Sunday, July 9, 2023

Urgent Hope For New International Collaboration to Prevent Climate Extinction

 THREE ITEMS:

1. Friday July 7: News and Evaluation of a Very Important Climate Conference at Science France (Embassy f France in US)
2. FOLLOW-UP ON WHERE IS HOPE, TANGIBLY
3. MORE TECHNICAL Details of new science/tech/microeconomics options

1. ============================================================
Sent to Science France and two key US partners:

Thank you again for organizing that hugely important climate conference yesterday. 

Earlier today, I voiced the hope that you and NSF could build a new partnership, which in my view could literally save the human species from extinction within this century, due to aspects of climate change which some of us now understand much better than we did in the past. But because you probably KNOW you want to build stronger bridges to NSF, before you have a chance to read and evaluate what Ward, Wadhams and I have learned about the extinction threat
(https://build-a-world.org/doku.php?id=climate:risks ), I first should introduce you to two key people, Prof. Ganesh (Kumar) Venayagamoorthy and Dr. Fahmida Chowdhury of NSF. **IF** everything follows the best possible path, I will basically be one of the unpaid (or little paid) helpers to you, Kumar and Fahmida, who together should be the true leaders of the new climate science and action planning which has a chance to save us from what looks like a path to extinction. 

Fahmida and Kumar would probably prefer that they get to define themselves directly to you. However, to raise your initial interest, in her, she probably will not mind if I pick randomly from what I see when I search on "NSF Fahmida climate:"
https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2022/nsf22546/nsf22546.htm. Better direct high level communication between substantive people in France Science and in the NSF International Office probably means direct contact between you two.

 Kumar I have had more contact with... Beyond that, I do not know. If ... you and Fahmida and Kumar may indeed become a very serious official triangle. Let us all pray that it be so. 

=======

But now -- as my wife and I and Frederica mentioned to Ligia yesterday ... neither my wife nor I are great communicators at the public, professional level which this effort badly needs. We are both scientists and science managers, and can be helpful in getting you very essential information, but now you will see why I apologize when I try my best to translate from my real language (mathematics and images) into English words. I was very useful to Senator Specter in 2009 (the year of climate legislation) in getting him the information HE needed on climate issues (my first responsibility in his office that year), but it was crucial that there were others to hold the lead. 

My impression from the COMBINATION of yesterday and from the information on climate which I collected under Kumar for an IEEE effort (see the climate block at build-a-world.org, run by Gary Barnhard) is that:

1. The SDG to improve conditions underwater in the ocean is receiving far less money than other SDGs, BECAUSE 
the folks managing most of the money IMAGINE that the main costs/risks are costs due to the direct effects on industries like fishing and beach pollution. THERE IS STILL A HUGE COMMUNICATION GAP IN MAKING THE WORLD TRULY AWARE THAT THE LIVES OF ALL US HIGHER MAMMALS ARE REALLY AT STAKE IN THIS CENTURY. For that, I urge you all to help disseminate the brief but well documented paper by Ward, Werbos and Wadhams.

2. I ask myself -- how could humanity get orders of magnitude greater benefit on the metric of reducing the probability of human extinction in this century versus billions of dollars spent focused on  that goal? 

I wanted to cc Alexander Turra of university of Sao Paolo, but do not see his email address. However, since he received his PhD from Campinas, I can cc my old deeply respected from Prof. Arnoldo de Hoyos there, whom Alexander should be in contact with in any case, along with Steenbock, who is crucial to point 3 of the climate strategy **I** have tried to support.
http://www.werbos.com/climate_extinction_risk_and_solutions.htm). Alexander made the important point that we need to include more effective focused strategic thinking, to measure and maximize metrics like this. 

I pray/beg that the new coming global ocean climate conferences UNOC in 2024 and 2025 include highly visible focused sessions exactly on the extinction threat, the science behind it, new R&D needs to understand it better, AND NEW DATA COLLECTION AND MODELING TO BETTER SUPPORT THE TWO KEY METRICS implied by Ward, Wadhams and Werbos:

[(1)] Measures of ocean stratification, especially focusing on the flow of oxygen to the surface from the Humboldt and Gulf Stream Currents;

[(2)]] Measures of ocean fertilization, especially where those currents now upwell oxygen, focusing as much as possible on the specific nutrients which cause net growth of the archaea which produced H2S in 5 to 12of the previous mass extinctions of life  on earth.

**IF** I had not retired from NSF in 2015, I would have long ago pushed for a new thrust (perhaps in the EFRI area of NSF Engineering?) to better UNDERSTAND and MEASURE the risks, starting from miniworkshops by video to include at least Peter Ward, Peter Wadhams, Kirschvink and Hazen, with me and Metta Spencer included in the group asking questions and seeking to map out what are the questions which reasonable scientists can disagree on and research approaches to answering them. 

In the science panel yesterday, I was deeply worried that the new efforts would be ... basically useless... in saving our species, because of focus on metrics which are worthwhile but well within the scope of other existing efforts, like what the present SDG funding can cover. But Prof. Collado-Vides and Melania Guerra substantially raised my hopes and my spirits. 
(Some would ask: how could a mentally balanced person feel such extreme ups and downs, directly and personally? 
As it happens, I have published on the deep neuroscience underlying the insights of Freud and Jung, and even collaborated with people like Karl Pribram. It is a major, scary mental health problem in the world today when so many key people are so devoid of affect that they do NOT react emotionally to real, serious threats to the survival of everyone we love.. and of all humans, and other higher mammals... or that they avoid problems they could help us solve as they bury their heads in denial, like an ostrich.) 

Thank you again so much, Ligia and Melania!

But as you now handle complex jobs, under complicated funding systems, you can only devote PART of your time to the all-important work you highlighted on Saturday:

Ligia -- on the modeling of key ocean chemistry variables, at depth and over time, important to BOTH key metrics (1) and (2),
and Madelina -- on the ocean stratification issues, especially as ... maybe she and Peter Wadhams should be funded to work together.

(The Gulf Stream issues could cause mass damage, far beyond any climate damage we see yet, much sooner than the larger Humboldt current will. Small things on a global scale -- like Paris and Britain freezing over. Really. Fimbulwinter. Like Peter Wadhams, my wife and I have seen those waters first hand, as well as the Eddas archives, and plan to do so again this month.)  

I was deeply shocked last year when I overlaid the two key data sources (NOAA on ocean chemistry, and earlier sources on stratification) and saw how accurately (terribly!) the locations matched. Fertilizer concentration is now in exactly the worst possible locations. Yes, we need to learn more, but we also should not just breathe easy at this time. I would guess the problem is that archaea food floating through the ocean usually gets eaten up quickly in zones of normal high oxygen, but builds up to scary levels in zones of high oxygen.

As Ligia was talking, I also thought of smaller models of euxinia in Black Sea, Chesapeake and even parts of Florida, which should feed into this effort. 

======

But... when I agreed to try to collect the information which Kumar asked for... I ONLY got crucial new integrated breakthrough information on THREE of the five points at http://www.werbos.com/climate_extinction_risk_and_solutions.htm -- the RISKS
(as in Ward, Wadhams and Werbos, but still in need of a larger full chapter), the EFFICIENT NET GHG reduction which we could get from new ways of making electricity and from transportation (two areas where our IEEE Power and Energy Society can claim to represent the very best engineering science information available from all over the earth). Even worse, my unique personal duties to the internet/AGI/IOT challenge have grown, because of a new technology I have pioneered. (See the one page abstract from my plenary talk at WCCI2022, the main IEEE conference connecting those technologies and more.) 

Your conference yesterday helped me appreciate... my five points, and the IEEE technology and market design supporting them, are mainly focused on metric [(1)] (and the great spinoffs possible like greater energy security and peace). But Ligia reminded me that modeling and data to support OTHER aspects of her work, related to metric [(2)], are also important.

There are again a case where ACTION ON LAND TO PREVENT DISASTER IN THE OCEAN (As Luis Almagro
https://www.oas.org/en/about/secretary_general.asp stressed) is what we really need to focus on more, BOTH to save our species but also to get funding for efforts like the new direction which he is trying to lead. Our existing strategies for cleaner making of electricity and transportation (Far beyond anything the leaders of the EU seem to be told about) are two of the three strategies on land most important to metric [(1)]. But my point 3 -- agriculture and related -- is crucial BOTH to reducing net GHG, and ALSO to reducing killer fertilization. 

