By John Tierney
Source: New York Times
Before we get to Ray
Kurzweil’s plan for upgrading the “suboptimal software” in your brain, let me pass on some of the cheery
news he brought to the World Science Festival last week in New York.
Do you have trouble sticking to a diet? Have patience. Within 10 years, Dr. Kurzweil explained, there
will be a drug that lets you eat whatever you want without gaining weight.
Worried about greenhouse gas emissions? Have faith. Solar power may look terribly uneconomical at the
moment, but with the exponential progress being made in nanoengineering, Dr. Kurzweil calculates that it’ll be cost-competitive
with fossil fuels in just five years, and that within 20 years all our energy will come from clean sources.
Are you depressed by the prospect of dying? Well, if you can hang on
another 15 years, your life expectancy will keep rising every year faster than you’re aging. And then, before the century
is even half over, you can be around for the Singularity, that revolutionary transition when humans and/or machines start
evolving into immortal beings with ever-improving software.
At least that’s Dr. Kurzweil’s calculation. It may sound too good to be true, but even his critics acknowledge
he’s not your ordinary sci-fi fantasist. He is a futurist with a track record and enough credibility for the National
Academy of Engineering to publish his sunny forecast for solar energy.
He makes his predictions using what he calls the Law of Accelerating Returns, a concept he illustrated
at the festival with a history of his own inventions for the blind. In 1976, when he pioneered a device that could scan books
and read them aloud, it was the size of a washing machine.
Two decades ago he predicted that “early in the 21st century” blind people would be able to read anything
anywhere using a handheld device. In 2002 he narrowed the arrival date to 2008. On Thursday night at the festival, he pulled
out a new gadget the size of a cellphone, and when he pointed it at the brochure for the science festival, it had no trouble
reading the text aloud.
This invention, Dr. Kurzweil
said, was no harder to anticipate than some of the predictions he made in the late 1980s, like the explosive growth of the
Internet in the 1990s and a computer chess champion by 1998. (He was off by a year — Deep Blue’s chess victory
came in 1997.)
“Certain aspects of technology
follow amazingly predictable trajectories,” he said, and showed a graph of computing power starting with the first electromechanical
machines more than a century ago. At first the machines’ power doubled every three years; then in midcentury the doubling
came every two years (the rate that inspired Moore’s Law); now it takes only about a year.
Dr. Kurzweil has other graphs showing a century of exponential growth in the number
of patents issued, the spread of telephones, the money spent on education. One graph of technological changes goes back millions
of years, starting with stone tools and accelerating through the development of agriculture, writing, the Industrial Revolution
and computers.
Now, he sees biology, medicine, energy
and other fields being revolutionized by information technology. His graphs already show the beginning of exponential progress
in nanotechnology, in the ease of gene sequencing, in the resolution of brain scans. With these new tools, he says, by the
2020s we’ll be adding computers to our brains and building machines as smart as ourselves.
This serene confidence is not shared by neuroscientists like Vilayanur S. Ramachandran,
who discussed future brains with Dr. Kurzweil at the festival. It might be possible to create a thinking, empathetic machine,
Dr. Ramachandran said, but it might prove too difficult to reverse-engineer the brain’s circuitry because it evolved
so haphazardly.
“My colleague Francis Crick
used to say that God is a hacker, not an engineer,” Dr. Ramachandran said. “You can do reverse engineering, but
you can’t do reverse hacking.”
Dr. Kurzweil’s
predictions come under intense scrutiny in the engineering magazine IEEE Spectrum, which devotes its current issue to the
Singularity. Some of the experts writing in the issue endorse Dr. Kurzweil’s belief that conscious, intelligent beings
can be created, but most think it will take more than a few decades.
He is accustomed to this sort of pessimism and readily acknowledges how complicated the brain is. But if experts
in neurology and artificial intelligence (or solar energy or medicine) don’t buy his optimistic predictions, he says,
that’s because exponential upward curves are so deceptively gradual at first.
“Scientists imagine they’ll keep working at the present pace,” he told me
after his speech. “They make linear extrapolations from the past. When it took years to sequence the first 1 percent
of the human genome, they worried they’d never finish, but they were right on schedule for an exponential curve. If
you reach 1 percent and keep doubling your growth every year, you’ll hit 100 percent in just seven years.”
Dr. Kurzweil is so confident in these curves that he has made a $10,000
bet with Mitch Kapor, the creator of Lotus software. By 2029, Dr. Kurzweil wagers, a computer will pass the Turing Test by
carrying on a conversation that is indistinguishable from a human’s.
I’m not as confident those graphs are going to hold up for fields besides computer science, so
I’d be leery of betting on a date. But if I had to take sides in the 2029 wager, I’d put my money on Dr. Kurzweil.
He could be right once again about a revolution coming sooner than expected. And I’d hate to bet against the chance
to be around for this one.
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