Posted 24 September 2002 - 10:44 AM
I am greatly appreciative of your courteous reply. I will do the search and reading you suggest as well as look for the sci-fi tale Vinge authored, perhaps more than just one?
From what I have learned from this web site and a little study of SIAI I find that the concept of Singularity is in opposition to continuing and increasing respect for existing singularities, namely instances of human consciousness. I originally voted on this poll with the majority, that it depends on how Singularity is created. If I could, I would change my vote. As defined, I cannot see any other way for Singularity to be manifest except as a disaster for humanity and life in general. The superior intelligence we create should be our own. “The concept of the Singularity is simply the concept that the world passes beyond human understanding when a greater-than-human intelligence is created.” I never want to see such a state of being. Any one who seeks immortality probably does not want to spend that time in servitude to some other entity or at the least; we do not want to lose our self-determination. We will embrace, desire and put great effort into enhancing our abilities to understand this world. We will not want to create any “wild card” that renders us unable to see our place in universe. We want to know more about where we came from, where we are and where we are going. Without our seeking and finding answers to the question “Why are we?” we are open to being sacrificed for reasons that do not make sense, that do not respect life and our prospects for immortality. We should not seek to render ourselves unconscious, unaware or not understanding if we are to seek the greatest and the best for our own singularities. The tools we have to increase human intelligence are in known and yet to be discovered science. The very term “Singularity” trounces on science as it claims a special incomprehensible definition of the word. We should be working with words and concepts that respect utility and understanding. Working for ends that are defined as ultimately incomprehensible by ourselves is irrational. We need to work to increase our ability to see and understand, our inherent capacity to be rational. That is what the information explosion demands. Luckily, it appears that this is also the path of creating the greatest possible sustainable freedom for humans, for you, for myself. We don’t want any force to coordinate and direct our lives for reasons we cannot fathom.
“The Singularity isn't religion - the Singularity is the *real* future, and it's going to profoundly effect us all whether we like it or not.”
“It's not necessarily supposed to give you a warm fuzzy feeling or perfect clarity at first, all Singularitarianism is is a group of people trying to accelerate and ensure the integrity of the biggest event on Earth since the rise of life.”
I could dig for more but these jump out as conjecture that is offered as fact, extreme allegiance to a concept beyond reason or as I stated before, “extreme superlatives about the singular importance of the concept of Singularity.” You don’t have to go through the difficulty of trying to avoid such in the future for my sake. I might suggest you do so for your own credibility but it is your choice. Maybe the only people you are trying or want to communicate with are those that hold these beliefs or perhaps could be swayed to share such conviction.
I hoped that comic spoke about something I haven’t communicated in the text and in a way that was easier to see and understand rather than having to go through the time and effort of reading a great deal of text. It is possible that some one will claim some day that the Singularity has arrived. What if the next day evidence becomes known, perhaps in a sorry way, that Singularity was not met? The intelligence we created was not benevolent, was not intelligent because it was too cold and heartless about human needs and wants. Should we just say that our technology was insufficient and with further work we could come up with another experiment to try? Could the damage of this pursuit be so much that we would want to stop that experimentation altogether? Will we have given the super non-human intelligence so much power that we will not be able to abort the experiment and its violent repercussions grow? Maybe it would have been better to replace AI with Singularity but the comic is meant to be communicative and the term Singularity seems defined as obscure, an exercise in obfuscation, something that cannot be pinned down so we can deny its possible failure and paint it as glorious and unavoidable, in short, evidence that changes to match the hypothesis. It requires a faith that is not of knowledge, just as with religions. As it is, I believe the layperson would interpret AI as concerning machine intelligence that is hoped to be more useful or better than human intelligence. Computers have beaten the best players of chess. AI has already shown it is the singular best chess player on the planet. Heck, it is the hope of every AI project that it be found as a singularity, an event that showed a better way to do things than to depend on human intelligence. This concept of Singularity seems to entail a great deal of denial of existing singularities. It seems nonsensical to me, yes, a conundrum, a nonexistent thing that only complicates the world rather than lead to greater understanding and freedom.
I’m sorry. I know this thing means a lot to you. It is all too common for humans to consider someone who does not share their convictions to be against them, to be an enemy. I wish you no ill. I’ll do more research as you suggest. I honestly believe I have your best interests at heart, mine too, as well as all human singularities, perhaps other conscious singularities too if we find that we are not alone as thinking life.
“Ultimate authority? What is this ultimate authority you speak of?”
Human understanding, science, the body of knowledge of known shared truths, this is the authority I speak of. If Singularity contradicts known science, as I believe it does, I would have to be made aware of how and why its exceptions and contradictions get around what we have already learned about how universe works. I guess if I was in some accident and lost a lot of my learning or ability to make cognizant choices, I might embrace the thing but at present, it does not qualify as a distinct concept. It never ceases to amaze me how many embrace something they don’t understand, especially something that has as its defined nature as being incomprehensible.
Let me address one more thing here that alludes to another post of yours elsewhere, namely something to the effect that academics and scholars use the term, “Singularity.” At one time most, including scientists and academics and scholars, thought the world was flat. Is it the number and social status of people who hold an opinion that makes it truth? You can actually pay money to an institute in Washington D.C. to come up with experts that will stand behind virtually any claims. Us humans are quite confused and there are enough people that you can find lots of conflicting opinion. Science is a process of seeking functional hypothesis in accordance with known conditions and not to seek evidence that fits our hypothesis. The onerous component of sound science is to find that something is not false, not to prove that it is true. Look for the contradictions first and foremost, not the agreements. Academics and scholars as well as Columbus could see lots of evidence that the world was flat but Columbus also saw evidence to the contrary. It only takes one inconsistency to illicit questioning of majority opinion. Copernicus came up with a novel idea that appeared to explain things better than established doctrine and later; Galileo saw that moons orbit Jupiter. This was an exception to established “truth.” Should they have denied their own reasoning and observational abilities because the majority saw otherwise?