From bestselling author and Pulitzer Prize finalist Robert Wright comes a sweeping new view of artificial intelligence—as an evolutionary force that will pose deep political and spiritual challenges and could, in the process, give our species a unifying sense of purpose.
The God Test is the first book to capture the power behind the AI revolution—to clearly explain the breakthroughs that sparked the current wave of advance and compellingly show why this wave will grow in magnitude and meaning. Written by one of our foremost public intellectuals, and informed by his decades of chronicling the digital age, the book argues that we are about to witness the most abruptly dramatic social transformation in the history of our species.
Wright says that to truly understand this moment in technological history, we need to expand our perspective beyond the last century or even the whole history of technology and look back across billions of years of life on Earth. The advance of AI, he argues, is driven by evolutionary dynamics like those that led to intelligent life in the first place. And understanding those dynamics can empower us to confront our climactic challenge: Can we muster the political, moral, and even spiritual resources needed to guide this technology wisely?
If we fail, the consequences for the whole planet could be grave. But if we meet the challenge—if we pass “the God test”—we can live in a world where humanity thrives, finding not just happiness but deeper meaning and purpose. The very machines that might otherwise imperil or oppress us can enrich us, helping us transcend the psychological impediments to human concord and fulfillment.
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
Robert Wright is the New York Times bestselling author of The Evolution of God (a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize), Nonzero, The Moral Animal, Three Scientists and their Gods (a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award), and Why Buddhism Is True. He is the cofounder and editor-in-chief of the widely respected Bloggingheads.tv and MeaningofLife.tv. He has written for The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The New York Times, Time, Slate, and The New Republic. He has taught at the University of Pennsylvania and at Princeton University, where he also created the popular online course “Buddhism and Modern Psychology.” He is currently Visiting Professor of Science and Religion at Union Theological Seminary in New York.
Chapter One: A Blast from the Future CHAPTER ONE A BLAST FROM THE FUTURE
In 1983, while researching an article about artificial intelligence that I was writing for an obscure journal called The Wilson Quarterly, I interviewed an obscure computer scientist named Geoffrey Hinton. Hinton advocated an approach to artificial intelligence that was outside the mainstream but that, as I put it in the article, “some tout as the new wave in AI.”
Four decades after my conversation with Hinton, I came across an article about him in The New York Times that said he was known in some circles as “The Godfather of AI.” Apparently the approach he championed had worked.
In particular: This approach—after much evolution via various innovations, some of which Hinton figured prominently in—had led to dramatic progress in “generative AI,” AI that creates images and sentences and other things traditionally created by human beings. In the months before the Times article came out, generative AI, most notably in the form of the chatbot ChatGPT, had taken the world by storm, wowing some people and freaking some people out.
Hinton, it turned out, was among the freaked out. The headline atop that New York Times story read “?‘The Godfather of A.I.’ Leaves Google and Warns of Danger Ahead.” AI had over the past few years been getting smarter much faster than he had anticipated, and he was worried about the consequences.
The specific dangers cited by Hinton in the Times article are by now familiar. AI could (a) take lots of people’s jobs; (b) make it harder to tell the real from the fake; (c) behave in unpredictably dangerous ways; and (d) be weaponized, in both literal and figurative senses, by bad actors.
And then there’s (e): AI could actually become a bad actor—at least, a bad actor from a human point of view. It might become so smart and powerful that it could sustain itself without human assistance. At which point it might decide it had no use for human beings.
Here’s how Hinton framed that prospect shortly after the New York Times story broke: It could turn out that “the good news is we figured out how to build beings that are immortal” and the bad news is that maybe “that immortality is not for us.”
With the publication of the Times piece, Hinton joined the group of people known as AI doomers. And in floating that last vision of doom—the demise of our species at the hands of brainy but heartless supermachines—he joined a select subset of AI doomers that you might call “sci-fi AI doomers.” They imagine AI becoming so smart and powerful as to be a kind of God—and, unfortunately, not a God that wishes us well. They imagine the human species surrendering its freedom, if not its very existence, to a ruthless superintelligence.
At the other end of the spectrum from the sci-fi doomers are people, sometimes called “accelerationists,” who want AI to move along as fast as possible. They envision a world full of AI-provided wonder, a world where disease and poverty and other human afflictions are in the process of disappearing.
There’s one thing that many of the more fervent accelerationists have in common with many of the more fervent sci-fi doomers (aside from fervor, I mean). And that’s a belief in the coming “singularity.” The singularity is the point where AI starts improving itself in a very hands-on way—amending its own algorithms to become smarter and smarter and hence better and better at amending its own algorithms. Once this “recursive self-improvement” kicks in, the rate of advance grows so rapidly that soon the term “rate of advance” doesn’t do it justice; there is an “intelligence explosion,” and life on Earth is forever transformed, for better or worse.
