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    The Age of Spiritual Machines: Annotated Contents
by   Raymond Kurzweil

A Note to the Reader

Acknowledgements

Prologue: An Inexorable Emergence

Before the next century is over, human beings will no longer be the most intelligent or capable type of entity on the planet. Actually, let me take that back. The truth of that last statement depends on how we define human.

Part One: Probing the Past

Chapter One: The Law of Time and Chaos

For the past forty years, in accordance with Moore's Law, the power of transistor-based computing has been growing exponentially. But by the year 2020, transistor features will be just a few atoms thick, and Moore's Law will have run its course. What then? To answer this critical question, we need to understand the exponential nature of time.

Chapter Two: The Intelligence of Evolution

Can an intelligence create another intelligence more intelligent than itself? Are we more intelligent than the evolutionary process that created us? In turn, will the intelligence that we are creating come to exceed that of its creator?

Chapter Three: Of Mind and Machines

"I am lonely and bored, please keep me company." If your computer displayed this message on its screen, would that convince you that it is conscious and has feelings? Before you say no too quickly, we need to consider how such a plaintive message originated.

Chapter Four: A New Form of Intelligence on Earth

Intelligence rapidly creates satisfying, sometimes surprising plans that meet an array of constraints. Clearly, no simple formula can emulate this most powerful of phenomena. Actually, that's wrong. All that is needed to solve a surprisingly wide range of intelligent problems is exactly this: simple methods combined with heavy doses of computation, itself a simple process.

Chapter Five: Knowledge and Context

It is sensible to remember today's insights for tomorrow's challenges. It is not fruitful to rethink every problem that comes along. This is particularly true for humans, due to the extremely slow speed of our computing circuitry.

Part Two: Preparing the Present

Chapter Six: Building New Brains...

Evolution has found a way around the computational limitations of neural circuitry. Cleverly, it has created organisms who in turn invented a computational technology a million times faster than carbon-based neurons. Ultimately, the computing conducted on extremely slow mammalian neural circuits will be ported to a far more versatile and speedier electronic (and photonic) equivalent.

Chapter Seven:...and Bodies

A disembodied mind will quickly get depressed. So what kind of bodies will we provide for our twenty-first-century machines? Later on, the question will become: What sort of bodies will they provide for themselves?

Chapter Eight: 1999

If all the computers in 1960 stopped functioning, few people would have noticed. Circa 1999 is another matter. Although computers still lack a sense of humor, a gift for small talk, and other endearing qualities of human thought, they are nonetheless mastering an increasingly diverse array of tasks that previously required human intelligence.

Part Three: To Face the Future

Chapter Nine: 2009

It is now 2009. A $1,000 personal computer can perform about a trillion calculations per second. Computers are imbedded in clothing and jewelry. Most routine business transactions take place between a human and a virtual personality. Translating telephones are commonly used. Human musicians routinely jam with cybernetic musicians. The neo-Luddite movement is growing.

Chapter Ten: 2019

A $1,000 computing device is now approximately equal to the computational ability of the human brain. Computers are now largely invisible and are embedded everywhere. Three-dimensional virtual-reality displays, embedded in glasses and contact lenses, provide the primary interface for communication with other persons, the Web, and virtual reality. Most interaction with computing is through gestures and two-way natural-language spoken communication. Realistic all-encompassing visual, auditory, and tactile environments enable people to do virtually anything with anybody, regardless of physical proximity. People are beginning to have relationships with automated personalities as companions, teachers, caretakers, and lovers.

Chapter Eleven: 2029

A $1,000 unit of computation has the computing capacity of approximately one thousand human brains. Direct neural pathways have been perfected for high-bandwidth connection to the human brain. A range of neural implants is becoming available to enhance visual and auditory perception and interpretation, memory, and reasoning. Computers have read all available human- and machine-generated literature and multimedia material. There is growing discussion about the legal rights of computers and what constitutes being human. Machines claim to be conscious and these claims are largely accepted.

Chapter Twelve: 2099

There is a strong trend toward a merger of human thinking with the world of machine intelligence that the human species initially created. There is no longer any clear distinction between humans and computers. Most conscious entities do not have a permanent physical presence. Machine-based intelligences derived from extended models of human intelligence claim to be human. Most of these intelligences are not tied to a specific computational processing unit. The number of software-based humans vastly exceeds those still using native neuron-cell-based computation. Even among those human intelligences still using carbon-based neurons, there is ubiquitous use of neural-implant technology that provides enormous augmentation of human perceptual and cognitive abilities. Humans who do not utilize such implants are unable to meaningfully participate in dialogues with those who do. Life expectancy is no longer a viable term in relation to intelligent beings.