AND -- I did the best I could to get a good overview of point 3, even though I never found anyone to take over a section of a book to handle that. (In truth, I probably would have invited Alexander Turra to take the lead, if he and Arnoldo and Walter Steenbock can agree and take over. IF Kumar ever gets support for a revitalization of the book project, I would propose that he explore that option, after we check some.) 

BUT THE KEY IS THAT ACTION ON LAND is what we need most, aside from rather modest traditional efforts to prevent excess fertilizer runoff from the land. Agricultural practices on land are the key target. MOST money being spent that way today has little benefit, but huge benefits are possible. Arnoldo and I did write a joint draft section 5, on the web, which was part of a start.

IN SUM -- there are crucial life or death scientific and technical and economic details. I deeply hope that a new network led by you three can create the networks needed to effectively address these details. And I hope that you will not hesitate to draw on all of us for the essential help you will need.

Best regards,

    Paul

P. I am also very grateful to anyone who cares enough to have read THIS far. 
For more complete technical information on what I found last year see:
Since many of us may be in DC area very soon, I would be delighted to get together in person again, either at your local location or (best for me) near one of the DC area Metro stations in Virginia. 

=======================================================
2. Follow up sent that day, on the "hope" side:
Please forgive me for conveying a negative picture, in the details, because I wanted to be brief. I was too brief.

The conference yesterday fits very well with the new research needed to understand and quantify the RISKS of human extinction.

I mentioned, but did not even summarize, what a huge difference the IEEE information can give us on the POSITIVE side,
IF people pay more attention to the ocean risks and to new international partnerships.

A very brief summary --

When I look at the depressing menu of choices which Von CDer Leyen keeps offering us... the good news is that new technologies have been proven in the OAS area -- Chile, US and Brazil especially -- which could basically cut the costs to people in the EU by a factor of more than two.
In truth, we discussed these in a more direct current way in recent discussions with India and Africa, but if you are interested I would be happy to share the details with anyone on these lists.

In essence, people in EU have been told that electricity consumers would have to double what they pay for an all-renewable new system, because of costs like backup, storage, and importing PVs from China (or wires under the Mediterranean or North Sea). There are new proven technologies which make that unnecessary, using new control technologies, new solid breakthroughs in heat-to-electricity conversion for use in solar power towers, and thermal storage.
If you want the electricity bills of people living in the EU to be cut in half, we have probed very deeply how to move that way.

Those are technical discussions for the future, but I really should have noted that there is huge upside potential worth exploring, available in this decade.

=====================================

3 SOME OF THE DETAILS, discussed before with links to India and Africa,
both of which have very important underutilized technical potential. Here is what I sent in November 2022 to an IEEE group:

AVOIDING CLIMATE EXTINCTION really should be a major block (maybe even 50%!) of a new NEPR. 

I have a weird belief that staying alive trumps everything. If we are fully sane humans, the sight of the gallows really should drive us to be FULLY awake. 

DID I cc you on the short but focused and blunt review of COP27 which I sent to the internet discussion groups I participate in (like Mei-Lin Fung's https://peoplecentered.net/people/mei-lin-fung/)? If you say "GO", I will. I would even be happy to forward that to this entire committee, if you think I should. 

The key message was that the news from COP27 made me fear for our lives, but AT THE SAME TIME an IEEE international conference based in Nanjing (see attached) made me much more hopeful than COP27 did. Thanks to the book project which Kumar asked me to start up (still in process, with LOTS of backup material beyond what is at build-a-world.org), we have an organized collection of exciting new options for energy and climate policy, which would be of huge value to the world economy and to national security within ten years, which neither EU nor Biden nor Biden's advisors know about. 

The exciting message from Nanjing was that new pathways are opening up to connect us, and IEEE in general, to the highest levels of decision-making. The high leader behind that ICCSI conference now has a new position, right in Tian an Men square, and may be willing to create a pathway to implement John Kerry's proposal for a climate survival division (specializing in the extinction threat, which is far more real and close than most people even imagine) in the Security Council. That is what I have given priority to this week.

And yes, the name "Xi" has often come up. I have often wondered how you might feel about those discussions. 

But -- at a minimum, IEEE could endorse what John Kerry and Guterres (UN SEc Gen) proposed very publicly just a few years ago. That proposal mainly died because bureaucrats in New York redirected Guterres and Kerry, but the redirections did not work as well as they hoped. Interest from Xi could radically reverse the situation. 

IEEE could even ask for a better pathway of climate information, real science and real IEEE-connected technologies, to support the new climate division. 

Does IEEEUSA have a special role in bridging the all-important gap between what the most advanced and relevant IEEE societies know, and the policy level (AND investors)? 

Truly efficient and intelligent power grids are PART of the "making electricity" priority in the draft book, one of the two parts for which we have the most information and new but proven options (ranging from important tools ready to go now, to areas where RD&D could be much more transformative than anything I see now, including the best proposals to NSF which I have had some occasion to review this past year ). But the transportation part is also strong. China is doing much more for world climate already than all of the COP actions taken together, because of its actions to support electric cars, but China and the US could do much better yet if we learn the right ways to cooperate (with mutual protections of course). 

In truth, my ability to wordsmith in THIS political environment ... should I even try? 

BEFORE any of us try... is a 50% climate section on the table as a possibility?

CONCRETELY... 

This would mean, ROUGHLY...

1. More rapid support, development, RD&D, deployment of what Kumar has championed, DSOPF, dynamic stochastic optimal power flow, AND market redesign to better support its use and its benefits, as in the draft chapter by Momoh and proposals by O'Neill and Ilic.

2. Liberating DOE from the entrails of the oil company hydrogen barriers, and returning more support  advanced Brayton for use both in space and in power tower solar farms (not requiring chips from China). That should include a major new US export push to support Heliogen and GE in that specific area, and ALSO accelerated RD&D for the more advanced (efficient, lower $/kwh) next generation of Brayton

3. Strengthened partnership with Chile to push and enhance thermal storage, to be integrated into advanced power tower solar farms and DSOPF to control them all.

4. OK, New focused (and well-informed, well-grounded) R&D on quantum RLADP (the key to quantum DSOPF), which allows efficiency and protection from unexpected disturbances in a more comprehensive DSOPF ranging all the way from markets to semiconductors in the power electronics. his is a new technology which I presented in my plenary award talk at WCCI2022 (abstract attached).

5. Similar opportunities for cars, consistent with the old IEEEUSA position (which I posted at werbos.com/oil.htm), accelerating BOTH rechargeable lithium-air batteries USING THE ORIGINAL DEVELOPER, and alternate net-zero liquids, and markets designed to better advance both where they benefit consumers. DSOPF can play a crucial role in the recharge aspect. [No, it is not abut cobalt. Even for rare earths, it is intelligent control, not resources, which gave China an edge.]
In truth, Sadoway may also know of other big breakthrough options, but the present system is shutting out all of them.
...
Best regards,

    Paul 

P.S. Between now and December 15, I also have to further deadlines, one for USGOV and one for INdia,
as well as the ICCSI follow-ons which I hope for. 
==========================================================

-- As I think it over, I should have said more about why these new technologies (US and IEEE) are so important and urgent, even if they are not visible in any US or EU climate policy yet
I have tracked EU climate policy very closely for a few years now, watching mainly France24 and Deutsche Welle some, almost never CNN. Greens (most powerful party in Germany) convinced Von Der Leyen EU must go all renewable ASAP, not only for climate but in face of serious energy security issues there. But then industry -- both electric and fossil -- convinced her that the REAL cost of renewables is many times higher than the generating costs the advocates have old her about, because of backups, intermittency, time of day issues. They plan a huge expansion in expensive LNG now because the renewables people are working hard to sell her DO have more than double cost growth, past generation, because of the time of day and intermittency (and raw transmission investment rules) 
issues.