So which is it: better or worse? Who is right, the accelerationists or the doomers? The word “singularity,” actually, suggests that maybe there’s no way of knowing. The term comes from physics, where it is applied to black holes and denotes an impenetrably opaque boundary—a point beyond which existing theories lose their predictive value. Maybe technological change of a certain velocity could have such wildly transformative effects that there’s no telling what lies ahead.
Maybe. But both accelerationists and hard-core sci-fi doomers are undaunted; when they gaze into the singularity, they think they see the future’s likely contours.
WHICH AWE IS IN ORDER?
One way to get a finer feel for what they see is via the history of the word “awe.”
When the word came into use, more than a millennium ago, it meant, the Oxford English Dictionary tells us, “immediate and active fear; terror, dread.” But, the OED explains, “from its use in reference to the Divine Being,” the word gradually came to mean “dread mingled with veneration, reverential or respectful fear; the attitude of a mind subdued to profound reverence in the presence of supreme authority, moral greatness or sublimity, or mysterious sacredness.” By the mid-eighteenth century, the word meant “the feeling of solemn and reverential wonder, tinged with latent fear, inspired by what is terribly sublime and majestic in nature.” Today the word, as typically used, doesn’t carry even a tinge of latent fear. To stand in awe is to stand in wonder at the greatness or power or magnitude of something, period.
Sci-fi AI doomers stand near one end of this spectrum of meaning, the end dominated by fear and dread. Accelerationists stand at the other end, contemplating the power of AI with wonder and no trace of fear. And some people stand somewhere in between—maybe cautiously optimistic, maybe somewhat pessimistic, maybe right on the border between positive and negative expectation, but in any event convinced that something momentous and transformative is unfolding.
This book has four purposes:
Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
Vendeur : INDOO, Avenel, NJ, Etats-Unis
Etat : New. N° de réf. du vendeur 9781668061657
Quantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Vendeur : BargainBookStores, Grand Rapids, MI, Etats-Unis
Hardback or Cased Book. Etat : New. The God Test: Artificial Intelligence and Our Coming Cosmic Reckoning. Book. N° de réf. du vendeur BBS-9781668061657
Quantité disponible : 5 disponible(s)
Vendeur : INDOO, Avenel, NJ, Etats-Unis
Etat : As New. Unread copy in mint condition. N° de réf. du vendeur SS9781668061657
Quantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Vendeur : California Books, Miami, FL, Etats-Unis
Etat : New. N° de réf. du vendeur I-9781668061657
Quantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Vendeur : CreativeCenters, Peoria, IL, Etats-Unis
hardcover. Etat : New. N° de réf. du vendeur 9781668061657
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, Etats-Unis
Hardcover. Etat : new. Hardcover. From bestselling author and Pulitzer Prize finalist Robert Wright comes a sweeping new view of artificial intelligence--as an evolutionary force that will pose deep political and spiritual challenges and could, in the process, give our species a unifying sense of purpose. The God Test is the first book to capture the power behind the AI revolution--to clearly explain the breakthroughs that sparked the current wave of advance and compellingly show why this wave will grow in magnitude and meaning. Written by one of our foremost public intellectuals, and informed by his decades of chronicling the digital age, the book argues that we are about to witness the most abruptly dramatic social transformation in the history of our species. Wright says that to truly understand this moment in technological history, we need to expand our perspective beyond the last century or even the whole history of technology and look back across billions of years of life on Earth. The advance of AI, he argues, is driven by evolutionary dynamics like those that led to intelligent life in the first place. And understanding those dynamics can empower us to confront our climactic challenge: Can we muster the political, moral, and even spiritual resources needed to guide this technology wisely? If we fail, the consequences for the whole planet could be grave. But if we meet the challenge--if we pass "the God test"--we can live in a world where humanity thrives, finding not just happiness but deeper meaning and purpose. The very machines that might otherwise imperil or oppress us can enrich us, helping us transcend the psychological impediments to human concord and fulfillment. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9781668061657
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : A Cappella Books, Inc., Atlanta, GA, Etats-Unis
Hardcover. Etat : New. N° de réf. du vendeur 395481
Quantité disponible : 4 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Rarewaves USA, OSWEGO, IL, Etats-Unis
Hardback. Etat : New. N° de réf. du vendeur LU-9781668061657
Quantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Vendeur : PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, Etats-Unis
HRD. Etat : New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000. N° de réf. du vendeur WB-9781668061657
Quantité disponible : 15 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Rarewaves.com USA, London, LONDO, Royaume-Uni
Hardback. Etat : New. N° de réf. du vendeur LU-9781668061657
Quantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles