I am going to guess that you seem to think cooperation and specialization are at odds because you're thinking in terms of game theory, which assumes that agents are indivisible and interchangable. In the em world, we don't even know how to assign responsibility for an action to an agent, or how to compute the change in social utility whe…
I am going to guess that you seem to think cooperation and specialization are at odds because you're thinking in terms of game theory, which assumes that agents are indivisible and interchangable. In the em world, we don't even know how to assign responsibility for an action to an agent, or how to compute the change in social utility when an agent copies itself or gives itself an upgrade, or how to define death or identity.
A single human can be regarded as a collection of AIs. The hand is specialized, yet cooperates with the eye.
I am going to guess that you seem to think cooperation and specialization are at odds because you're thinking in terms of game theory, which assumes that agents are indivisible and interchangable. In the em world, we don't even know how to assign responsibility for an action to an agent, or how to compute the change in social utility when an agent copies itself or gives itself an upgrade, or how to define death or identity.
A single human can be regarded as a collection of AIs. The hand is specialized, yet cooperates with the eye.