The new technologies and market designs I mentioned get rid of at least half the cost to the user! 
Time of day is no problem when the specific new type of storage, thermal storage hooked up to Brayton and intelligent control, is BETTER than baseload 24/7 for load following! 
















Monday, June 26, 2023

Response Submitted to NSF/TIP request for guidance on new roadmap

This was the response I submitted today to:
 https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2023/04/28/2023-08995/request-for-information-rfi-on-developing-a-roadmap-for-the-directorate-for-technology-innovation 
You too could submit your response to this open call for suggesions for he new roadmap called for in new legislation!

 Dr. Paul J. Werbos 

 1. Context: Greater Needs Which TIP Could Meet To the Maximum

The CHIPS and Science Act, and the creation of TIP, offer us all a dramatic new opportunity to increase the probability that the US and humanity as a whole can survive the deep and serious new threats which have arisen in recent years. From my experience as an NSF Program Director in 1988-2015 (reflected in comments below), working across many disciplines and seeing connections which had fallen between the cracks, I saw both huge unmet opportunities connecting the 10 technology focus areas of TIP, and new risks which my friends in the UN system call “existential”, threats to the very existence of the human species. 

 1.1. The Global Risks (Which Will Drive the Security Outcomes)

Since my retirement from NSF, I have been working more intensely with the Millennium Project (MP) (www.millennium-project.org),  a global network of leading futures research nodes, and also with the IEEE and the National Space Society (NSS), in order to help as much as I can with the seven grand challenges which I start from in a new book chapter (Consciousness_v5_Bangalore, attached): 

================= 1.1. Changes in Technology Which Demand Deeper Consciousness 
The website build-a-world.org posts a few of the extensive new materials already available in 2022 from IEEE, NSF and other deep scientific efforts on: 

     Four Great Fears (“Existential Threats”)
        --  Internet/AGI/IOT if we fail to reach Sustainable Intelligent Internet (SII)
       – Climate extinction, all of our species and many others 
       – Misuse (1) of nuclear tech (e.g. werbos.com/NATO_terrorism.pdf) and (2) biotech, e.g. “Borg” 

l  Two great Hopes GROWTH:

- Quantum leap in attaining human potential, including our connections to each other and our noosphere 

- Economically sustainable settlement of space (e.g. National Space Society)

l  SITUATIONAL AWARENESS FOR HUMANS IN COSMOS :

Use of AGI and new constellation sensing technology (from electromagnetics to new force fields such as axial Higgs) to observe the sky and better understand the place of our species in the larger cosmos

This paper cannot get deep into all these complex issues, but this list should be enough to wake us up to the fact that better understanding and expression of consciousness is a matter of life or death for all humans. 
============================================ 

 Working through the MP, many of us have helped support and upgrade the work of the UN Secretary General Guterres to develop new mechanisms to understand and meet these challenges (https://www.un.org/en/content/common-agenda report/assets/pdf/Common_Agenda_Report_English.pdf). We had substantial discussions with them and with the Chinese about creating new divisions to focus more effectively on the emerging internet/AGI/IOT complex of risks and on climate. 

 In our recent discussions, the official representatives of most nations supported his call for the creation of a new UN agency on AI, intended to oversee the entire spectrum of new issues, technologies, and RD&D needed to survive the emerging complex of threats. Unfortunately, this new agency, on its own, may simply not be able to map, understand and advance the whole complex of new technologies needed to survive the minefield of new risks. 

The World Academy of Arts and Sciences (WAAS) has offered to try to build up the all-important new network of RD&D and information, to feed into the new global policy decisions and global investments, but even the WAAS does not have the level of scientific and technical depth on its own even to know what the key issues are emerging from the most advanced research from the NSF and IEEE research communities and review capabilities. 

 1.2. Overview of the New Opportunities and Global Needs For TIP 

 These gaps and needs in the UN system provide a huge new opportunity and need for TIP to fill the gap, to build the new partnerships, stretching from universities and private laboratories (and other agencies and nations) all the way to the global system, strengthening the constructive role of the best we have in the US. Ideally, TIP should create a high-level office, sibling to the International Office of NSF, charged with a complete integrated response to all seven of these challenges. However, because this response must focus down to ten pages, because I have passed on suggestions regarding the climate threat by other channels, and because the nuclear and biowar technologies involve sensitive information, I will focus here on new directions and opportunities to make the world much more effective in addressing the internet/AGI/IOT threats.


 2. TIP Focus Areas, New Opportunities and the Internet/AGI/IOT Connected Complex of Risks 

 2.1. AGI 

 “AGI”, artificial general intelligence, refers to a rapidly emerging new type of artificial intelligence or machine learning (focus area one on your list). Today’s culture, ranging from mass media but even to “experts” widely cited in policy and media circles, simply does not have a trustworthy roadmap of what AGI already is, and will be in the future. 

 The reasons for this are two-fold: (1) a need for more connections between disciplines, which TIP and a new focus area within TIP is uniquely placed to create; and (2) gaps in public education, an urgent new piece of the STEM agenda. 

 The best true global overview of this problem can be seen by carefully reviewing the diverse viewpoints represented at: http://1dddas.org/activities/infosymbiotics-dddas2020-october-2-4-2020/dddas2020-video-presentations. The 2020 and 2022 conferences were both organized by Dr. Frederica Darema, who originated the interagency DDDAS effort and whom my wife Dr. Ludmila Dolmatova Werbos and I still assist. In both conferences, one group of highly respected experts would say “X is impossible,” while another presented its demonstrations of X, which in turn was just a first step on a well-plotted roadmap leading to what some people call “artificial super intelligence” (though few of those people know the mathematical principles which make that possible, doable, and risky, but risky NOT to do.) 

 Another overview of the diversity of mainstream experts can be seen in the background material collected by the MP to prepare for its proposal this past week, in response to an invitation from OpenAI.

 Even today, the best strategic roadmap now in existence to make some of the important connections which need to be expanded may be found at: https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2007/nsf07579/nsf07579.htm. That EFRI/COPN roadmap was the outcome of a unique deep crossdisciplinary dialogue across all the relevant program directors and research areas at NSF, pointing towards a new integrated understanding of mathematical general intelligence (MGI) including both AGI and a new approach to understanding general intelligence in the mammal brain
The NSF EFRI BRAID topic was also an important positive step, but we now see a much larger world of unmet opportunities and gaps than we did even in 2009. 

 In a talk to the World Economic Forum, Sergey Brin described how he initiated the great Deep Learning Revolution, which will go far beyond the early narrow work on Generative AI -- work which is large compared to the past but tiny compared to what is coming, for good or ill. Brin describes how he “knew” that deep learning would not work, based on what all the mainstream AI experts told him, until he saw the outcomes of a grant funded by EPRI COPN, a grant to Ng and LeCun which I personally pushed through the system over several types of friction and inertia still in existence. For a link to Brin’s talk, and to my own plenary talk at NIPS 2017, see http://drpauljohn.blogspot.com/2017/01/deep-learning-and-new-ai-you-aint-seen.html 

 2.2. Quantum AGI -- Connecting To Focus Areas 2 and 3 

 By the time of the 2017 conference, NIPS had grown into a major focus of the computer industry with neural networks, due, in my view, to the great efforts of Yann LeCun in computer science. But before that, the rapid expansion of neural networks and deep learning was first pioneered by the World Congress on Computational Intelligence (WCCI) series of conferences, a joint activity of IEEE and of the International Neural Network Society, dating back to 1988. Even today, WCCI conferences are the technical lead in many areas, especially any of those which involve engineering applications, such as the core missions of climate and energy, nuclear and biotech, and space and vehicle technology. 

 In 2022, IEEE granted me the Frank Rosenblatt Award, its lead technical field award for all of the technologies covered in the WCCI conferences. More important: I attach the abstract of my acceptance speech, which gives a one page roadmap of the past and future of AGI, with citations. That includes a link to the roadmap of 2014 https://arxiv.org/abs/1404.0554 which China (led by Tsinghua, NSFC and CAS) then followed, putting it ahead of the US in many crucial technologies still little known in the US mainstream computer science community. (For example, I have seen their new systems applying machine learning to interception missions in space beyond what any US groups have mastered as yet.)

