R
ribozyme
Guest
This assertion gives me extreme optimism:
I hope that we can eliminate poverty and rectify social inequality in the future. Although I believe in some of Kurzweil’s predictions, unfortunately, his work hasn’t completely quelled my doubts about his optimistic future. Superficially, it sounds like the quixotic world of Star Trek. I wonder if technology will solve all the maladies of the human species – poverty, disease, social inequality, and so on – and abolish suffering. However, some who aim to deprecate Kurzweil’s ideas use metaphors that are evocative of religion. For example:
“The rapture for nerds”
Don’t patronize my “religion” on this thread!
On what basis does Kurzweil base his “augury” on? – The Law of Accelerating Returns. Click on the figure in my signature. It’s a 56 page read (not double-spaced including graphs on Microsoft Word) but it is definitely worth an hour of your time for a perusal of that essay.
I do not know if our species can eliminate this destructive selfishness and I fear this attitude is internecine. Such sentiments are an impediment to human solidarity. One should concede that Kurzweil is rather adept at predicting technological trends, but one has to ask if he is apprised about humanity’s selfish nature.
Nevertheless, I’m excited about the future.
money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2007/05/14/100008848/index.htm?postversion=2007050209By the time a child born today graduates from college, Kurzweil believes, poverty, disease, and reliance on fossil fuels should be a thing of the past. Speaking of which, don’t get him started on global-warming hype.
I hope that we can eliminate poverty and rectify social inequality in the future. Although I believe in some of Kurzweil’s predictions, unfortunately, his work hasn’t completely quelled my doubts about his optimistic future. Superficially, it sounds like the quixotic world of Star Trek. I wonder if technology will solve all the maladies of the human species – poverty, disease, social inequality, and so on – and abolish suffering. However, some who aim to deprecate Kurzweil’s ideas use metaphors that are evocative of religion. For example:
“The rapture for nerds”
Don’t patronize my “religion” on this thread!
On what basis does Kurzweil base his “augury” on? – The Law of Accelerating Returns. Click on the figure in my signature. It’s a 56 page read (not double-spaced including graphs on Microsoft Word) but it is definitely worth an hour of your time for a perusal of that essay.
"If you went around saying that in a couple of decades we’ll have cell-sized, brain-enhancing robots circulating through our bloodstream, or that we’ll be able to upload a person’s consciousness into a computer, people would probably question your sanity.
Do you think Kurzweil is an over-optimistic pollyanna? I am a misanthrope and I loathe many aspects about the species Homo sapiens. For example:But if you say things like that and you’re Ray Kurzweil, you get invited to dinner at Bill Gates’ house - twice - so he can pick your brain for insights on the future of technology. The Microsoft (Charts, Fortune 500) chairman calls him a “visionary thinker and futurist.”
Lee Silver, a Princeton biologist, said he’d love to believe in the future as Kurzweil sees it, but the problem is, humans are involved. The instinct to preserve individuality, and to gain advantage for yourself and your children, would survive any breakthrough into biological immortality – which Silver doesn’t think is possible. The gap between the haves and have-nots would widen and Kurzweil’s vision of a united humanity would become ever more elusive, he said.
wired.com/medtech/health/news/2005/02/66585“I think it would require a change in human nature,” Silver said, “and I don’t think people want to do that.”
I do not know if our species can eliminate this destructive selfishness and I fear this attitude is internecine. Such sentiments are an impediment to human solidarity. One should concede that Kurzweil is rather adept at predicting technological trends, but one has to ask if he is apprised about humanity’s selfish nature.
Nevertheless, I’m excited about the future.