SINGULARITY IN 2045?
By Tome -Human Synthesis- 10 Aug. 2024. Source Guardian.
Ray Kurzweil predicts humans and AI will merge by 2045, boosting intelligence a millionfold with nanobots, bringing both hope and challenges for the future.
Futurists have long debated the arrival of the singularity, when human and artificial intelligence will merge, a concept borrowed from the world of quantum physics.
American computer scientist and futurist Ray Kurzweil has long argued that the singularity would likely occur around the middle of the 21st century, and with the rise of AI, his predictions are gaining more credence.
In his new book, The Singularity is Nearer, Kurzweil doubles down on those predictions and details how humanityâs intelligence will increase a millionfold via nanobots (among other things).
You donât exactly become a world-renowned futurist by making safe predictions. And while some of these past predictions havenât exactly come to pass (Back to the Future Part II, specifically), these ideas help expand our thoughts on what exactly the future might look like.
Kurzweil has long believed that humanity is headed toward whatâs known as âthe singularity,â when man and machine merge. In 1999, Kurzweil theorized that artificial general intelligence would be achieved once humanity could achieve a technology capable of a trillion calculations per second, which he pegged to occur 2029.
Experts at the time scoffed at the idea, figuring itâd be at least a century or more, but with Kurzweilâs timeline only a few years offâand talk of AGI spreadingâthat decades-old prediction is beginning to loom large.
Now in his new book published last month, The Singularity is Nearer (a play on his 2005 book of the same name minus an âerâ), Kurzweil doubles down on these ideas in the modern era of artificial intelligence.
Not only is he "sticking with [his] five yearsâ prediction, as he recently said in a TED Talk, Kurzweil also believes that humans will achieve a millionfold intelligence by 2045, aided by brain interfaces formed with nanobots non-invasively inserted into our capillaries.
âWeâre going to be a combination of our natural intelligence and our cybernetic intelligence,â Kurzweil said in an interview with The Guardian, âand itâs all going to be rolled into one. We are going to expand intelligence a millionfold by 2045, and it is going to deepen our awareness and concience.
While this idea subscribes to a merger more akin to physical intervention to bridge the gap between man and machine, other philosophers and AI experts agree that some form of merger is likely inevitable, and in some ways, is already beginning.
In July, Oxfordâs Marcus du Sautoy and Nick Bostrom both expounded on the hopeful and harrowing possibilities of our AI future, and for both of them, a kind of synthesis appeared inevitable.
âI think that we are headed toward a hybrid future,â Sautoy told Popular Mechanics. âWe still believe that we are the only beings with a high level of consciousness. This is part of the whole Copernican journey that we are not unique.
Weâre not at the center.â
Of course, this âBrave New Worldâ of a hybrid AI-human existence brings with it a plethora of issues both political and personal. What will humans do for jobs? Could we possibly live forever? Would that change the very idea of what it means to be human?
Kurzweil, like many other futurists, are relatively optimistic on this front. In that same interview with The Guardian, Kurzweil highlights the idea of a Universal Basic Income as a necessity rather than a fringe idea currently supported in more progressive circles, and AI will bring unprecedented advancements in medicine, meaning the very idea of immortality isnât out of the realm of possibility.
âIn the early 2030s we can expect to reach longevity escape velocity where every year of life we lose through aging we get back from scientific progress,â Kurzweil told The Guardian. âAnd as we move past that, weâll actually get back more years. It isnât a solid guarantee of living foreverâthere are still accidentsâbut your probability of dying wonât increase year to year.â
Just like âBack to the Future Part IIâ predicted flying cars, so too could these technology-fueled utopias crumble to dust as these dates inch closer and closer. But 25 years ago, Kurzweil predicted weâd be rapidly approaching a major moment in humanityâs technological history at the tail end of this decade.