Ray Kurzweil
the Cybernetic Inventor, Entrepreneur
and Futurist Philosopher talks about his
book "The Age of Spiritual Machines"
almost on the day it was released in
January of 1999. He recounts his earlier
publication "The Age of Intelligent
Machines" and offers many illuminating
projections of likely future Cybernetic
developments.
The Singularity
Is Near: The
Movie
does exactly
what Ray
Kurzweil set out
to do. It's a
movie version of
the book, with
two running
through lines.
In documentary
style, we have
Ray discussing
his ideas about
the Singularity,
with
commentators
variously
supporting or
refuting or
worrying about
his ideas. With
Bill McKibben in
the role of the
friendly flat
out opponent;
Bill Joy playing
the reasonable
but worried man;
and Mitch Kapor
doubting the
technological
possibilities --
they are all
worked into the
weave to (at
least) let us
know that not
everybody
believes that a)
The Singularity
is Coming and b)
It's going to
work out well.
K. Eric Drexler,
MIT roboticist
Cynthia
Breazeal,
desktop
manufacturing
guru Neil
Gershenfeld and
many more are
woven in to
support the idea
-- and the more
hopeful
potentials -- of
accelerating
change leading
to radical
alterations in
life (itself).
The value
added here for
those h+ types
already familiar
with this
discourse
includes the
clarity and
concise
expression of
the ideas
presented in
Ray's
doorstopper
sized book, and
lots of very
groovy, trippy,
and playful
graphics
(including an
apparent parody
of the opening
of
Fringe.)
And then
there's the
integration of a
fictional
narrative into
the whole thing.
The story
revolves around
Ramona,
Kurzweil's alter
ego and
virtual/AI
persona. This is
the same Ramona
who is
interviewed
throughout
The Singularity
Is Near
book, where her
role is to tell
us what life is
like at various
points in time
in the future.
To some extent,
she plays that
same role here,
but she also
supplies some
drama. And while
the acting here
will not win any
academy awards,
Ramona is put
into several
perilous
situations and
-- one of them,
at least -- is
rather
affecting. (I'm
not going to
give anything
away, except to
say that there's
a courtroom
scene, and
you'll find
yourself rooting
for her.) There
are some funny
elements too,
including a very
direct nod at
The Matrix.
Ultimately,
like the book,
The Singularity
Is Near: The
Movie is an
advocacy/teaching
film. I wouldn't
count on cinema
critics to find
in it a glorious
work of art. But
it's a total
blast to sit
through (even
with Tony
Robbins and Alan
Dershowitz) and
it's definitely
going to get
around and blow
minds, spark
debate, thought
and study.
Singularitarians
will want to
show this to
friends and
family, and even
for those who
don't believe in
the singularity
but support
transhumanist
ideas, there's a
whole lot about
nanotech,
biotech and AI
to tweak
interest and
excitement.
Ray Kurzweil grew up in
the New York City borough of
Queens. He was born to
secular Jewish parents who
had escaped
Austria just before the
onset of World War II, and he
was exposed via
Unitarian Universalism to a
diversity of religious faiths
during his upbringing. His
father was a musician and
composer and his mother was a
visual artist. His uncle, an
engineer at
Bell Labs, taught young Ray
the basics of
computer science.[1]
In his youth, he was an avid
reader of science fiction
literature. In 1963, at age
fifteen, he wrote his first
computer program. Designed to
process
statistical data, the
program was used by researchers
at IBM.[2]
Later in high school he created
a sophisticated
pattern-recognition software
program that analyzed the works
of classical composers, and then
synthesized its own songs in
similar styles. The capabilities
of this invention were so
impressive that, in 1965, he was
invited to appear on the
CBS television program
I've Got a Secret, where he
performed a piano piece that was
composed by a computer he also
had built.[3]
Later that year, he won first
prize in the International
Science Fair for the invention,[4]
and he was also recognized by
the Westinghouse Talent Search
and was personally congratulated
by President
Lyndon B. Johnson during a
White House ceremony.
In 1968, during his
sophomore year at
MIT, Kurzweil started a
company that used a computer
program to match high school
students with colleges. The
program, called the Select
College Consulting Program, was
designed by him and compared
thousands of different criteria
about each college with
questionnaire answers submitted
by each student applicant. When
he was 20, he sold the company
to Harcourt, Brace & World for
$100,000 (roughly $500,000 in
2006 dollars) plus royalties.[5]
He earned a
BS in Computer Science and
Literature in 1970 from
MIT.
In 1974, Kurzweil started
the company Kurzweil Computer
Products, Inc. and led
development of the first
omni-font
optical character recognition
system—a computer program
capable of recognizing text
written in any normal font.
Before that time, scanners had
only been able to read text
written in a few fonts. He
decided that the best
application of this technology
would be to create a reading
machine, which would allow blind
people to understand written
text by having a computer read
it to them aloud. However, this
device required the invention of
two enabling technologies—the
CCD
flatbed scanner and the
text-to-speech synthesizer.
Under his direction, development
of these technologies was
completed,
citation needed] and
on January 13, 1976, the
finished product was unveiled
during a news conference headed
by him and the leaders of the
National Federation of the Blind.
Called the Kurzweil Reading
Machine, the device covered an
entire tabletop. It gained him
mainstream recognition: on the
day of the machine's unveiling,
Walter Cronkite used the
machine to give his signature
soundoff, "And that's the way it
is, January 13, 1976." While
listening to
The Today Show, musician
Stevie Wonder heard a
demonstration of the device and
purchased the first production
version of the Kurzweil Reading
Machine, beginning a lifelong
friendship between himself and
Kurzweil.
