blademaster
I'm moving to Brazil
+2,075|7032
A group of experts from around the world will hold a first of its kind conference Thursday on global catastrophic risks.

They will discuss what should be done to prevent these risks from becoming realities that could lead to the end of human life on Earth as we know it.

Speakers at the four-day event at Oxford University in Britain will talk about topics including nuclear terrorism and what to do if a large asteroid were to be on a collision course with our planet.

On the final day of the Global Catastrophic Risk Conference, experts will focus on what could be the unintended consequences of new technologies, such as super intelligent machines that, if ill-conceived, might cause the demise of Homo sapiens.

"Any entity which is radically smarter than human beings would also be very powerful," said Dr. Nick Bostrom, director of Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute, host of the symposium. "If we get something wrong, you could imagine the consequences would involve the extinction of the human species.""We want to preserve the best of what it is to be human and maybe even amplify that," Bostrom said.

Transhumanists, according to Bostrom, anticipate an era in which biotechnology, molecular nanotechnologies, artificial intelligence and other new types of cognitive tools will be used to amplify our intellectual capacity, improve our physical capabilities and even enhance our emotional well-being.

The end result would be a new form of "posthuman" life with beings that possess qualities and skills so exceedingly advanced they no longer can be classified simply as humans.

"We will begin to use science and technology not just to manage the world around us but to manage our own human biology as well," Bostrom said. "The changes will be faster and more profound than the very, very slow changes that would occur over tens of thousands of years as a result of natural selection and biological evolution."

Bostrom declined to predict an exact time frame when this revolutionary biotechnological metamorphosis might occur. "Maybe it will take eight years or 200 years," he said. "It is very hard to predict."Other experts are already getting ready for what they say could be a radical transformation of the human race in as little as two decades."This will happen faster than people realize," said Dr. Ray Kurzweil, an inventor and futurist who calculates technology trends using what he calls the law of accelerating returns, a mathematical concept that measures the exponential growth of technological evolution."There will be no distinction, post-Singularity, between human and machine or between physical and virtual reality," he writes.

Singularity will approach at an accelerating rate as human-created technologies become exponentially smaller and increasingly powerful and as fields such as biology and medicine are understood more and more in terms of information processes that can be simulated with computers.

By the 2030s, Kurzweil said, humans will become more non-biological than biological, capable of uploading our minds onto the Internet, living in various virtual worlds and even avoiding aging and evading death.

In the 2040s, Kurzweil predicts that non-biological intelligence will be billions of times better than the biological intelligence humans have today, possibly rendering our present brains obsolete.

"Our brains are a million times slower than electronics," Kurzweil said. "We will increasingly become software entities if you go out enough decades."

This movement towards the merger of man and machine, according to Kurzweil, is already starting to happen and is most visible in the field of biotechnology.

As scientists gain deeper insights into the genetic processes that underlie life, they are able to effectively reprogram human biology through the development of new forms of gene therapies and medications capable of turning on or off enzymes and RNA interference, or gene silencing.

"Biology and health and medicine used to be hit or miss," Kurzweil sad. "It wasn't based on any coherent theory about how it works."

The emerging biotechnology revolution will lead to at least a thousand new drugs that could do anything from slow down the process of aging to reverse the onset of diseases, like heart disease and cancer, Kurzweil said.By 2020, Kurzweil predicts a second revolution in the area of nanotechnology. According to his calculations, it is already showing signs of exponential growth as scientists begin to test first generation nanobots that can cure Type 1 diabetes in rats or heal spinal cord injuries in mice.

One scientist is developing something called a respirocyte, a robotic red blood cell that, if injected into the bloodstream, would allow humans to do an Olympic sprint for 15 minutes without taking a breath or sit at the bottom of a swimming pool for hours at a time.Other researchers are developing nanoparticles that can locate tumors and one day even eradicate them.

And some Parkinson's patients now have pea-sized computers implanted in their brains that replace neurons destroyed by the disease; new software can be downloaded to the mini computers from outside the human body.

"Nanotechnology will not just be used to reprogram but to transcend biology and go beyond its limitations by merging with non-biological systems," Kurzweil said. "If we rebuild biological systems with nanotechnology, we can go beyond its limits."

The final revolution leading to the advent of Singularity will be the creation of artificial intelligence, or superintelligence, which, according to Kurzweil, could be capable of solving many of our biggest threats, like environmental destruction, poverty and disease.

"A more intelligent process will inherently outcompete one that is less intelligent, making intelligence the most powerful force in the universe," Kurzweil writes.

Yet the invention of so many high-powered technologies and the possibility of merging these new technologies with humans may pose both peril and promise for the future of mankind.

"I think there are grave dangers," Kurzweil said. "Technology has always been a double-edged sword."

http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/07/15/bio.tech/index.html
TrollmeaT
Aspiring Objectivist
+492|7059|Colorado
One can only hope that we will last long enough to see our greatness realized.
Volatile
Member
+252|7091|Sextupling in Empire

This has been foreseen for years. Organic matter is weak and so easily destroyed in this hostile universe, and hopefully one day we'll be able to transcend this restricting cage and be able to move on to something more durable.

With advancements in Ai, our destruction is probable, but I think that the risks are worth it. 

