Authors: Ray Kurzweil
ISBN-13: 9780143037880, ISBN-10: 0143037889
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Date Published: September 2006
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Ray Kurzweil is one of the world's leading inventors, thinkers, and futurists. The recipient of many awards and honored with accolades such as "the ultimate thinking machine" (Forbes) and the "rightful heir to Thomas Jefferson" (Inc.), he is the author of four previous books.
For over three decades, Ray Kurzweil has been one of the most respected and provocative advocates of the role of technology in our future. In his classic The Age of Spiritual Machines, he argued that computers would soon rival the full range of human intelligence at its best. Now he examines the next step in this inexorable evolutionary process: the union of human and machine, in which the knowledge and skills embedded in our brains will be combined with the vastly greater capacity, speed, and knowledge-sharing ability of our creations.
Renowned inventor Kurzweil (The Age of Spiritual Machines) may be technology's most credibly hyperbolic optimist. Elsewhere he has argued that eliminating fat intake can prevent cancer; here, his quarry is the future of consciousness and intelligence. Humankind, it runs, is at the threshold of an epoch ("the singularity," a reference to the theoretical limitlessness of exponential expansion) that will see the merging of our biology with the staggering achievements of "GNR" (genetics, nanotechnology and robotics) to create a species of unrecognizably high intelligence, durability, comprehension, memory and so on. The word "unrecognizable" is not chosen lightly: wherever this is heading, it won't look like us. Kurzweil's argument is necessarily twofold: it's not enough to argue that there are virtually no constraints on our capacity; he must also convince readers that such developments are desirable. In essence, he conflates the wholesale transformation of the species with "immortality," for which read a repeal of human limit. In less capable hands, this phantasmagoria of speculative extrapolation, which incorporates a bewildering variety of charts, quotations, playful Socratic dialogues and sidebars, would be easier to dismiss. But Kurzweil is a true scientist--a large-minded one at that--and gives due space both to "the panoply of existential risks" as he sees them and the many presumed lines of attack others might bring to bear. What's arresting isn't the degree to which Kurzweil's heady and bracing vision fails to convince--given the scope of his projections, that's inevitable--but the degree to which it seems downright plausible. (Sept.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Prologue : the power of ideas | 1 | |
Ch. 1 | The six epochs | 7 |
Ch. 2 | A theory of technology evolution : the law of accelerating returns | 35 |
Ch. 3 | Achieving the computational capacity of the human brain | 111 |
Ch. 4 | Achieving the software of human intelligence : how to reverse engineer the human brain | 143 |
Ch. 5 | GNR : three overlapping revolutions | 205 |
Ch. 6 | The impact ... | 299 |
Ch. 7 | Ich bin ein Singularitarian | 369 |
Ch. 8 | The deeply intertwined promise and peril of GNR | 391 |
Ch. 9 | Response to critics | 427 |
Epilogue : how singular? : human centrality | 485 |