According to former
Kurzweil Computer Products
employees, the Kurzweil Reading
Machine's designer was engineer
Richard Brown, a KCP employee at
the time[citation
needed].
Kurzweil's next major
business venture began in 1978,
when Kurzweil Computer Products
began selling a commercial
version of the optical character
recognition computer program.
LexisNexis was one of the
first customers, and bought the
program to upload paper legal
and news documents onto its
nascent online databases.
Two years later, Kurzweil
sold his company to
Xerox, which had an interest
in further commercializing
paper-to-computer text
conversion. Kurzweil Computer
Products became a subsidiary of
Xerox formerly known as
Scansoft and now as
Nuance Communications, and
he functioned as a consultant
for the former until 1995.
Kurzweil's next business
venture was in the realm of
electronic music technology.
After a 1982 meeting with
Stevie Wonder, in which the
latter lamented the divide in
capabilities and qualities
between electronic synthesizers
and traditional musical
instruments, Kurzweil was
inspired to create a new
generation of music synthesizers
capable of accurately
duplicating the sounds of real
instruments.
Kurzweil Music Systems was
founded in the same year, and in
1984, the
Kurzweil K250 was unveiled.
The machine was capable of
imitating a number of
instruments, and in tests
musicians were unable to discern
the difference between the
Kurzweil K250 on piano mode
from a normal grand piano.[6]
The recording and mixing
abilities of the machine,
coupled with its abilities to
imitate different instruments
made it possible for a single
user to compose and play an
entire orchestral piece.
Kurzweil Music Systems was
sold to Korean musical
instrument manufacturer
Young Chang in 1990. As with
Xerox, Kurzweil remained as
a consultant for several years.
Concurrent with Kurzweil
Music Systems, Kurzweil created
the company Kurzweil Applied
Intelligence (KAI) to develop
computer
speech recognition systems
for commercial use. The first
product, which debuted in 1987,
was the world's first
large-vocabulary
speech recognition program,
allowing human users to dictate
to their computers via
microphone and then have the
device transcribe their speech
into written text. Later, the
company combined the speech
recognition technology with
medical expert systems to create
the Kurzweil VoiceMed (today
called Clinical Reporter) line
of products, which allow doctors
to write medical reports by
speaking instead of writing. KAI
exists today as
Nuance Communications.
Kurzweil started
Kurzweil Educational Systems
in 1996 to develop new
pattern-recognition-based
computer technologies to help
people with disabilities such as
blindness,
dyslexia and
ADD in school. Products
include the Kurzweil 1000
text-to-speech converter
software program, which enables
a computer to read electronic
and scanned text aloud to blind
or visually-impaired users, and
the Kurzweil 3000 program, which
is a multifaceted electronic
learning system that helps with
reading, writing, and
study skills.
During the 1990s Kurzweil
founded the Medical Learning
Company.[7]
The company's products included
an interactive computer
education program for doctors
and a computer-simulated
patient. Around the same time,
Kurzweil started
KurzweilCyberArt.com—a website
featuring computer programs to
assist the creative art process.
The site used to offer free
downloads of a program called
AARON—a visual art synthesizer
developed by Harold Cohen—and of
"Kurzweil's Cybernetic Poet",
which automatically creates
poetry. During this period he
also started KurzweilAI.net, a
website devoted towards
showcasing news of scientific
developments, publicizing the
ideas of high-tech thinkers and
critics alike, and promoting
futurist-related discussion
among the general population
through the Mind-X forum.
In 1999, Kurzweil created
a
hedge fund called "FatKat"
(Financial Accelerating
Transactions from Kurzweil
Adaptive Technologies)
http://www.fatkat.com, which
began trading in 2006. He has
stated that the ultimate aim is
to improve the performance of
FatKat's A.I. investment
software program, enhancing its
ability to recognize patterns in
"currency fluctuations and
stock-ownership trends."[8]
He predicted in his 1999 book,
The Age of Spiritual Machines,
that computers will one day
prove superior to the best human
financial minds at making
profitable investment decisions.
In 2001, Canadian rock band
Our Lady Peace released an
album, titled
Spiritual Machines, based on
Kurzweil's book. Kurzweil's
voice was featured in the album,
reading excerpts from his book.
In June 2005, Kurzweil
introduced the
"Kurzweil-National Federation of
the Blind Reader" (K-NFB Reader)—a
pocket-sized device consisting
of a digital camera and computer
unit. Like the Kurzweil Reading
Machine of almost 30 years
before, the
K-NFB Reader is designed to
aid blind people by reading
written text aloud. The newer
machine is portable and scans
text through digital camera
images, while the older machine
is large and scans text through
flatbed scanning.
Kurzweil is currently
making a movie due for release
in 2010 called The Singularity
is Near: A True Story About the
Future[9]
based, in part, on his 2005 book
The Singularity Is Near.
Part fiction, part non-fiction,
he interviews 20 big thinkers
like
Marvin Minsky, plus there is
a B-line narrative story that
illustrates some of the ideas,
where a computer avatar (Ramona)
saves the world from
self-replicating microscopic
robots.
In addition to Kurzweil's
movie, an independent,
feature-length documentary was
made about Kurzweil, his life,
and his ideas called
Transcendent Man. Filmmakers
Barry and Felicia Ptolemy
followed Kurzweil, documenting
his global speaking tour.