Besides, this species as it is is extremely flawed and weak. I say we should either evolve or be eradicated by something superior.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6988|132 and Bush

Self replicating nanobots will be the end.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
usmarine2
Banned
+233|6178|Dublin, Ohio
ya sure.  when I was in grade school, according to these guys, I would be flying around in little spaceships instead of driving cars by now.
Commie Killer
Member
+192|6774
What are we so weak? Man has the abilty to create, and destroy. Hell, the only things that can kill us as a species are natural events or shit we create. Not some other organic matter(except for viruses and the like).
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6988|132 and Bush

usmarine2 wrote:

ya sure.  when I was in grade school, according to these guys, I would be flying around in little spaceships instead of driving cars by now.
Maybe the Jetsons wasn't the best place to look for future tech.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
usmarine2
Banned
+233|6178|Dublin, Ohio

Kmarion wrote:

usmarine2 wrote:

ya sure.  when I was in grade school, according to these guys, I would be flying around in little spaceships instead of driving cars by now.
Maybe the Jetsons wasn't the best place to look for future tech.
funny guy
Poseidon
Fudgepack DeQueef
+3,253|6925|Long Island, New York
https://filmonic.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/11/terminator_004.jpg

i'm waiting, bitches
TrollmeaT
Aspiring Objectivist
+492|7059|Colorado

usmarine2 wrote:

ya sure.  when I was in grade school, according to these guys, I would be flying around in little spaceships instead of driving cars by now.
Actually flying cars aren't that far off, they are mapping out the skyfreeways now & it will be all automated so we don't have to worry about  people crashing into things.
usmarine2
Banned
+233|6178|Dublin, Ohio

TrollmeaT wrote:

usmarine2 wrote:

ya sure.  when I was in grade school, according to these guys, I would be flying around in little spaceships instead of driving cars by now.
Actually flying cars aren't that far off, they are mapping out the skyfreeways now & it will be all automated so we don't have to worry about  people crashing into things.
k
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6988|132 and Bush

TrollmeaT wrote:

usmarine2 wrote:

ya sure.  when I was in grade school, according to these guys, I would be flying around in little spaceships instead of driving cars by now.
Actually flying cars aren't that far off, they are mapping out the skyfreeways now & it will be all automated so we don't have to worry about  people crashing into things.
It's called the airline industry.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
weerdfoo1
Banned
+26|6552|California
I personally don't trust a hybridization of technology and biological matter.  Hell, even as an electrical engineering major I don't trust technology on a stand alone basis.

Personally I think it would make more sense to improve ourselves through genetic engineering, but with this you start getting into the ethical issues of "playing god."
Veridic
Member
+2|6536
So I guess this could change the meaning of Blue Screen of Death
Stingray24
Proud member of the vast right-wing conspiracy
+1,060|6832|The Land of Scott Walker
X-Men tbh
MGS3_GrayFox
Member
+50|6554

weerdfoo1 wrote:

I personally don't trust a hybridization of technology and biological matter.  Hell, even as an electrical engineering major I don't trust technology on a stand alone basis.

Personally I think it would make more sense to improve ourselves through genetic engineering, but with this you start getting into the ethical issues of "playing god."
Which is stupid, because god doesn't exist, its dumb to even suggest we can play something that doesn't exist.
Fenris_GreyClaw
Real Хорошо
+826|6906|Adelaide, South Australia

I'd love to live in the Internet.

Also, Grey Goo
weerdfoo1
Banned
+26|6552|California

MGS3_GrayFox wrote:

weerdfoo1 wrote:

I personally don't trust a hybridization of technology and biological matter.  Hell, even as an electrical engineering major I don't trust technology on a stand alone basis.

Personally I think it would make more sense to improve ourselves through genetic engineering, but with this you start getting into the ethical issues of "playing god."
Which is stupid, because god doesn't exist, its dumb to even suggest we can play something that doesn't exist.
I'm not saying that it would be an issue with me.  It's just nucleotides placed into a specific sequence, no big deal.  I'm talking about other people.  I'm very sure most of the people on this forums agree with you and me that it shouldn't be an issue.
Mavik
Member
+22|6163|Germany
One day we will cast aside our fragile mortal shells and join the eternal energy of the universe.

Pardon?
AussieReaper
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
+5,761|6540|what

Fenris_GreyClaw wrote:

I'd love to live in the Internet.
Instead of just appearing on various porn sites?
https://i.imgur.com/maVpUMN.png
Reciprocity
Member
+721|6968|the dank(super) side of Oregon
one day technology will run parallel to our own human hardware.  interaction will be seamless and interchangable.  Mortality will be a choice. 


-Today, a young man on acid realized that all matter is merely energy condensed to a slow vibration, that we are all one consciousness experiencing itself subjectively, there is no such thing as death, life is only a dream, and we are the imagination of ourselves.  Here's Tom with the weather.    -Bill Hicks

whether it's through spiritual awakening or a faster processor, we may just get there.


or at least have less lag on our Playstation16.

Last edited by Reciprocity (2008-07-24 00:52:06)

too_money2007
Member
+145|6695|Keller, Tx
One scientist is developing something called a respirocyte, a robotic red blood cell that, if injected into the bloodstream, would allow humans to do an Olympic sprint for 15 minutes without taking a breath or sit at the bottom of a swimming pool for hours at a time.
Fuck yeah!
Major.League.Infidel
Make Love and War
+303|6865|Communist Republic of CA, USA
https://nanopedia.case.edu/image/I.Robot.jpg
Flecco
iPod is broken.
+1,048|7052|NT, like Mick Dundee

Bring it on motherfuckers.
Whoa... Can't believe these forums are still kicking.
A12345
Member
+77|6857
will this kill sports? think of people complaining because they couldnt afford the latest upgrades and that why they lost.

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