Lost Fragment
Obsessed with 4chan
Can we have a reality and evidenced based discussion on this and keep the conspiracy theory/metaphysics/supernatural stuff to a minimum? I'm looking at you, Meus Renaissance and Wii.
So yeah, this isn't exactly a new subject to me, but I've never seriously studied it. Most of my reading about it has been casual. Like I'll stumble on an article about it and think "ooh, that's an interesting thought" while at the same time thinking it's not very likely. Like how articles on theoretical ways to travel to another galaxy in the future are interesting, but considering the laws of physics, don't seem very likely to my layman mind, no matter how advanced a civilization is.
Then I stumbled on this article yesterday. Before now, I've pigeonholed the people who believe the singularity is inevitable into the "this dude is also convinced that aliens visit Earth even though there's no evidence and that the Illuminati put hidden cameras in his teabags" or "this guy is a reputable scholar, but this is just a highly theoretical thought experiemnt" groups, but this Kurzweil person has a great track record, a ridiculous resume, and seems 100% convinced that the singularity is coming pretty soon.
Not only that, but the shit he talks about is pretty far out compared to what I've read before. Immortality through being able to back up our consciousnesses to computers? Resurrecting the dead? Having our nanobots spread to all corners the cosmos, creating a "conscious" universe? WAT?
This all sounds pretty cool, but because it's a pretty huge unknown, the possibility of living in a reality like that alone is pretty spooky, without even considering the possibility that the machines could go all Skynet on us.
Now, even reputable folks with great track records who've received accolades and awards from the White House are susceptible to just being fucking crazy, which is a distinct possibility with Mr. Ray Kurzweil and the other scholars and academics who take the technological singularity seriously. But I dunno. There are some pretty smart folks on GAF, and at least one person that I know of who has hardcore credentials and works with Cern on the LHC, so I ask you folks: just how realistic is this singularity stuff?
So yeah, this isn't exactly a new subject to me, but I've never seriously studied it. Most of my reading about it has been casual. Like I'll stumble on an article about it and think "ooh, that's an interesting thought" while at the same time thinking it's not very likely. Like how articles on theoretical ways to travel to another galaxy in the future are interesting, but considering the laws of physics, don't seem very likely to my layman mind, no matter how advanced a civilization is.
Then I stumbled on this article yesterday. Before now, I've pigeonholed the people who believe the singularity is inevitable into the "this dude is also convinced that aliens visit Earth even though there's no evidence and that the Illuminati put hidden cameras in his teabags" or "this guy is a reputable scholar, but this is just a highly theoretical thought experiemnt" groups, but this Kurzweil person has a great track record, a ridiculous resume, and seems 100% convinced that the singularity is coming pretty soon.
Not only that, but the shit he talks about is pretty far out compared to what I've read before. Immortality through being able to back up our consciousnesses to computers? Resurrecting the dead? Having our nanobots spread to all corners the cosmos, creating a "conscious" universe? WAT?
This all sounds pretty cool, but because it's a pretty huge unknown, the possibility of living in a reality like that alone is pretty spooky, without even considering the possibility that the machines could go all Skynet on us.
Now, even reputable folks with great track records who've received accolades and awards from the White House are susceptible to just being fucking crazy, which is a distinct possibility with Mr. Ray Kurzweil and the other scholars and academics who take the technological singularity seriously. But I dunno. There are some pretty smart folks on GAF, and at least one person that I know of who has hardcore credentials and works with Cern on the LHC, so I ask you folks: just how realistic is this singularity stuff?