Premiered in 2009 at the
Tribeca Film Festival,[9]
Transcendent Man documents
Kurzweil's quest to reveal
mankind's ultimate destiny and
explores many of the ideas found
in his New York Times
bestselling book,
The Singularity is Near,
including his concept of
exponential growth, radical life
expansion, and how we will
transcend our biology. The
Ptolemys documented Kurzweil's
stated goal of bringing back his
late father using AI. The film
also features critics who argue
against Kurzweil's predictions.
Kurzweil said during a
2006 C-SPAN2 interview that he
was working on a new book that
focused on the inner workings of
the human brain and how this
could be applied to building AI.
While being interviewed
for a February 2009 issue of
Rolling Stone magazine, Kurzweil
expressed a desire to construct
a genetic copy of his late
father, Fredric Kurzweil, from
DNA within his grave site. This
feat would be achieved by
deploying various nanorobots to
send samples of DNA back from
the grave, constructing a clone
of Fredric and retrieving
memories and recollections—from
Ray's mind—of his father.[10]
Kurzweil's first book,
The Age of Intelligent Machines,
was published in 1990. The
nonfiction work discusses the
history of computer AI and also
makes forecasts regarding likely
future developments. Other
experts in the field of AI
contribute heavily to the work
in the form of essays. The
Association of American
Publishers' awarded it the
status of Most Outstanding
Computer Science Book of 1990.[11]
Next, Kurzweil published a
book on nutrition in 1993 called
The 10% Solution for a Healthy
Life. The book's main idea
is that high levels of fat
intake are the cause of many
health disorders common in the
U.S., and thus that cutting fat
consumption down to 10% of the
total calories consumed would be
optimal for most people.
In 1998, Kurzweil
published
The Age of Spiritual Machines,
which focuses heavily on further
elucidating his theories
regarding the future of
technology, which themselves
stem from his analysis of
long-term trends in biological
and technological evolution.
Much focus goes into examining
the likely course of AI
development, along with the
future of computer architecture.
In February 2007,
Ptolemaic Productions acquired
the rights to The Singularity is
Near, The Age of Spiritual
Machines and Fantastic Voyage
including the rights to
Kurzweil's life and ideas for
the film
Transcendent Man. The
feature length documentary was
directed by Barry Ptolemy.
Kurzweil's newest book,
Transcend: Nine Steps to Living
Well Forever,[14]
a follow-up on Fantastic Voyage,
was released on April 28, 2009.
The book he's currently
working on is called "How The
Mind Works and How To Build
One".[15]
Kurzweil has been called
the successor and "rightful heir
to
Thomas Edison", and was also
referred to by
Forbes as "the ultimate
thinking machine."[16][17][18]
Kurzweil has received
these awards, among others:
First place in the
1965 International Science
Fair[4]
for inventing the classical
music synthesizing computer.
The 1990 "Engineer of
the Year" award from Design
News.[21]
The 1994 Dickson
Prize in Science. One is
awarded every year by
Carnegie Mellon University
to individuals who have
"notably advanced the field
of science." Both a medal
and a $50,000 prize are
presented to winners.[22]
The 1998 "Inventor of
the Year" award from the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.[23]
The 1999 National
Medal of Technology.[24]
This is the highest award
the President of the United
States can bestow upon
individuals and groups for
pioneering new technologies,
and the President dispenses
the award at his discretion.[25]
Bill Clinton presented
Kurzweil with the National
Medal of Technology during a
White House ceremony in
recognition of Kurzweil's
development of
computer-based technologies
to help the disabled.
The 2000 Telluride
Tech Festival Award of
Technology.[26]
Two other individuals also
received the same honor that
year. The award is presented
yearly to people who
"exemplify the life, times
and standard of contribution
of Tesla, Westinghouse and
Nunn."
The 2001 Lemelson-MIT
Prize for a lifetime of
developing technologies to
help the disabled and to
enrich the arts.[27]
Only one is meted out each
year to highly successful,
mid-career inventors. A
$500,000 award accompanies
the prize.[28]
Kurzweil was inducted
into the National Inventors
Hall of Fame in 2002 for
inventing the Kurzweil
Reading Machine.[29]
The organization "honors the
women and men responsible
for the great technological
advances that make human,
social and economic progress
possible."[30]
Fifteen other people were
inducted into the Hall of
Fame the same year.[31]
The Arthur C. Clarke
Lifetime Achievement Award
on April 20, 2009 for
lifetime achievement as an
inventor and futurist in
computer-based technologies.[32]
Kurzweil claims to
have received seventeen
honorary degrees from as
many institutions, although
independent articles that
verify such a claim do not
exist:
After several years of
closely tracking trends in the
computer and machine industries,
Kurzweil came to a realization:
the innovation rate of computer
technology was increasing not
linearly but rather
exponentially. With this,
Kurzweil formed a method of
predicting the course of
technological development. As a
computer scientist, Kurzweil
also understood that there was
no technical reason that this
type of
performance growth could not
continue well into the 21st
century.
Since growth in so many
fields of science and technology
depends upon computing power,
such improvements translate into
improvements to human knowledge
and to non-computer sciences
like nanotechnology,
biotechnology, and materials
science. Considering the ongoing
exponential growth in computer
capabilities, this means many
new technologies will become
available long before the
majority of people—who
intuitively think linearly about
technological progress—expect.
This core idea is expressed by
Kurzweil's "Law of Accelerating
Returns".
