Steven:

Societies without some form of moral code, a shared sense of right and wrong, 
usually don’t last long…

-mark 

 

From: Orionworks - Steven Vincent Johnson [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 27, 2015 8:02 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Vo]:doubling speed every 2 years for decades more, Intel silicon 
photonics now revolutionizing data centers, Michael Kassner: Rich Murray 
2015.01.26

 

>From Lewan,

 

> I believe that a good explanation for doubling speed is provided by Kurzweil’s

> suggestion that he calls The Law of Accelerating Returns

> (http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of-accelerating-returns), basically 

> meaning that whatever is invented/evolved in a system is fed back into the

> system and increases the over-all speed of invention/evolution, leading

> mathematically to exponential growth of speed. 

 

I've read a few  of Kurzweil's books. Last one I read, I believe, was "The Age 
of Spiritual Machines."

 

His books are fun to read. It would seem that Ray's belief system involves an 
eventual "singularity event" which suggests the advancement of computer 
technology and AI will either save us, or transform our species into something 
very different than what we are now. That said, Ray's concept is not all that 
different, IMHO, than those among us who believe that Jesus' pending 2nd coming 
will save us, or that the benevolent Space Brothers from Arcturus (or is that 
Sirius... I can't keep the star systems straight) will either save us or at 
least transform us as a species.

 

Despite all of these pending predictions coming from Ray Kurzweil, or from 
Fundamentalist Christians or from other religious doctrine, or for that matter 
from the Brotherhood of Benevolent Space Brothers, I think it would be wise of 
us to never ever underestimate the collective power of stupidity, ignorance, 
and Luddism.

 

I'm more inclined to speculate that Kurzweil might possibly get some of his 
predictions right, but only if interstellar space travel becomes a practical 
reality. That would allow groups of like-minded humans to migrate to their very 
own habitable planet where they can then set up their own governing rules which 
would give them carte blanche to dabble with their genomes and infuse them with 
all the AI technology they see fit.

 

In the meantime I suspect a very large group of Luddites will stay on Earth and 
maintain the status quo. That's probably a good idea anyway. Who knows. For all 
I know perhaps that is "by design." It's probably good idea to maintain a 
diverse gene pool such as what we have on our planet allowing interplanetary 
anthropologists and scientist from god knows what civilization to occasionally 
stop by and sample.

 

Regards,

Steven Vincent Johnson

svjart.orionworks.com

zazzle.com/orionworks

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