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IEEE Special Report On the Singularity

jbcarr83 writes "The IEEE Spectrum is running a special issue on the technological singularity as envisioned by Vernor Vinge and others. Articles on both sides of the will it/won't it divide appear, though most take the it will approach. I found Richard A.L. Jones' contribution, 'Rupturing The Nanotech Rapture,' to be of particular interest. He puts forward some very sound objections to nanomachines of the Drexler variety."

3 of 483 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The what? by BPPG · · Score: 5, Informative

    Singularity, that's the thing at the center of a black hole right? What's that got to do with nanotech and AI?

    Mankind has been progressing technologically in steps that seem to get closer and closer together. The theory is that at some point, technological advances will begin to happen all at once, with the emergence of things like sentient AI and usable quantum engineering. Basically, technological transcendence.

    It's a pretty silly idea, but everyone has their own vision of nirvana.

    --
    What's the value of information that you don't know?
  2. Re:The singularity already happened by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.simulation-argument.com/classic.html That's what you're thinking of. And honestly, it does make some sense, but I'm not sure if replacing God with unbounded recursion is much more pleasing.

  3. Re:Faith in the Singularity by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 5, Informative

    There's a reason it's also called the Rapture of the Nerds :)

    Minor nitpick: Futurists make a distinction between "strongly" and "weakly" Godlike AI. Strongly Godlike AI refers to an intelligence that is for all meaningful purposes God - effectively unbounded control over space and time. Weakly Godlike AI refers to a being that intellectually transcends us in ways we can't imagine, but is still bound by the laws of the universe. Most talk about the Singularity focuses on a weakly Godlike scenario.