Kurzweil projects that
between now and 2050 medical
advances will allow people to
radically extend their lifespans
while preserving and even
improving quality of life as
they age. The aging process
could at first be slowed, then
halted, and then reversed as
newer and better medical
technologies became available.
Kurzweil argues that much of
this will be due to advances in
medical nanotechnology, which
will allow microscopic machines
to travel through one's body and
repair all types of damage at
the cellular level. Equally
consequential developments will
occur within the realm of
computers as they become
increasingly powerful, numerous
and cheap between now and 2050.
Kurzweil predicts that a
computer will pass the
Turing test by 2029, by
demonstrating to have a mind
indistinguishable from a human's
in terms of knowledge, emotion
and self-awareness. He predicts
that the first AI will be a
computer simulation of a human
brain which will be created
thanks to hyperaccurate
brainscanning done by advanced
medical nanomachines inserted
into a real human brain.
Kurzweil suggests that AIs will
inevitably become far smarter
and more powerful than
unenhanced humans. He also
believes that AIs will exhibit
moral thinking and will respect
humans as their ancestors.
According to his predictions,
the line between humans and
machines will blur as machines
attain human-level intelligence
and humans start upgrading
themselves with cybernetic
implants. These implants will
greatly enhance human cognitive
and physical abilities, and
allow direct interface between
humans and machines.
Kurzweil's standing as a
leading
futurist and
Transhumanist has gained him
positions of prominence within
pertinent organizations:
In February 2009,
Kurzweil, in cooperation with
Google and the
NASA Ames Research Center,
announced the creation of
Singularity University. The
University's self-described
mission is to "assemble, educate
and inspire a cadre of leaders
who strive to understand and
facilitate the development of
exponentially advancing
technologies and apply, focus
and guide these tools to address
humanity’s grand challenges".[41]
Using Kurzweil's Singularity
concept as a foundation, the
University, whose initial class
of 40 Fellows began their
nine-week graduate program in
June, 2009, provides students
the skills and tools to guide
the process of the Singularity
"for the benefit of humanity and
its environment". Singularity U
encompasses cross-disciplinary
studies in ten different
scientific and future-oriented
tracks, taught by industry
experts.
He predicts
nanobots will be used to
maintain the human body and to
extend the human lifespan.[3][43]
Kurzweil has stressed the
extreme potential dangers of
nanotechnology,[3]
but argues that in practice,
progress cannot be stopped, and
any attempt to do so will retard
the progress of defensive and
beneficial technologies more
than the malevolent ones,
increasing the danger. He says
that the proper place of
regulation is to make sure
progress proceeds safely and
quickly. He applies this
reasoning to biotechnology,
artificial intelligence, and
technology in general.[citation
needed]
In his controversial 2001
essay, "The Law of Accelerating
Returns", Kurzweil proposes an
extension of
Moore's law that forms the
basis of the concept of "Technological
Singularity".[44]
This
section may contain
original research.
Please
improve it by
verifying the claims
made and adding
references.
Statements consisting
only of original
research may be removed.
More details may be
available on the
talk page.
(December
2007)
Arguably, Kurzweil gained
a large amount of credibility as
a futurist from his first book
The Age of Intelligent Machines.
It was written from 1986 to 1989
and published in 1990. Building
on
Ithiel de Sola Pool's
"Technologies of Freedom"
(1983), Kurzweil forecast the
demise of the Soviet Union
due to new technologies such as
cellular phones and fax machines
disempowering authoritarian
governments by removing state
control over the flow of
information. In the book
Kurzweil also extrapolated
preexisting trends in the
improvement of computer chess
software performance to predict
correctly that computers would
beat the best human players by
1998, and most likely in that
year. In fact, the event
occurred in May 1997 when chess
World Champion
Garry Kasparov was defeated
by IBM's
Deep Blue computer in a
well-publicized chess
tournament. Perhaps most
significantly, Kurzweil foresaw
the explosive growth in
worldwide Internet use that
began in the 1990s. At the time
of the publication of
The Age of Intelligent Machines,
there were only 2.6 million
Internet users in the world,[45]
and the medium was unreliable,
difficult to use, and deficient
in content, making Kurzweil's
realization of its future
potential especially prescient,
given the technology's limits at
that time. He also stated that
the Internet would explode not
only in the number of users but
in content as well, eventually
granting users access "to
international networks of
libraries, data bases, and
information services".
Additionally, Kurzweil correctly
foresaw that the preferred mode
of Internet access would
inevitably be through wireless
systems, and he was also correct
to estimate that the latter
would become practical for
widespread use in the early 21st
century.
Kurzweil also accurately
forecast that, by the end of the
1990s, many documents would
exist solely in computers and on
the Internet, and that they
would commonly be embedded with
sounds, animations, and videos
that would inhibit their
transfer to paper format.
Moreover, he foresaw that
cellular phones would grow in
popularity while shrinking in
size for the foreseeable future.
This
article's
factual accuracy may
be compromised because
of out-of-date
information. Please help
improve the article
by updating it. There
may be additional
information on the
talk page.
(June
2009)
In 1999, Kurzweil
published a second book titled
The Age of Spiritual Machines,
which goes into more depth
explaining his futurist ideas.
The third and final section of
the book is devoted to
elucidating the specific course
of technological advancements
Kurzweil predicts the world will
experience over the next
century. Titled "To Face the
Future", the section is divided
into four chapters respectively
named "2009", "2019", "2029",
and "2099". In each chapter,
Kurzweil makes predictions about
what life and technology will be
like in that year.
While the veracity of
Kurzweil's predictions beyond
2009 cannot yet be determined,
many of the ideas of the "2009"
chapter have been scrutinized.
To begin, Kurzweil's claims that
2009 would be a year of
continued transition as
purely electronic computer
memory continued to replace
older rotating memory seems
to be disproved by continued
rapid growth in hard-disk
capacity and unit sales,[46]
while high-capacity
flash drives have yet to
catch on in high-volume
applications. Nonetheless, solid
state storage is the preferred
means of storage in low-volume
applications such as MP3
players, handheld gaming
systems, cellular phones and
digital cameras. Many companies
produce a 256 GB solid state
drive for use in laptops and
desktops, but these drives will
cost over $600, making storage
on them cost roughly five times
the price of comparable
hard-disk storage. On the other
hand, Kurzweil correctly foresaw
the growing ubiquity of
wireless Internet access and
cordless computer peripherals.
Perhaps of more importance,
Kurzweil presaged the explosive
growth in peer-to-peer
filesharing and the emergence of
the Internet as a major medium
for commerce and for accessing
media such as movies, television
programs, newspaper and magazine
text, and music. He also claimed
that three-dimensional computer
chips would be in common use by
2009 (though older, "2-D" chips
would still predominate). But
although IBM has recently
developed the necessary
chip-stacking technology and
announced plans to begin using
three-dimensional chips in its
supercomputers and for wireless
communication applications, chip
stacking remains a low-volume
technology in 2009.[47]
[edit]
Solar Power and
Grand Challenges of the 21st
Century
In 2010, Ray Kurzweil said
in an expert panel in the
National Academy of Engineering
that solar power will scale up
to produce all the energy needs
of Earth's people in 20 years.
[50]
Kurzweil admits that he
cared little for his health
until age 35, when he was
diagnosed with a
glucose intolerance, an
early form of
type II diabetes (a major
risk factor for heart disease).
Kurzweil then found a doctor
that shares his non-conventional
beliefs to develop an extreme
regimen involving hundreds of
pills, chemical i.v. treatments,
red wine and various other
methods to attempt to live
longer.
Kurzweil believes that the
radical technological advances
made throughout the 21st century
will ultimately culminate with
the discovery of means to
reverse the aging process, cure
any disease, and repair
presently unrepairable injuries.
Kurzweil has thus focused
himself towards following a
lifestyle intended to heighten
his odds of living to see the
day when science can make him
immortal. Kurzweil calls this
the "Bridge to a Bridge to a
Bridge" strategy: The first
bridge to longer life is
Kurzweil's regimen, whereas the
second- and third bridges are
based on advanced
biotechnologies and
nanotechnologies, respectively,
that have not yet been invented.
Kurzweil believes they will
allow for progressively longer
human lifespans to the point of
immortality and that
successfully implementing the
first "bridge" now allows one to
reach the second in the future,
which then allows one to reach
the third.
Some elements of
Kurzweil's lifestyle are
conventional. He exercises
frequently, does not eat to
excess, and does not abuse
recreational drugs. Many others,
however, are controversial and
may be explained by his
obsession with living as long as
possible. Kurzweil ingests "250
supplements, eight to 10 glasses
of
alkaline water and 10 cups
of green tea" every day and
drinks several glasses of red
wine a week in an effort to
"reprogram" his biochemistry.[51]
Lately, he has cut down the
number of supplement pills to
150.[52]
Although not supported by
science,[53]
Kurzweil and many others believe
that consuming large amounts of
water is necessary for flushing
toxins out of the body, and that
alkaline water allows the body
to preserve important enzymes
used for neutralizing acidic
metabolic wastes. For this
reason, Kurzweil abhors soft
drinks and coffee, which are
both acidic. Kurzweil believes
that acidic drinks drain
detoxifying enzyme reserves.
Kurzweil has taken criticism
from nutritionists and
scientists for his advocacy of
alkaline water's alleged health
benefits and other
unconventional beliefs, and he
responded to this over the
Internet.[54]
Green tea and red wine contain
antioxidants that neutralize
free radicals. Kurzweil also
consumes red wine because it
contains the compound
resveratrol, which may help
to fight heart disease according
to some evidence, but it is also
a potentiator of breast
carcinomas which may prove to
out-weigh any suggested benefit.[55]
Kurzweil also takes pills
containing high concentrations
of the chemical because the
amount in red wine is extremely
inconsistent.
On weekends, Kurzweil also
undergoes intravenous
transfusions of chemical
cocktails at a clinic which he
believes will reprogram his
biochemistry. He routinely
measures the chemical
composition of his own bodily
fluids, undergoes preemptive
medical tests for many diseases
and disorders, and keeps
detailed records about the
content of all the meals he
eats. On that last note,
Kurzweil only eats organic foods
with low glycemic loads and
claims it has been years since
he last consumed anything
containing sugar. Kurzweil
considers foods rich in sugars
and carbohydrates to be
unhealthy since they spike the
levels of glucose and insulin in
the bloodstream, leading to
health problems in the long
term. He instead eats mainly
vegetables, lean meats, tofu,
and low glycemic load
carbohydrates, and only uses
extra virgin olive oil for
cooking. Kurzweil also
diligently eats foods rich with
Omega-3 fatty acids (including
small, wild salmon).
Moreover, Kurzweil makes
it a priority to get sufficient
sleep for physical and
psychological health, and he
maintains low stress levels in
part by meditating and getting
massages weekly. He exercises
daily with walking, bike-riding
and using workout machines, but
advises against high-impact
forms of exercise. Kurzweil
claims that his rigorous efforts
have yielded positive results,
pointing to his vitamin-selling
business partner who claims his
"biological age" is more than a
decade younger than his
chronological age. In fact,
Kurzweil claims that his
personal health regimen has
actually slowed down his rate of
aging. He also advocates
maintaining a slightly
below-average body weight on the
grounds that it imparts some of
the life-extension benefits of
full
caloric restriction.
Kurzweil joined the
Alcor Life Extension Foundation,
a
cryonics company. In the
event of his death, Kurzweil's
body will be chemically
preserved, frozen in liquid
nitrogen, and stored at an Alcor
facility in the hope that future
medical technology will be able
to revive him.
Kurzweil and his current
"anti-aging" doctor, Terry
Grossman, MD., now have two
websites promoting their first[56]
and second book,[57]
and sells their "longevity
products", many of which can be
found on medical scam warning
sites.[58]
Though Kurzweil's parents
were
Jewish, they raised him as a
Unitarian and exposed him to
many different faiths during his
youth. Kurzweil gave a 2007
keynote speech to the
United Church of Christ in
Hartford, Connecticut,
alongside
Barack Obama, who was then a
Presidential candidate. In The
Singularity is Near he expresses
a need for a new religion based
on the principle of mutual
respect between sentient life
forms, and on the principle of
respecting knowledge. This
religion would not have a
leader, instead being purely
personal to adherents.
Even beyond philosophical
arguments over whether a machine
can "think" (see
Philosophy of artificial
intelligence), Kurzweil's
ideas have generated much
criticism within the scientific
community and in the media.
Mitch Kapor, the founder of
Lotus Development Corporation,
has called the notion of a
technological singularity "intelligent
design for the
IQ 140 people...This
proposition that we're heading
to this point at which
everything is going to be just
unimaginably different—it's
fundamentally, in my view,
driven by a religious impulse.
And all of the frantic
arm-waving can't obscure that
fact for me."[59]
VR pioneer
Jaron Lanier has been one of
the strongest critics of
Kurzweil’s ideas, describing
them as “cybernetic totalism”
(totalitarianism), and has
outlined his views on the
culture surrounding Kurzweil’s
predictions in an essay for
Edge.org entitled One Half
of a Manifesto.[60]
Pulitzer Prize winner
Douglas Hofstadter, author
of
Gödel, Escher, Bach, has
said of Kurzweil's and
Hans Moravec's books: "It’s
as if you took a lot of very
good food and some dog excrement
and blended it all up so that
you can't possibly figure out
what's good or bad. It's an
intimate mixture of rubbish and
good ideas, and it's very hard
to disentangle the two, because
these are smart people; they're
not stupid."[61]
Bill Joy, cofounder of
Sun Microsystems, agrees
with Kurzweil's timeline of
future progress, but thinks that
technologies such as AI,
nanotechnology and advanced
biotechnology will create a
dystopian world.[68]
Daniel Lyons, writing in
Newsweek, criticized
Kurzweil for some of his
predictions which turned out to
be wrong; such as the economy
continuing to boom from the 1998
dot-com through 2009, a US
company having a
market capitalization of
more than $1 trillion, a
supercomputer achieving 20
petaflops, speech
recognition being in widespread
use and cars that would drive
themselves using sensors
installed in highways; all by
2009.[69]
To the charge that 20 petaflop
supercomputer was not produced
in the time he predicted,
Kurzweil responded that he
considers
Google a giant
supercomputer, and that it is
capable of 20 petaflops.[69]
Biologist
P.Z. Myers has criticized
Kurzweil's predictions as being
based on "New
Age spiritualism" rather
than science and says that
Kurzweil does not understand
basic biology.[70]
Myers also says that Kurzweil
picks and chooses events that
appear to demonstrate his claim
of exponential technological
increase leading up to a
singularity, and ignores events
that do not.[71]
^
Miller, Robin
(2004-10-20).
"Neal Stephenson
Responds With Wit and
Humor".
Slashdot.
http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/10/20/1518217.
Retrieved 2008-08-28.
"My thoughts are more in
line with those of Jaron
Lanier, who points out
that while hardware
might be getting faster
all the time, software
is shit (I am
paraphrasing his
argument). And without
software to do something
useful with all that
hardware, the hardware's
nothing more than a
really complicated space
heater."
^ ab
Lyons, Daniel (May
2009).
"I, Robot". Newsweek.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/197812/page/2.
Retrieved 2009-05-22.
"During the height of
the dotcom boom in 1998,
Kurzweil predicted that
the economy would keep
on booming right through
2009 (and on to 2019,
for that matter) and
that one U.S. company
(he didn't say which)
would have a market
capitalization of more
than $1 trillion. Not
even close. Kurzweil
also predict-ed that by
2009 a top supercomputer
would be capable of
performing 20
quadrillion operations
per second (20 petaflops
in computer jargon), the
same as the human brain.
In fact, the top
supercomputer just broke
the one-petaflop
mark—though Kurzweil
says he considers all of
Google to be a giant
supercomputer and that
it is, indeed, capable
of performing 20
petaflops. Kurzweil also
predicted that by now
our cars would be able
to drive themselves by
communicating with
intelligent sensors
embedded in highways,
and that speech
recognition would be in
widespread use."