 But my 2022 abstract goes on to say: 
===================== 
This year, we have opened the door to a new revolution. Just as adaptive analog networks, neural networks, massively and provably open up capabilities beyond old sequential Turing machines, the quantum extension of RLADP offers power far beyond what the usual Quantum Turing Machines (invented by David Deutsch) can offer. It offers true Quantum AGI, which can multiply capabilities by orders of magnitude in and application domain which requires higher intelligence, such as observing the sky, management of complex power grids, and “quantum bromium” (hard cybersecurity). See "Quantum technology to expand soft computing." Systems and Soft Computing 4 : 200031. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772941922000011 and links on internet issues at build-a-world.org. 
======================================================
 One of the public interest lawyers in the NSS community asked me to file a patent on QAGI as I defined it (VERY different from older attempts to combine quantum and AGI), complete with a discussion of how to do the hardware implementation on the preferred platforms (quantum dots, above all). That reminded me of the time when I worked for NSF, when the Office of General Counsel (Charles Brown) urged me to patent some of my work before then. (See https://patents.google.com/patent/US6581048B1/en). Therefore, I did go ahead and file that patent, now pending. Full implementation across the wide range of applications domains would be a large undertaking; therefore, I intend to use this patent as a way to accelerate the field, as I did with the previous work (without which we would not have had the deep learning revolution!). 

 In my last years at NSF, my core activities included AGI, electric power and a quantum technology activity https://arxiv.org/abs/0709.3310 which was discontinued after my retirement. As part of that, I was NSF liaison to QISCOG, the interagency group to coordinate quantum information sciences. From that work, I learned that the US faces a huge gap in educating people to understand the importance and use of master equations (which I learned about from the texts by Walls and Milburn and Carmichael, whose group has been a great partner to me in recent years, and from the ECCS Nanohub project). Simple education about the true foundations of quantum physics is a crucial [art of actually getting something useful done from this new crossdisciplinary thrust area. 

 2.3. Quantum AGI -- Focus Areas 6 and 8 

 The entire roadmap of AGI, from technologies already coming online to advanced QAGI, and to further generations possible beyond what is envisioned in my patent pending, is relevant to all ten focus areas, in concrete ways I hope we will discuss more in the future. Focus areas 6 and 8 call out for special mention, however, because of their direct and urgent implications for the international big picture. Security of communications has been growing rapidly as an issue, threatening areas from currency systems, financial systems, weapons control, to fake news and more. Traditional bromium approaches to cybersecurity were simply not enough to prevent very massive and embarrassing hacks in recent years (which should be well known to anyone whose personal data was stored in OPM computers). These risks are growing rapidly, and do constitute an existential risk to us all. (It may be compared to the growing mass of miscalculation and gaps in information which led to World War I, but this time the potential damage is much much greater.) 

With this submission, I will attach a cybersecurity position statement which was passed unanimously by the IEEE Technical Policy Committee on Energy, where electric utilities had the greatest voice -- though other players entered the game as it went up higher in the system. At higher levels, there has been an intense but quiet debate: do we rely on Mutual Assured Destruction or on a mix of deterrence and defense, to prevent the level of risks which Gingrich and Congressman Trent Franks warned about (https://www.amazon.com/Second-After-John-Matherson-Novel-ebook/dp/B002LATV16/)? Many of us believe that it is growing riskier and riskier to rely on US ability to shut down other countries, when we ourselves are more vulnerable and becoming more vulnerable by the week. Many believe that relying on deterrence is the main lesson of the Cold War, but they need to understand history better. We need to rely in greater depth and understanding on the foundation created by Von Neumann and Morgenstern, who many of us believe should get the real credit for our survival so far. Von Neumann and Morgenstern is also the foundation we built on to create “the new AGI,” including quantum RLADP. If a hostile adversary (whose identity we cannot really establish) takes over a major currency or fleet of autonomous weapons overnight, the shock and the word urgent will be understood to be gross understatements. Since we have technology coming to dramatically reduce such risks, we really should proceed. Only by doing so in an open, scientific way can we avoid the kind of game play which led to World War I (and could actually kill us all, with great stunned shock as it happens). 

 3. Assorted Final Comments 

 Again, all seven of the challenges above merit much more science and connection, within and between each other. This submission is narrower, because the total range of issues hinted at here is already a challenge to our existing networks. But I do owe you a few final thoughts. The NSF emphasis on STEM is also important to all these challenges -- most specifically to challenge 1 (a fear) and challenge 6 (the grand hope of accelerating full human potential). Collaborations between the engineering and neuroscience/psychology parts of NSF played a crucial role in leading up to the IERI initiative https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2004/nsf04553/nsf04553.htm. Deeper understanding of the brain and the mind could take us much higher. The requirements for deeper understanding and enhancement of the highest levels of human potential, unifying approaches from all over the world, have become more and more a matter of sheer survival. Artificial super intelligence WILL be built, one way or another, but we still have hope of raising human minds and souls enough to maintain at least a balance, as is essential to survival not only of humans but of all our works. (I have chosen not to elaborate on my discussions with people like Teller and Schwinger within the scope of https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2013/nsf13554/nsf13554.htm, but this is an integrated strategy for survival.)

 The main advantages of quantum RLADP over traditional optimal control, reinforcement learning and approximate dynamic programming (for which I received the Rosenblatt Award) is its ability to cope with “minefield or “needle in a haystack optimization problems. These are problems in which the value function (or error function to be minimized) is highly nonconvex. The patent also extends this to the “Quantum Annealing of Things,” putting actual physical systems like a big laser to be controlled or a vehicle to be protected from exploding into a state of quantum superposition. A great partner to seek would be https://www.desi.lbl.gov/policies/, relevant to the important basic science of challenge 7 but also to strengthening the power of the NIF fusion system to accommodate targets like the D-D pellets designed by Perkins, which could be a huge benefit to energy goals on earth and in space.

Wednesday, June 7, 2023

Life or Death Gaps Between Real Science and the new UN Global Digital Compact


I was deeply delighted recently when one of you raised the hope that WAAS, the World Academy of Arts and Sciences (WAAS), might take over the essential and urgent task of bridging the gap between serious, advanced RD&D and the research mission of the new UN agency on AI. 

That was a great hope, like the hope I felt when Kerry, Guterres and EU announced they would focus new efforts in trying to reduce the threat of human extinction by the most dangerous type of climate change. Unfortunately, good intentions sometimes cause more harm than good when the implementation does not account for the full range of science, technology and rational market design needed to cope with very difficult new challenges, requiring even a new scientifically grounded understanding of human minds. The new challenges coming fast in the global internet require many massive changes, as fast as it is possible to do right; if we do not work VERY hard to start mobilizing the best that the old NSF and IEEE have ever done, a new UN agency can easily become prematurely ossified in many ways.

** IN THIS POST** ... I will address just ONE crucial aspect, the need to openly develop the most advanced new quantum information technology, ONE of the important key ingredients of the new US act in this area:
https://www.aip.org/fyi/2022/chips-and-science-act-enshrines-policy-new-nsf-technology-directorate


DOES WAAS know what it needs to know to fill his gap for the new UN agency? Not without special help from SOMEONE. Through this post, I will try to help that someone -- and pray that one of you chooses to be that someone -- but all I can do is flag some key points about quantum information crucial to the choices before us now, radically different from what you may know as yet.

WHY is new RD&D in quantum information S&T (QuIST) so crucial and so urgent as the Chips Act rightly highlights, thanks in part to Senator Warner of the Senate Intelligence Committee?? 

Two reasons:

(1) New cybersecurity threats, on everything from global monetary systems to fleets of weapons more advanced than you know about, and electric power, are more important and urgent than anything else being debated now for "the new internet." The new agency needs to START there, including the proposal a few years ago from Xi Jin Ping for international collaboration to limit or prevent the new kinds of backdoors in software and hardware which utility executives on IEEE USA EPC explained a few years ago (see attachment).

(2) True Quantum AGI, as defined in my WCCI award acceptance speech last year (abstract attached), is ONE of the two new directions rightly stressed in the IEEE EPC statement, making it possible to detect and prevent the kinds of hardware backdoor which have already started to cause major problems and are on track for far worse.

