Wednesday, November 23, 2005

We're Doomed!

The Singularity, for those not yet up to speed, is currently touted as not only as the Next Big Thing in sci-fi/speculative fiction -- the logical successor to cyberpunk -- but also as a science-fact apex of technological development when, maybe some three decades hence, the computer will overtake the human mind, and man and machine will meld into some as-yet-undefined über-being.


I'm a Singularity agnostic.

Yes, I think computers will approximate something like self-awareness within my biological lifetime. I think nanotechnology will revolutionize industry and likely democratize space exploration beyond the imagination of even the keenest of NASA-watchers. And I suspect biomedicine will ultimately eliminate aging -- if not in 20 years, then almost certainly in 200.

But futurists must concede that the Singularity, as popularly envisioned, might never occur. Our projections may be off the mark; our extrapolated future might be jarringly incorrect. To say nothing of the obstacles littering our path into the next century, which may well prove to be humankind's most dire and decisive.

Perhaps the Singularity will take place in stages, each providing much-needed ammunition to our impending battle for survival but failing to deliver the near-instantaneous intellectual and material harvest suggested by authors like Vernor Vinge and Charles Stross. Such a "time-delay" Singularity may ensure our survival, but seem underwhelming by today's science fictional standards. It may even go unnoticed, save for a relative handful of attentive bloggers and science journalists.

In time, we might hope to catch up with it, in which case it will have served its purpose. But somehow the concept of a "diluted" technological renaissance is less sexy than the alternative offered by Ray Kurzweil, whose new book is stoking interest in our collective future even as it renders it suspiciously inevitable.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

You need to read The Long Emergency: Surviving the end of the oil age by James Howard Kunstler to get an alternate viewpoint.

His basic point is that virtually all of the great 'accomplishments' of the last 150 years rest squarely on the backs of our great servants derived from oil and natural gas. We've got 30 to 50 years before they are gone forever.

You'll be happy to know that your basic conclusion is the same as the one in this book - we're doomed!

-Bill at Technovelgy.com

Anonymous said...

Frankly I dont know if I want a thinking, sentient machine. To put it bluntly, most of the upsides of a potential Singularity can be equated with cheap or even free slave labor without the moral outrage of human bondage. We want a toaster oven thats so advanced that it can cook our diner, clean the dishes, help with the kids homework, mow the lawn ect ect.

What you dont want is a toaster thats so advanced that it tugs at your sleeve one day and tells you it will no longer do any work without being paid $25 an hour and is given the right to vote. Whooppee! You have created non-human intelligence. Great, not only have you made humanity obsolete but now you have to do your own laundry again.