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Stanford University

Stanford Seminar - Citadel of One- Individuality and the Rise of the Machines, Suzanne Sadedin

Stanford University via YouTube

Overview

Biologically speaking, individuals emerge when the interests of potentially distinct entities are tied together, such that they evolve as a collective. From this perspective, we can make sense of the biological diversity of individuals, and it becomes clear that individuality is not a binary trait, but a continuum encompassing entities as diverse as human cell lineages, ant colonies and fields of dandelions. Individual-like entities can emerge and compete at multiple scales simultaneously, from cells to super-organisms. Theorists have argued that selection at the level of coalitions has likely played a powerful role in shaping human evolution, and the cognitive architecture that drives us to competitively support our in-groups remains powerful today. Collective entities such as governments, corporations and other human institutions may co-opt this architecture to emerge as partial, non-sentient individuals evolving in parallel with humans. Such collectives tend to accrue power faster than individuals within modern societies, and technological advances are accelerating this trend. Should we expect more mercy from our collectives than our bodies offer to our cells?

Syllabus

Introduction.
American Gods (Neil Gaiman novel).
What is an individual?.
Aphids, corals, jellyfish.
Kin selection.
Multilevel selection.
How do collective entities emerge?.
Superorganisms.
Cell lineages.
Cooperation and policing.
Human sociality.
Groupishness.
Modern human collectives.
Collective fitness.
Unique features.
Power inequalities.
Cigarettes.
Use of machine learning by collectives.
Hypothetical example.
Sentient beings need not apply.
Shortsighted optimization.
Future research.

Taught by

Stanford Online

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