Just how near did you say the singularity is?
A week after I wrote about Ray Kurzweil here, the New York Times picked up the scent in “The Coming Superbrain.”
The NYT article by John Markoff discusses the rebirth of scientific interest in artificial intelligence, which had a bad spell after initial rosy forecasts did not pan out. But will a self-aware superbrain emerge any time soon, and will it be nice or nasty? Markoff notes that this question is moving from science fiction into reality. He brings in Kurzweil about half way through the article. Through his sources, Markoff expresses skepticism about Kurzweil’s idea of living long enough to live forever. For instance, the article concludes with a quote from robotics expert Gary Bradski: “Kurzweil will probably die, along with the rest of us not too long before the ‘great dawn’ . . . . Life’s not fair.”
In truth, it is easy to be skeptical about living forever. No one has ever done it. Even the most optimistic religions present heaven in terms of “life after death.” Kurzweil is cutting out the death part. As I said, it’s easy to be skeptical.
Markoff focuses on the issue of emerging artificial intelligence and Kurzweil’s notion of humans and computers mind-melding somehow or other. But in his book, Kurzweil spends as much time discussing two other technologies — genetics and nanotech — which he argues will provide a “bridge” to the joining of human and machine minds. How much of a difference that makes, I don’t know.
Markoff provides a link to a trailer of “Transcendent Man,” an entry at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival that explores the debate over Kurzweil — is he the crackpot prophet of a new religion or a legitimate scientific investigator?

