Need to dive into this some: https://x.com/elder_plinius/status/1831450930279280892?t=q1FwKfrEVKE-4VA1LNZ35w&s=19
does the ai have to be an authority figure? or is it enough that people just worship the idea of ai?
@CampbellHutcheson Do you have a specific example here?
I was imagining the AI as the deity that people sought guidance from / worshipped.
If there was a church of AI where there isn’t a specific LLM that they worship, but they worship the concept of AI as bringing light to humanity, that could resolve yes.
The key here is that people have to be seeking moral guidance and consultation from the AI in an organized manner.
As an example a meet up group where people talk about how great AI is as a tech tool wouldn’t count because they aren’t using it as a moral compass.
Happy to keep clarifying here if I haven’t answered your question.
The self-driving car pioneer said there are “a couple thousand people” coming together to build a spiritual connection between humans and AI
@manyu i do think they need to know it's an AI, although if you have a specific case, I'm happy to take a look at it.
if we have two different groups worshipping LLMs that add up to 10k, the market resolves to yes
Alex Tabarrok on the same topic: https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2023/10/ai-worship.html
Random-question-which-I-think-would-help-intuitions: How long do cults usually take to form (to 10k)? How long do various other groups take to form (like the mentioned ostrich racing ;) )
(Though the question is still vague about whether someone using chatgpt in the place of a catholic pastor, but who must still follow the roughly standard catholic practices counts or not)
Mostly because, even if we get some odd sect in some town that manages to get a bunch of people following a LLM, I don't think they'd reach 10k in five years? I imagine UFO cults took longer to get up off the ground, and they had the benefit of background UFO conspiracy stuff.
Internet, however, makes it significantly more likely. It is also harder to count actually-treating, such as if some possibly-serious person has an LLM do twitch streams that are 99% popular for the meme.
But I just don't have great intuitions for how quickly certain groups can grow. Obviously some companies can grow surprisingly quickly, but there's a lot more friction to joining a 'LLM worship'.
@jacksonpolack Sure, but typically there is also a higher authority figure than the pastor, be they bishop or deity. Does the market only resolve if the AI is the highest authority?
@MartinRandall the intent of the question is that the LLM fills the role of the deity, although the adherents don't have to call it a deity per se.
As an example, if they said "I follow the way of AI" rather than "I worship AI", I think it still counts.
@JamesDillard maybe change "a religious authority" to "the religious authority"?
Although... what about polytheism? If there are multiple deities, one of which is an AI, how does that resolve?
@MartinRandall polytheism resolves as yes for sure.
i can see how religious authority figure can be misleading, but I meant it in the sense of deity, not in the sense of a teacher.
@jack Do you want to make a large bet? I can do up to M100k @ 60%. Can be virtualized if you don't want to tie up money.
@Mira I think that James will resolve this YES, but I expect the actual result to be NO.
That is, I do not think he correctly understands the concept of a religious authority figure.
Some qualitative comparisons for what 10,000 people feels like:
More than 10k people often visit Antarctica in a week in summers.
Luxury watch collectors in the US ~10k
There are ~10,000 Tornado chasers in the US
~10,000 sand sculptors in the world
Approximately 10,000 people in the U.S. are legally practicing falconry.
~10-15k wing-suit flyers per year
~10,000 penguin counters in the world
Arctic Circle Travelers are estimated around 10k annually
Lawn Mower Racers - ~10k annually
Toe Wrestling Competitors - ~10k annually
Professional Air Guitarists - ~13k annually
Ostrich Riders - ~12k annually
Pumpkin Boat Racers has ~10k annual participants in the US
Quidditch Players: Inspired by Harry Potter, ~25,000 people play in organized leagues globally.
Swamp Soccer Players - approximately 10,000 people participate globally.
Underwater Pumpkin Carvers are ~10k worldwide, though mostly in the US
Some religious examples:
Raelism - a UFO religion
By the early 2010s, the group was claiming 60,000 members internationally
Aetherius society - a religion to worship the "cosmic masters" and extraterrestrial species has ~10k global members
Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster - 10s of 1000s of members
@firstuserhere TIL that lawn mower racing is a thing, along with toe wrestling, ostrich riding, pumpkin boat racing, quidditch IRL, and swamp soccer.