^
Lyons, Daniel (May
2009).
"I, Robot". Newsweek.
http://www.newsweek.com/id/197812.
Retrieved 2009-07-24.
"Still, a lot of people
think Kurzweil is
completely bonkers
and/or full of a certain
messy byproduct of
ordinary biological
functions. They include
P. Z. Myers, a biologist
at the University of
Minnesota, Morris, who
has used his blog to
poke fun at Kurzweil and
other armchair futurists
who, according to Myers,
rely on junk science and
don't understand basic
biology. "I am
completely baffled by
Kurzweil's popularity,
and in particular the
respect he gets in some
circles, since his
claims simply do not
hold up to even casually
critical examination,"
writes Myers. He says
Kurzweil's Singularity
theories are closer to a
deluded religious
movement than they are
to science. "It's a New
Age spiritualism—that's
all it is," Myers says.
"Even geeks want to find
God somewhere, and
Kurzweil provides it for
them.""
The prototype is designed for use at home, using Internet blueprints to print custom 3-D objects. The desired object is printed in a small tub filled with synthetic resin.
New Scientist, May 19, 2011 — TissueFlex, a disposable micro-bioreactor that allows cells to be grown in three dimensions rather than two, is being developed by a start-up firm called Zyoxel.
The micro-bioreactor is made from a biocompatible silicone-based polymer and comprises just two parts: the bottom layer,…
Carbon nanotubes that mimic natural tissue and can regenerate heart cells in a dish have been created by researchers at Brown University.
The material compensates for nerve cells in the heart’s wall and a special class of cells that spontaneously expand and contract, keeping the heart beating in perfect synchronicity,…
Wired, May 17, 2011 — The amount of information carried in the arrangement of words is the same across all languages, even languages that aren’t related to each other. This consistency could hint at a single common ancestral language, or universal features of how human brains process speech,…
Wired , May 16, 2011 — When people can learn what others think, the wisdom of crowds may veer towards ignorance.
In a new study of crowd wisdom — the statistical phenomenon by which individual biases cancel each other out, distilling hundreds or thousands of individual guesses into uncannily accurate average answers…
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Center for Functional Nanostructures (CFN) researchers have created the first 3-D invisibility cloak for ordinary (non-polarized) visible light, limited at this time to the 700 nm. (red) range.
BBC News, May 18, 2011 — An Austrian man has voluntarily had his hand amputated so he can be fitted with a bionic hand, which will be controlled by nerve signals in his own arm.
The bionic hands, manufactured by the German prosthetics company Otto Bock, can pinch and grasp…
New York Times, May 18, 2011 — New blood tests that can gauge the length of telomeres in the human body are now going on sale, marketed by some laboratories as revealing the subject’s biological age.
Experts disagree on the relevance of telomere length as an indicator of biological age.
Wall Street Journal, May 18, 2011 — After a weeks-long outage that compromised the personal information of more than 100 million subscribers to Sony’s Playstation Network and lost Sony as much as $1 billion, CEO Howard Stringer says that no online network’s security can be guaranteed in the ‘bad new world’ of cybercrime.
Bloomberg, May 16, 2011 — The hackers that brought down Sony’s Playstation Network for more than a month used stolen credit cards to rent computing power from Amazon’s Elastic Computing Cloud (EC2) to carry out their attack. Personal information, credit cards, and passwords from millions of customers were seized by hackers during the…
Daily Mail, May 16, 2011 — Dr. Henry Markram, a neuroscientist at the École Polytechnique Fédérale in Lausanne, Switzerland, has assembled a team of nine top European scientists to build a computer model of a human brain in 12 years.
New York Times, May 17, 2011 — WhereBerry, a new social networking website, lets you discuss where you want to go and what you want to do — such as what restaurant you want to visit or what movie you want to see. Entries are public, so you can get ideas…
ScienceInsider (published by Science magazine) reported Tuesday May 17 that “over the last week, a combination of robotic and human inspections has led to the conclusion that the fuel assemblies in units 1, 2, and 3 were completely exposed to the air for from over 6 hours to over 14 hours and that…
Topics: Energy | Environment/Climate | Survival/Defense
OK, I just made up the Facebook part, but IEEE Spectrum reported Tuesday on two robots that communicate linguistically like humans and invent new words. Spooky.
They’re called “Lingodroids” (reminds me of Stephen King’s even spookier The Langoliers, which were robotic monsters dealing with a “time rip”).…
Topics: AI/Robotics | Cognitive Science/Neuroscience | Social Networking/Web 2.0
Now that NASA’s Kepler space telescope has identified 1,235 possible planets around stars in our galaxy, astronomers at the University of California, Berkeley, are aiming a radio telescope — the 100 meter Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope, the largest steerable radio telescope in the world — at the…
I love the premise: take off on a global trek to interview the world’s oldest people, top health and fitness gurus, and smartest life-extension scientists, and ask one question: what’s your secret?
In How To Live Forever, a new film from Variance Films (opening in New York Friday…
Two worlds will merge next weekend (May 14–15) in New York City, and it’s about time.
