change is inevitable
Imagine an algorithm that would enable the best version of yourself in exchange for doing exactly what it says. It seems far-fetched, but it is much closer than you may think.
Humanity has the ability to engineer reality at every level, allowing us to remap the possibility space of being human in ways we've never done before.
If we are remapping reality from the atomic level all the way up, why aren’t we doing that with our own cognition?
There is the sacred idea that humans are the only arbiters of what they do, even if what they do is harmful or self-destructive.
Blueprint removes certain variables that we compute on a daily basis and offloads them to a superior technology.
Throughout history, humanity has yielded control to technology that demonstrates superiority at any given task. When the automobile was created, we no longer cared about breeding a better horse; we realized that the car was better and we jumped in.
The most radical idea in DON’T DIE is the inevitability that algorithms will improve over time and get better than humans at most tasks. In order to opt into this reality, we will have to give up some functional elements of freewill.
Emphasis on “some”.
This bring us back to the original question we posed, if an algorithm could do a better job at managing you than you, would you take it?
The Blueprint community says yes.
When we reduce the philosophical and mathematical structure of existence to its most element state it’s DON’T DIE at every layer.
DON’T DIE, don’t kill each other, don’t kill the planet, don’t build things that kill things, and prepare yourself to interface with radical new technologies that at the present moment we cannot even imagine.