Epilogue: The Rest of the Universe Revisited

Intelligent beings consider the fate of the universe.

Timeline

How to Build an Intelligent Machine in Three Easy Paradigms

Glossary

Notes

Suggested Readings and Web Links

Index

Originally published in The Age of Spiritual Machines (C)1999 Raymond Kurzweil

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Interesting, sadly unrealistic
posted on 05/09/2002 9:52 AM by innervoice@mailcity.com

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Mr. Kurzweil, like so many others, makes one mistake of assuming that the world begings and ends in the developed countries.

While, this made an intersting reading, like reading H G Wells (I say this as a compliment), unfortunately forgets that majority of the
neuron based computational units are out there in
the third-worlds and sadly on the wrong side of
the digital divide. Existence itself is challange for them.

What about them Mr. Kurzweil ? At what point in
the timeline, that you present, does starvation
go away, fundamentalism die out or when does the
day dawn when every new biological unit born have a secure future in this planet ?

Do we just wish them away ?

Re: Interesting, sadly unrealistic
posted on 05/09/2002 1:15 PM by tomaz@techemail.com

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To eradicate the poverty in the third world, you would need 5000 billion US$ per year. You don't have that amount of money.

After the Singularity, it will be done very easy.

The Third World is just another reason for the Singularity.

- Thomas

Re: Interesting, sadly unrealistic
posted on 05/09/2002 4:29 PM by Citizen Blue

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I believe that the 'Singularity' will work; as technology makes things more efficient, then there will be the ability to assist in third-world countries. I believe Mr. Kurzweil has done the math.

Re: Interesting, sadly unrealistic
posted on 05/10/2002 4:01 AM by Innervoice

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Folks, I sure hope what you say is true. However to a novice in this field that I am,these concepts
of multiverses, singularity (I admit I don't
understand this completely yet) and the future as
envisioned by Mr Kurzweil in the "Sprirtual
Machine" books don't answer one basic question
that I have. What is all this in aid of ? If
multiverses do indeed exist, if the evolutionary
path is indeed one that makes cyborgs out of us
all, if all this is true, one question that the
uninitiated asks, why ? Throughout human history
we appear to be moving to higher levels of
technical and even social complexity and I have no
reason to believe that this trend shall stop. But
what about conciousness, do enhancements in our
capabilities to observe the various dimensions of
creations can also be expected to elevate us to higher levels of conciousness in its wake ??

Re: Interesting, sadly unrealistic
posted on 05/10/2002 2:30 PM by abc@tryout.com

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I definitely think so. But about the poverty in the Third World... If we, the West, would know for sure that we are all going to die one year from now and be a slave in India the next day -your master thinks he has the right to physically dicipline you and the money you earn you don't earn but it's a loan (yes!) because your master thinks that he can't just GIVE money away; or be a sex slave and your pimp tells you you deserve it because of your bad karma; or be the wife of a moslim writer who thinks he has the right to, only when its necessary (a real huminatarian), to correct you with hitting you with a stick...then how much energy, resources, money, thinking would be spend on REALLY HANDLING the suffering going on in the Third World? A LOT, you can bet on it.




Re: Interesting, sadly unrealistic
posted on 05/11/2002 3:54 AM by Citizen Blue

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Something tells me, Buddhist that I am, that there is a reason for everything. I may be stepping outside of my bounds by this post; but I do believe in the laws of Karma, and dharma; I also think that things such as this cannot always be calculated on a physical level. It is easy for spirituality to become enshrouded in cults and religions; man confuses this rather easily. Science, I believe is the purest form that man can express knowable laws; I believe there is an intuitional side, a spiritual side to everything.

Re: Interesting, sadly unrealistic
posted on 05/11/2002 3:56 AM by Citizen Blue

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p.s. Even atheists can be spiritual.

Re: Interesting, sadly unrealistic
posted on 11/02/2002 8:06 AM by harold

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I agree with Thomas. And overpopulation will never again be a problem because we can engineer ourselves to live on many planets, and even out in space.