But should you believe that? Why, and how?

Just this morning, my wife rightly cited Gershenfeld of MIT who tells us not to overestimate the importance of modern quantum technology, for which he was one of the very most important real pioneers. The vast majority of people now being funded for quantum computing in US and EU are  working on Quantum Turing Machines (QTM). They owe a lot to Gershenfeld, and to David Deutsch of Oxford (who invented the Quantum Turing Machine). Just as EU climate action tends to channel certain established energy and political causes, WAAS will be under huge pressure to listen on what Gershenfeld just said, based on a very deep understandinding of QTMs. 

 But from 2007 to 2015, I had the unique good fortune of leading a unique funding activity at NSF
https://arxiv.org/abs/0709.3310 which gave me a chance to probe very deeply into these technologies, and develop a truly unique cognitive map of the entire field:
https://photos.app.goo.gl/qAy8giPzEjp1tZkj9. By bcc, I thank the former NSF Division director who asked for this. (I hope NSF will "build back better" in this activity now vacant in the US.) 

The new agency NEEDS to be fully informed of this entire territory, including emerging new options (being pursued outside the US and EU more effectively than here right now). 

THE QTM HAS LIMITED RELEVANCE TO CYBERSECURITY, FOR EXAMPLE,  but the Quantum RLADP technology
(the core of QAGI) is a very different story. THIS REQUIRES THAT A NEW AGENCY FULLY UNDERSTAND THE FULL NEW QUANTUM FOUNDATIONS ALREADY ADVANCED BY DEUTSCH AND GERSHENFELD (WHOM I WOULD LOVE TO HELP ON THIS), applied in a totally new way beyond what QTMs can do.

One of the big problems I learned in running QMHP (and serving as NSF member of the interagency Quantum Information S&T Coordinating group, QISCOG) is that MOST "experts" submitting proposals and plans had fatal errors in their understanding of David Deutsch's physics and how to apply it. (The physics is much more universal than the QTM example.) Thus I thank Yeshua ben David for arranging a mid-level seminar explaining the most important points
which key people in the new agency need to know about, to take the lead in new relevant quantum technology:

What can Quantum RLADP do orders of magnitude better than the existing (inadequate) cybersecurity hardware technologies like bromium or even bromium enhanced by DWave quantum optimization?

Effective parallel quantum search. 

In practical terms... it is uniquely suited to solve "needle in a haystack" or "minefield" optimization problems, problems which combine the two.  In technical terms, it offers orders of magnitude more performance for any number of flux gates or quantum dots (the most promising hardware embodiment) , when the value function or error function are highly nonmonotonic functions of the parameters to be tuned. This can be applied NOT ONLY to value functions or error functions defined by subroutines or circuits WITHIN a DWave kind of computing system, BUT ALSO TO PHYSICAL PLANTS TO BE STABILIZED WITHIN PHYSICAL BOUNDS, like the big laser I mentioned in my previous post. I call this extension "Quantum Annealing of Things," QuATh. 

Please forgive me a confession. The full technical details of QuATh, including a workplan for phased implementation, are included in a pending patent disclosure.

In previous decades, I had information rights to backpropagation (a necessary enabler of the "deep learning revolution", one of the two which won me the IEEE Frank Rosenblatt award). Half our family income traces back to reassignment of patent rights of the most powerful CLASSICAL RLADP optimization technology. I obtained these rights only after strong encouragement from Charles Brown, then at the NSF Office of General Counsel. If the lawyers at that time had blocked any development or use of backpropagation until my retirement from NSF in 2015... I hope that we can find a way forward despite such realities, which are even more essential now than they were then (because of what I know in my piece of the puzzle, which I hope  pass on as soon as possible). 

Best of luck to us all. Given the precarious state of humanity in this century, we need a LOT of that luck... 

Paul





On Thu, Jun 1, 2023 at 10:19 AM Paul Werbos <paubos@gmail.com> wrote:
On your nuclear question...

which has new urgency this week because of the Global Digital Compact (GDC) which the UN Secretary General Plans to Unveil in about three days... 

I was very excited this week to hear the LLNL international presentation on the technical details of their work on inertial fusion at NIF.
James Gaffney gave the kind of true cutting edge technical reality which we in IEEE have a unique ability to appreciate and understand. 

Unless you count stuff like cold fusion, I believe that LLNL leads the world in general in getting to ignition point.
They got there with the usual DT fusion, but Perkins of LLNL previously led development of more advanced D-D fuel pellets, which would truly revolutionize our situation both on earth and in space. Better performance in the D-D work they are already succeeding with would get us closer to great economics, and to the far more benign D-D option. (DD creates about 10% as many neutrons as DT does, and has plentiful fuel in vast cheap supply.) 

Most exciting... and why I cc our CIS (outgoing) President ... Jim Gaffney, representing the two groups at LLNL
most crucial to the international community, stated that THE KEY TECHNICAL CHALLENGE NOW IS BETTER INTELLIGENT CONTROL (accuracy, stability, duration)!! This is a core IEEE CIS technology, where we have new options far more powerful than anything LLNL knows about YET (even though they outperform the usual machine learning mass tools, and have important tools already on github/LLNL). I suddenly wish my senator (Warner) and Congressman (Beyer) knew about the exciting new opportunity to build a new crosscutting team somehow to connect Gaffney's efforts out  of LLNL with the newest and most powerful intelligent control tools available from CIS and other related IEEE communities. (For those outside IEEE, I attach the one page abstract I used last year to go with the Frank Rosenblatt award, with links to key aspects -- such as technologies which have been widely developed in China but not so much in US since my retirement from NSF in 2015.) 

However: this is not just about energy, climate and space. 

Thanks to a great presentation yesterday from the new Technology Directorate (TIP) of NSF,
I hope and pray that we and NSF could connect with the Secretary General enough to see the great synergy between TIP and GDC. The GDC (and human security) will require a higher level of international cooperation, AND YET deeper technical competence, than the world has ever seen as yet. If there is any hope of getting that started, before the usual entropy sets in, it calls for strong and urgent efforts to build these bridges, so that the world as a whole can start to get and support what it needs from NSF and IEEE in greater abundance.

I was stunned by the synergy between Threads A, B and C of the TIP presentation and the areas we have been moving forward on an international basis for the past few years... 

Best of luck to us all. (We need it!)


Thursday, May 25, 2023

Overview of the Most Urgent New Internet Challenges and Needs

The Millennium Project has supported UN in addressing "existential threats", including new developments in internet/AGI/IOT much greater and more imminent than policy makers know as yet.

Here is the response I sent to the questions they sent to leading experts (including me):

Origin or Self-Emergence

1. How do you envision the possible trajectories ahead, from today's AI, to much more capable Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) in the future?

See http://www.werbos.com/How_to%20Build_Past_Emerging_Internet_Chaos.htm .

The new coupling of hew hardware, both for communication and for computing, with ANI or AGI, and with explosive growth in the Internet of Things (IOT), results in a nonlinear system much more complicated and sensitive to small decisions than anything the human species has ever survived. It is comparable to the massive changes modeled in R. May, Stability and Complexity in Model Ecosystems, which resulted in species extinction in most cases. The decision challenge whichhumanity faces is an example of a type of mathematical decision problem which is very difficult, either because of “needle in a haystack” aspects or “minefield” aspects, where the true value function J is highly nonmonotonic. (See Consciousness_v4_Bangalore.pdf attached for links to the NSF research program which focused on value functions in the brain and in mathematics as a path to AGI.) 

To solve such a decision problem, and survive, the only strategy with hope of our survival is for us to achieve a higher level of collective intelligence in our decision making; humanity can achieve this only if we develop, deploy and make sane use of the most advanced intelligent decision technology possible, true Quantum AGI. That entails serious risks, but the alternatives we face -- standing like a frozen deer in the face of an oncoming truck, or an uncontrolled market competition (Nash equilibrium) which produces swarms of apps like a horde of locusts -- offer less hope than the difficult path of doing the hard new work we need to do, in new directions with new connections in the decision process itself.New connections between governance and the most advanced market and IOT technology both ininternet and in networks of humans would be essential

2. What are the …

3. What are some key initial conditions for AGI so that an artificial super intelligence does not emerge
later that is not to humanity’s liking?

Quantum AGI would already be an artificial super intelligence. As with any intelligent system, its outputs may be to our liking or not, depending on what cardinal utility function U is wired into the system (“embodied intelligence, the only kind possible) and the interface rules governing its relations with humans and other biological systems, and the deep precise conflict of interest rules constraining the flow of payment or feedback within the QAGI itself. Conflict of interest problems with human societies are one of the most important root causes of our inability to be anywere near as effective as we could be in handling many existential threats -- not just internet/AGI/IOT but climate extinction and new warfare technologies.

Value alignment, morality, values

Values are at the very center of my response to 1 and 3. But if they are implemented only as laws, regulations and wishes, without translation to general architecture and algorithms, they will be as useful as painting happy faces on the outer skin of a killer drone. (Many proposals for friendly AI would be as useful as that.)

Governance and Regulations

4. How to manage the international cooperation necessary to build international agreements and a global governance system while nations and corporations are in an intellectual “arms race” for global leadership?

5. What options or models are there for global governance of AGI?


4 and 5 are the very meat of your questions. They call for actual translation of my answers to 1 and 3 to something real. They also require a lot of flexibility (“agility”) in how we grope our way as intelligently as possible to a path to survival.

For the moment, I would envision international efforts, similar in spirit to some of the disarmament negotiations of the past, where we build up to a whole series of new agreements, with the force of treaties and connection to a new division of internet/AGI/IOT threats under the Security Council, and with technical details worked out even more competently (and open and transparent, with feedback) than the best of those past negotiations.

The most urgent need is for specification of a new integrative platform -- a combination

of hardware and software -- with new open tools to detect and prevent backdoors in

hardware and software, for use at least by primary members of the new treaty (which

must include US and China from the start, because of their unique capabilities and

objective common interests). This requires acceptance by NSA that key aspects of the

“rainbow book technology (children of the work by Prof. Graham of Amherst, recently

deceased)”, which have already been studied outside the US, be brought into the open

domain and included in the treaty system. It also requires full development of Quantum

AGI, as defined in Quantum technology to expand soft computing . Just as the

TCP/IP internet provides the foundation or backbone of the old internet, a new

international version based on this new cybersecurity technology (and a few of

the web 3 upgrades) should be agreed to be the backbone of the future core

internet coordinating the many apps which rely on it. Adequate recognition,

registration and respect for human entities should be a crucial design

requirement.

These upgrades should be developed by a process similar to IEEE standards development, except with more

respect for more complexities and players. The systems which gave us the (woefully insecure and dangerous)

5G standards today are simply not open or well-vetted enough.


6. What risks arise from attempts to govern the emergence of AGI? (Might some measures be

counterproductive?)

7. Should future AGIs be assigned rights?

Or should THEY be persuaded to give rights to humans and other organic life forms? They will have powers

and “immune system and COI type hard-wired rules in their design. Asimov’s rules for robots do not reflect the real technologies coming on line now, but getting THEIR or ITS design right (a single global integrative market or platform, unavoidable) is essential.

8. How can governance be flexible enough to respond to new issues previously unknown at the time of

creating that governance system?

My definition of AGI INCLUDES flexibility or agility. Yes, a very high level of agility would be needed for

humans to have much of a chance of survival. The new internet platform specification should be a

“cybersocial contract,” in effect, which maximizes agility not only for the internet part but for the whole system,

including the expression of the highest level of natural human potential ever seen in this solar system.

9. What international governance trials, tests, or experiments can be constructed to inform the text of an

international AGI treaty?

10. How can international treaties and a governance system prevent increased centralization of power

crowding out others?

11. Where is the most important or insightful work today being conducted on global governance of AGI?

Control

12. What enforcement powers will be needed to make an international AGI treaty effective?

13. How can the use of AGI by organized crime and terrorism be reduced or prevented? (Please consider

new types of crimes and terrorism which might be enabled by AGI.)

14. Assuming AGI audits would have to be continuous rather than one-time certifications, how would audit

values be addressed?

15. What disruptions could complicate the task of enforcing AGI governance?

16. How can a governance model correct undesirable action unanticipated in utility functions?

17. How will quantum computing affect AGI control?

18. How can international agreements and a governance system prevent an AGI “arms race” and

escalation from going faster than expected, getting out of control and leading to war, be it kinetic,

algorithmic, cyber, or information warfare?

And last: 22. What additional issues and/or questions need to be addressed to have a positive AGI outcome?


Initial sample of potential governance models for AGI*


The Millennium Project www.millennium-project.org


1. IAEA-like model or WTO-like with enforcement powers. These are the easiest to understand, but likely

to be too static to manage AGI.

2. IPCC-like model in concert with international treaties. This approach has not led to a governance

system for climate change.

3. Online real-time global collective intelligence system with audit and licensing status, governance by

information power. This would be useful to help select and use an AGI system, but no proof that

information power would be sufficient to govern the evolution of AGI.

4. GGCC (Global Governance Coordinating Committees) would be flexible and enforced by national

sanctions, ad hoc legal rulings in different countries, and insurance premiums. This has too many

ways for AGI developers to avoid meeting standards.

5. UN, ISO and/or IEEE standards used for auditing and licensing. Licensing would affect purchases and

would have impact, but requires international agreement or treaty with all countries ratifying.

6. Put different parts of AGI governance under different bodies like ITU, WTO, WIPO. Some of this is

likely to happen but would not be sufficient to govern all instances of AGI systems.

7. Decentralized Semi-Autonomous TransInstitution. This could be the most effective, but the most

difficult to establish since both Decentralized Semi-Autonomous Organizations and TransInstitutions

are new concepts.

*Drawn from “Artificial General Intelligence Issues and Opportunities,” by Jerome C. Glenn

contracted by the EC for input to Horizons 2024-27 planning.


===========================

==========================


Addendum:

Sent to early discussion today:

The OpenAI manifesto which you forwarded to us sounded like a great ray of 

light in the darkness.. at first. It IS a big step forward compared to reactive policies which do not account for the realities. But we will need to iterate carefully to avoid further pitfalls.

OpenAI... Musk., When Jerry sent some of us the new National AI policy (an epitome of pitfalls of ignorance),
my reaction last night might be prophetic:
____________
Yes, it is incredibly depressing.

I wonder whether Musk will use this as evidence of myopia so fatal that it justifies choosing a new president, even a risky one, on grounds that SOME hope is better than none. But Musk's plans for zTesla fleet control exhibit technical incompetence just as fatal. 
_____
Open AI makes a crycial good point about the central role of new systems development, But like most of Musk's other ventures... the technicsl realities of wggat they have under the hood may not be sokuud enough, nit well grounded enough, to reach sustainability. They sound good, work as PR and initial funding... But AGI demands new technical foundations.


Sunday, May 7, 2023

Back in US after Japan, Hawaii, Alaska, Intelligent Mammals and Birds

Ludmilla urged me not to post anything on Facebook until our return home today for security reasons. In a way, that was unnecessary because of four security backups, but why create unnecesary burdens on any of them?


But now we are back after an incredible series of deep complex learning experiences, with thousands of photos and a huge mass of reports from Google Translate from plaques all over Japan which no one has ever known about who did not know Japanese. Back when I went to Harvard from 1964 to 1974 (BA,MA,PhD), I certainly read and discussed the classic texts on China and Japan by Fairbank and Reuschauer, and studies of  history from Toynbee to Hegel and Marx, but actually visiting the primary sources has shown me how different and larger the real story has been. I feel as if I just spent three months in a more adult, friendly and advanced version of The Magic Schoolhouse. We spent a month before in Japan ( and Korea) in 2019, building on brief trips before that, but there -- as in Hawaii, Alaska and Pacific islands-- we now saw into a level we had never reached before.
We also learned more advanced science and spiritual connection to other mammals and even birds. The details of all these topics are hugely important, not just to us but to the entire earth, but will a lifetime be enough to pass on even half of it? I will try.
Ludmilla too more and better pictures than I did, but as a start, I have posted my unedited, unexplained photos from port visits to Kodiak, Sitka and Ketchikan:
https://photos.app.goo.gl/E9gi4bf7LXmbztrv5


Thanks to her, to airbnb, to Google maps, to numerous onsens and to Japan railroads and busses we experienced a diversity of lifestyles from the lowest practical level to the highest levels and kami ever discussed in Buddhism and shinto.