Humanity+ @ Parsons, a collaboration of Humanity+ and Parsons The New School for Design, promises to offer up a delicious cornucopia of innovative speakers and events. Appropriately kicking it all off: radical author/futurist/high-energy seminal thinker…
In “Against Naive Uploadism: Memory, Consciousness and Synaptic Homeostasis,” neuroscientist Seth Weisberg challenges the comparison of a neuron to a digital computer and the idea that an action potential (spike) fired by one neuron equals one calculation at each synapse. He also challenges the assumption that we are approaching computing power comparable to…
Topics: AI/Robotics | Cognitive Science/Neuroscience | Human Enhancement
“This is a necessary first step in the process,” said Professor Alice Parker, who began the complex project of looking at the possibility of developing a synthetic brain…
Sadly, one of the world’s last remaining typewriter factories, Godrej & Boyce in Mumbai, India, is closing down its typewriter production line, survived only by Moonachie, N.J.-based Swintec.
We may not know what we’ve lost. Despite its limitations, with a typewriter, you are pressed to think out the entirety of…
Atlas Shrugged Part I, the movie, an adaptation of Ayn Rand’s 1957 objectivist novel Atlas Shrugged, tells the first installment in the story of a dystopian future in which a collectivist society has forced the great thinkers of the world to go on strike, leaving the functioning world without scientists, engineers, philosophers,…
Topics: Entertainment/New Media | Social/Ethical/Legal
The Fermi paradox is the apparent contradiction between high estimates of the probability of the existence of extraterrestrial civilizations and the lack of evidence for, or contact with, such civilizations. As Enrico Fermi asked, “Where is everybody?”
One answer is that extraterrestial life sufficiently advanced to be capable of interstellar travel or communication must…
Tuesday night April 12, “Ray Kurzweil — inventor and subject of the documentaryTranscendent Man — stops by to take everything that Stephen thinks he understands about the world and grind it into unrecognizable smithereens before his forlorn and tearful eyes,” Comedy Central’s Indecision reports.
In the science-fiction movie Source Code (April 1 release), a secret program called “Source Code” sends a pilot back in time to cross over into another man’s identity and relive the last eight minutes of the passenger’s life on a train.
The mission: find a bomb that exploded on the…
Topics: Cognitive Science/Neuroscience | Entertainment/New Media | Virtual/Augmented Reality
Limitless | Director: Neil Burger. Cast: Bradley Cooper, Robert De Niro, Abbie Cornish
The moment I saw the film title — Limitless — I knew I was in for an oversimplified Hollywood-styled dramatization of transhuman themes, and set my expectations to a moderately amusing piece of crap.…
Topics: Cognitive Science/Neuroscience | Entertainment/New Media | Human Enhancement
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has found levels in filters in 12 of their radiation-monitoring stations “slightly higher” than those found by EPA monitors last week and a Department of Energy monitor the week before. But they are “still far below levels of public health concern,” the agency states.
A fundamental principle of bioethics requires the consent of a patient to any medical procedure performed upon them. A patient will exist the moment a conscious mindclone arises in some academic laboratory, or hacker’s garage. At that moment, ethical rules will be challenged, for the mindclone has not consented to the work being done on…
I decided to write this article after I found that many colleagues and participants whom I spoke with at the recent Humanity+ (ref. R.A. Koene, 2010b) and Transvision (ref. R.A. Koene, 2010a) conferences were struggling with personal and strategic decisions when they considered what sort of future to strive for.
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Topics: Cognitive Science/Neuroscience | Human Enhancement | Survival/Defense
There has been recent disappointment expressed in the progress in the field of genomics. In my view, this results from an overly narrow view of the science of genes and biological information processing in general. It reminds me of the time when the field of…
Amara D. Angelica on How To Live Forever* May 20 2011
Maria Entraigues http://www.facebook.com/maria.entraigues reminds me that "How to Live Forever" is opening today (Friday May 20) in Los Angeles. (@ ...
Logic on When will scientists grow meat in a petri dish? May 19 2011
This will become commonplace, particularly when combined with 3D printing technology. The yuk factor phase will be temporary. Just do ...
jpmelo on When will scientists grow meat in a petri dish? May 18 2011
Scientists should instead concentrate their efforts to integrate modified photosynthetic bacteria into human skin in a way they would integrate ...
Jay27 on ‘Team Frankenstein’ launch bid to build a human brain within decade May 18 2011
I hope he manages to pull it off. However, in the following 2008 article: http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/out_of_the_blue/P2/ The following is stated: "Once the team is able ...
Khannea Suntzu on Glimpse our robotic future in China May 18 2011
If China leapfrogs the US and Europe, then Democracy, diversity and Freedom on this planet has a pwoprem.
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Recent Comments
May 20 2011
I too was dissapointed lack of roborat. Or even robomouse or robo-fruit fly for that matter. I think Markram is ...
May 20 2011
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May 20 2011
Maria Entraigues http://www.facebook.com/maria.entraigues reminds me that "How to Live Forever" is opening today (Friday May 20) in Los Angeles. (@ ...
May 19 2011
There is a big difference between: "An Austrian man has voluntarily had his hand amputated so he can be fitted with ...
May 19 2011
This will become commonplace, particularly when combined with 3D printing technology. The yuk factor phase will be temporary. Just do ...
May 18 2011
I would like to see this search based upon a "radio signature" of the planet. This would take at ...
May 18 2011
Scientists should instead concentrate their efforts to integrate modified photosynthetic bacteria into human skin in a way they would integrate ...
May 18 2011
I hope he manages to pull it off. However, in the following 2008 article: http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/out_of_the_blue/P2/ The following is stated: "Once the team is able ...
May 18 2011
OK, I'm not a nuclear scientist, but from what I do understand, isn't a meltdown simply the final step of ...
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