
215
83.1K
Sean retweetledi
Laura Elliott
Laura Elliott@TinyWriterLaura·
it’s weird to me when people argue that men are fundamentally degenerates who can’t help but sexually harass & abuse women & kids. i know lots of men who aren’t making porn of women & kids. they’re normal. do you want us to treat men like animals? that’s what you’re arguing here
English
44
876
8.7K
161.9K
Sean retweetledi
big brane boi
big brane boi@bcubeddd·
“I don’t like anything other scientists have done in the last 50 years and by God I will make this everyone’s problem”
big brane boi tweet media
English
28
6
150
10.9K
Sean retweetledi
Nirmalya Kajuri
Nirmalya Kajuri@Kaju_Nut·
These days whenever someone starts talking about physics being stuck in my comments and I feel the urge to explain, I first check their profile to see if they have an alternative theory. 9 times out of 10, I am confronted with "John's Fractal Multiverse Theory" or "Dave's Entangled Dimensions Model." Saves me a lot of time.
English
30
13
176
32.8K