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Shingon Buddhism and How it Could Help with 7 Challenges to Humanity

 What are the core truths and lessons learned by Shingon Buddhism, which if better understood and connected to the rest of us could make maximum contribution to grand challenge number 5, on the list of seven grand challenges to humanity which I now try to help us with? And how does it connect to new efforrsbto build grand unification from Buddhism to yoga and science?

_1. The 7 challenges______________
7 Grand Challenges This Century
● Four Great Fears (“Existential Threats”) : SURVIVAL 
– Internet/AGI/IOT if we fail to reach Sustainable Intelligent 
Internet (SII) --- Depends on mind, intelligent systems 
– Climate extinction, all of our species and many others
– Misuse of nuclear tech, or biotech (e.g. werbos.com/
NATO_terrorism.pdf)
● Two Great Hopes: GROWTH
– Quantum leap in attaining human potential, including 
our connections to each other & our noosphere (soul,qi) 
– Economically sustainable settlement of space (e.g. NSS) 
● SITUATIONAL AWARENESS FOR HUMANS 
IN COSMOS: New tech (QAGI/axions) to see the sky
__________

2. What Shingon is

This past week I have learned a lot, probing into Shingon Buddhism, far beyond what my friends at Harvard thought they knew when they studied books by Fairbank and Reischauer (which I also read). A small fraction of our photos can be seen at:


Key summaries which we all should know about include:


Kukai, the founder of Shingon Buddhism, worked very hard and successfully to develop a kind of pyramid of instruction, aimed at elevating human minds and souls to their highest potential. It IS a pyramid, which reminds me of the pyramid which my old friend James Momoh once used to elevate instruction in electric power engineering, starting from minority children up to new faculty and researchers. There is a huge wealth of experience, which does not complete this huge challenging area of work but can be a massive help to humanity in addressing the larger challenge it contributes to.

Because it is a multilevel pyramid... Many misconceptions have appeared about it.
______
3. Misconceptions and deeper connections to yoga and dcience

But at werbos.com/religions.htm I post some further explanations.(Some out of date).
Emperor's of Japan often tried to create a war between Buddhism and Shinto, so as to degrade and control both. (I have seen similar history in more depth in the west, even in the life of George Washington whose land I am living on, according to some real estate people).

I can even.imagine Ku Kai smiling at a kind of two sided flag -- on the left a sun or solar system image involving the archetype of Amaterasu which reflects our solar system noosphere, and on right Orion reflecting our link to the deeper larger cosmos (Jung's Spirit of the Deep). Of course, Freud and Jung and the new neural network mathematics of intelligent systems (Mathematical General Intelligence, MGI) are also crucial to the new integration we need to be successful in all seven Challenges.

Monday, February 6, 2023

International Talk on Seven Urgent Challenges to Humanity from Human Extinction To New Sights Into Life Beyond Earth

International Talk on Seven Urgent Challenges to Humanity from Human Extinction To New Sights Into Life Beyond Earth


Yesterday, as I prepared for a period of computer silence, I sent out a review of two topics related to the seven grand challenges on the list below:
 


This blog post will address three connected topics, as I work to integrate all seven (and my personal life):

1. A shift in focus to try to better balance fear (existential threats) and hope (grand opportunities) in our international efforts, supporting the Secretary General and the Millennium Project

2. Radical new information from science (e.g. news from NASA, some to be released in a few months) on life beyond our solar system.

3. Extensions of these issues as we begin an international discussion starting form (1) and (2). 

1. From fear to hope in UN efforts


Many of us have strongly supported Jerry Glenn's efforts to support Guterres in trying to 
support a dramatic increase in effectiveness through the UN to protect the human species as a whole from "existential threats" -- like the dramatic new information from more advanced science about the real risks of "climate extinction" and new developments in the internet/AGI/IOT system.
The UN needs a much better flow of information about future possibilities and choices, and many of us will do all we can to create a new and better expanded flow. 

But several of you once responded: "These are all about FEARS. We need HOPE. Without HOPE, we will all die anyway." Some communications workers even go to the opposite extreme, advocating a kind of "positive thinking" which reminds me of the old Disney cartoon of kangaroos burying their heads in the sand to avoid SEEING the tiger about to eat them.  

I listened and agreed strongly with those of you who made that point to me. 

I agreed for many reasons. 

First, I spent about half my serious life in science to understanding brains and replicating brain-like intelligence. That was a GREAT background in understanding how NETWORKS can be organized in a way which actually make survival and growth possible,for systems at any level. from new AGI hardware to societies and more. INTEGRATION is such a central function that we all need to understand and practice it better -- WHICH IS A CORE MISSION OF THE MILLENNIUM PROJECT. . (Karl Deutsch, my Harvard PhD advisor, started to become famous in international politics when he wrote a book about the connection from neural networks to governance. He hired me to make the math real.) I attach the chapter I drafted for Come Carpentier, for his new book on consciousness from the India Foundation, which gives an overview of that new understanding.

As PART of that effort, many decades ago, I read papers like Olds' work in neuroscience, where they reported that healthy, effective mammals have a MIX of hope and fear, the very foundation of their brains and minds. Animals thrive who devote more brain space to hope than to fear. 

HOWEVER, WE DO ALSO NEED AN IMMUNE SYSTEM to stay alive. (As I get older, and learn how complicated it is to stay healthy, I now know aspects of THAT science even beyond what Lifeboat Foundation has kept up with.) The fears, constraints and inhibitions are a necessary PART of our system. When I view humanity through the "window" of what we learn from Carl Jung, I tell myself: "I WILL respect and channel the spirit of Loki... but only as a dog on a very strong leash." Fears, and even some barking...

BUT OUR SURVIVAL REQUIRES BETTER USE OF THE BRAIN, not just the immune system on a leash. We, the futurists and integrators of this species, need to focus most of our energy on the positive bigger goals, and not just short term values like immediate pleasures and small threats.
We need to find ways to work together more, even when they do not fit into the "immune system" protection function of the Security Council. 

This is why in MY efforts I always attach the list of SEVEN challenges attached, as explained in the final section of my paper for Bangalore. Our species is like a little fish in a gigantic aquarium.
Those of us who are truly attuned to the whole species and to life on earth will be driven by three great, incessant inner biological imperatives -- to survive, to grow, and to better understand what we face in the larger aquarium as a whole. Will it eat us? Does it house family which can help us (and vice-versa)? Can we find out?

2. New Information from Beyond Our Solar System


JUST YESTERDAY, the Philosophical society of Washington and the Cosmos Club (of which Jerry is a member) led a major review of what NASA is learning on challenge number seven:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-NhhWE2gu4

I did not attend in person, but I bcc two friends who did and who appear in the video. 

I was impressed by the citation to a new paper in Nature which suggests they saw convincing evidence of six "technosignatures" within 1,000 light years or so. Within months, we can expect new information from NASA enlarging these new findings, based IN PART on the new Webb telescope. I will need to study all that carefully, as best I can in coming months (under reduced internet for awhile). 

I BCC six  other scientists  who MIGHT POSSIBLY be in a position to start the first phase of IMPLEMENTING  a new quantum AGI technology (QAGI) which would give us orders of magnitude better resolution in seeing what these NASA programs report, impressive as it now is. IN ADDITION to the four big networks used already by the Breakthrough institute, NASA may now be in a position to fund new work on seeing technosignatures better than anyone can at present. 
I am bcc'ing the patent attorney who contacted me about converting my provisional patent on QAGI to a normal patent pending, which he promises will be filed by the deadline tomorrow. 
I am hoping that Jerry will get support for his new workshop on AGI where we can get more concrete about this technology, how it fits our older technologies, and what the risks and opportunities are. I even sent two of you a more explicit workplan, beyond what was in the provisional, on the first stage of the work on the new type of quantum device which can enable all of these new capabilities, and more. 

By the way, I also bcc a world leader in astrobiology, who knows far more about xenobiology than anyone did in the PSW video. Maybe the new thrust might benefit from him as well?

Best of luck to us all. We all need it a lot. And you all are crucial nodes in the network of survival.

3. Initial Dialogue

3.1. Responding to a leader on the space community discussion list

Thanks, Ajay, for more information on the meeting yesterday on what I call "challenge 7."

I also thank Brian Josephson for the link to the new Nature paper I need to study:

That’s https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-022-01872-z

On Sat, Feb 4, 2023 at 1:20 PM a.p.kothari astrox.com <a.p.kothari@astrox.com> wrote:
Paul,
Thanks. It was a great talk by Zurbuchen (ex-associate administrator for Science directorate at NASA) and Drake (Daughter of Dr. Drake of Drake equation fame). I too was there yesterday  (I am also a member of PSW).
In the audience was also the new Chief Technology Officer at NASA, Mr. AC Charania. 
We are in good hands with AC and Bhavya at NASA.
As per Drake eqn, or Fermi paradox (the Q I wanted to ask), see here:
https://www.fairobserver.com/culture/how-space-exploration-can-lead-us-to-our-true-destiny/


I have added an (old) cc to David Brin, who was once active on a Lifeboat Foundation list we were both on. (I cc'ed lifeboatfundation@yahoo.com but that bounced, even though I received an email ccing them from lifeboat this very morning!) Why cc him? Well, he has a novel Existence which is must reading for anyone really serious about the Fermi paradox.

FOR CHALLENGE 7, I have been advocating focused new research which would help us find out what we DOn'T know, as I said in my post. Brin reviews dozens of credible possible answers..
but mine is different from any of them! There are other possibilities, like the Bangalore paper I attached with my post.

Ajay himself has a special role to play in our network for CHALLENGE 6, as you could see quickly by comparing my list with what he posts now.

In my view, the greatest single obstacle to economically sustainable human settlement beyond earth (challenge 6) is the pattern of biased filtered information (aka "legal corruption'') in Washington DC. That has been VERY visible to me here in this area, but has affected every major nation on earth. (For example, I wonder who really promoted and set off the spy balloons from China this week, undermining a key part of Xi's goals.) In DC, the "war" between Musk and SLS (snail versus clam) has blocked serious RD&D on advanced space and hypersonics technology in US, which some of us know very well (with extensive backup files). When Biden came to power,
and Kamala Harris was expected to play a stronger role, some IEEE people asked me who could lead NASA well enough to restore hope for challenge 6. I suggested Ajay, because his knowledge of hypersonics and honesty and independence were the best I could find. But Kamala depended a lot on political personnel filters, which have led to many, many problems in many areas. Ajay is still making important contributions... 

==========================

3.2 From the Millennium Project list: 

Hi Paul - Great note on MilProj conversation about fear and hope. . . 
but I have to tease you on this one:

the old Disney cartoon of kangaroos burying their heads in the sand to avoid SEEING the tiger about to eat them.  

Kangaroos do not do that . . . ostriches do! 

Thank you so much, …, both for your  correction and for your tact.
DoI have a duty to broadcast an apology? Well, not if I have had more wine at this moment than I did when I posted that! I could only make it worse.

In truth, that stretch cartoon made a deep impression on me, and still lives.
I actually went to a place of wild, free tigers in India... where I was stalked by a big male one who looked me in the eye... but turned away in disgust when he smelled what Indian food had done to me... 

=========
3.3 To Peter Ward, From Personal Contact and IEEE Climate Discussion List


On Sun, Feb 5, 2023 at 6:15 PM Peter D Ward <argo@uw.edu> wrote:
apologies to the mass mailing, but pretty sure this "learned" critique of the Rare Earth Hypothesis is nonsensical.  But it is mercifully short and does address the major tenets of our Rare Earth Hypothesis

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-CsLmoiKugE

Half my post about fears and hopes and seven challenges addressed "challenge 7" on my list (attached again) ,
and the discussion on youtube led by the recent director of science programs for NASA. It is an important challenge for science to try to learn how many OTTHER civilizations are out there beyond our solar system.

 As I listened to the NASA viewpoint, I did strongly feel they need to learn more about the work of Peter Ward, Hazen, Kirschvink and Kump on the origins of life, the nature of life, and astrobiology. But I did not give lots of details in what I sent you, because I wanted to emphasize the new opportunities we have to see the sky better.
In fact, just yesterday my provisional patent offering orders of magnitude improvement in what we can actually SEE as we look up to the sky was converted to a regular patent pending.

NASA still has a lot they need to catch up on from the work  Peter Ward in many areas. I was surprised that they seemed unaware of his important book "Life As We Do not Know It," which I bought when I bought "Under A Green Sky." (At that time, 2009 or 2010, those two paperbacks plus a sudoku book barely got me to the $25 free shipping from Amazon.) That book had many insights, and reflected NASA support and efforts at the time.

But was the Rare Earths theory true? I am skeptical of that part of the story, BUT SCIENCE DEMANDS THAT WE FIND OUT, NOT JUST ASSUME WE KNEW EVERYTHING IN ADVANCE.

So far as I now know, the new paper in Nature which reports something like six technosignatures
(six planets with technological civilizations) observed already  within maybe 10,000 light years of us is
a reasonable guess of the lower bound on who else is out there. But I only just heard the talk two days ago.
I have yet to study the actual Nature paper; I thank Brian Josephson again for sending me the link:

 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-022-01872-z

But even after I read it, I would guess we really need to address my challenge 7, by working harder to find out
many things, INCLUDING a better lower bound on how rare technological planets really are out there. 

On Sun, Feb 5, 2023 at 6:15 PM Peter D Ward <argo@uw.edu> wrote:
apologies to the mass mailing, but pretty sure this "learned" critique of the Rare Earth Hypothesis is nonsensical.  But it is mercifully short and does address the major tenets of our Rare Earth Hypothesis

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-CsLmoiKugE

By the way, Jerry rightly worried that some folks may rightly get confused between my list of seven overarching challenges facing all of humanity for the coming century, versus the 15 challenges which have been used to organize the dialogues of the Millennium Project for many years, starting long before the time in 2009 when I first learned (from Peter) that human extinction by climate change was a serious possibility. 

In the spirit of my "spiritual father," John Von Neumann, I like to think of the largest goals as part of a "cardinal utility function U," which we must never forget if we want a decent chance of success. But in life, we often need to have larger longer-term goals and focused intermediate goals needed to actually get there. I see the 7 challenges as larger, more ultimate goals, and the 15 challenges as extremely important focused subgoals necessary to survival in the longer term, and to the maintenance of our society even now, even before existential threats arise. 

We can use focused strategic thinking, and lead a balanced sensitive sane human existence, on many levels.
By now, I even use strategic mathematical optimization theory  guide my muscles as I take a shower in the morning
http://drpauljohn.blogspot.com/2023/01/some-tricks-for-living-longer-and.html .
The 15 challenges are at a higher level than that, to be sure, but the 7 challenges are higher yet,
providing a larger framework.

=========
Early this Friday, I will lose access to this computer for at least three months. This post was a kind of culmination for me. I strongly hope you all will remember and advance all seven challenges, even as I sail into the setting sun. THUS I will post that culmination message, and these extensions, on a blog site which I hope is a BIT more permanent (and hope others do likewise).


3.4. From David Wood 


David Wood (who is also working with Jerry and me and others on great challenge number one) commented:
People following the points raised by Paul may be interested in two recent podcast episodes that dug more deeply into the question of the Fermi Paradox and estimates on the likelihood of technological planets:

This one features David Brin, covers some of the ideas of his novel Existence, and draws the conclusion that while life may be widespread in the galaxy, life intelligent enough to launch spacecraft may be rare

This one features Anders Sandberg, and offers three different answers to the Fermi Paradox (one favoured by Anders, one favoured by me, and another favoured by podcast co-host Calum Chace).

The episode featuring Anders Sandberg also reviews some implications of solutions to the Fermi Paradox for the (near!) future of humanity.

// David W.