The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology

The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology
by Ray Kurzweil

The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology
List Price: $21.00
Our Price: $11.88
You Save: $9.12 (43%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $7.87 (click here)
Category: Book
See more book details and other editions


or

Book Summary Information

Author: Ray Kurzweil
Edition: Paperback
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2006-09-26
ISBN: 0143037889
Number of pages: 672
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)

Book Reviews of The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology

Book Review: The Apocalypse is Nigh
Summary: 2 Stars

Julian Jaynes rounds out his wonderful The Origins of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind with a sanguine remark that the idea of science is rooted in the same impulse that drives religion: the desire for "the Final Answer, the One Truth, the Single Cause".

Nowhere is this impulse better illustrated, or the scientific mien so resemblant of a religious one, than in Ray Kurzweil's hymn to forthcoming technology, The Singularity Is Near. For if ever a man were committed overtly - fervently, even - to such a unitary belief, it is Ray Kurzweil. And the sceptics among our number could hardly have asked for a better example of the pitfalls, or ironies, of such an intellectual fundamentalism: one one hand, this sort of essentialism features prominently in the currently voguish denouncements of the place of religion in contemporary affairs, often being claimed as a knock-out blow to the spiritual disposition. On the other, it is too strikingly similar in its own disposition to be anything of the sort. Ray Kurzweil is every inch the millenarian, only dressed in a lab-coat and not a habit.

Kurzweil believes that the "exponentially accelerating" "advance" of technology has us well on the way to a technological and intellectual utopia/dystopia (this sort of beauty being, though Kurzweil might deny it, decidedly in the eye of the beholder) where computer science will converge on and ultimately transcend biology and, in doing so, will transport human consciousness into something quite literally cosmic. This convergence he terms the "singularity", a point at which he expects with startling certainty that the universe will "wake up", and many immutable limitations of our current sorry existence (including, he seems to say, the very laws of physics) will simply fall away.

Some, your correspondent included, might wonder whether, this being the alternative, our present existence is all that sorry in the first place.

But not Raymond Kurzweil. This author seems to be genuinely excited about a prospect which sounds rather desolate, bordering on the apocalyptic, in those aspects where it manages to transcend sounding simply absurd. Which isn't often. One thing you could not accuse Ray Kurzweil of is a lack of pluck; but there's a fine line between bravado and foolhardiness which, in his enthusiasm, he may have crossed.

His approach to evolution is a good example. He talks frequently and modishly of the algorithmic nature of evolution, but then makes observations not quite out of the playbook, such as: "the key to an evolutionary algorithm ... is defining the problem. ... in biological evolution the overall problem has always been to survive" and "evolution increases order, which may or may not increase complexity".

But to suppose an evolutionary algorithm has "a problem it is trying to solve" - in other words, a design principle - is to emasculate its very power, namely the facility of explaining how a sophisticated phenomenon comes about *without* a design principle. Evolution works because organisms (or genes) have a capacity - not an intent - to replicate themselves. Nor, necessarily, does evolution increase order. It will tend to increase complexity, because the evolutionary algorithm, having no insight, is unable to "perceive" the structural improvements implied in a design simplification. Evolution has no way of rationalising design except by fiat. The adaptation required to replace an overly elaborate design with more effective but simpler one is, to use Richard Dawkins' expression, an implausible step back down "Mount Improbable". That's generally not how evolutionary processes work: over-engineering is legion in nature; economy of design isn't, really.

This sounds like a picky point, but it gets to the nub of Kurzweil's outlook, which is to assume that technology evolves like biological organisms do - that a laser printer, for example, is a direct evolutionary descendent of the printing press. This, I think, is to superimpose a convenient narrative over a process that is not directly analogous: a laser printer is no more a descendent of a printing press than a mammal is a descendent of a dinosaur. Successor, perhaps; descendant, no. But the "exponential increase in progress" arguments that Kurzweil repeatedly espouses depend for their validity on this distinction.

The "evolutionary process" from woodblock printing to the Gutenberg press, to lithography, to hot metal typing, to photo-typesetting, to the ink jet printer (thanks, Wikipedia!) involves what Kurzweil would call "paradigm shifts" but which a biologist might call extinctions; each new technology arrives, supplements and (usually) obliterates the existing ones, not just by doing the same job more effectively, but - and this is critical - by opening up new vistas and possibilities altogether that weren't even conceived of in the earlier technology - sometimes even at the cost of a certain flexibility inherent in the older technology. That is, development is constantly forking off in un-envisaged, unexpected directions. This plays havoc with Kurzweil's loopy idea of a perfect, upwardly arcing parabola of utopian progress.

It is what I call "perspective chauvinism" to judge former technologies by the standards and parameters set by the prevailing orthodoxy - being that of the new technology. Judged by such an arbitrary standard older technologies will, by degrees, necessarily seem more and more primitive and useless. The fallacious process of judging former technologies by subsequently imposed criteria is, in my view, the source of many of Ray Kurzweil's inevitably impressive charts of exponential progress. It isn't that we are progressing ever more quickly onward, but the place whence we have come falls exponentially further away as our technology meanders, like a perpetually deflating balloon, through design space. Our rate of progress doesn't change; our discarded technologies simply seem more and more irrelevant through time.

Kurzweil may argue that the rate of change in technology has increased, and that may be true - but I dare say a similar thing happened at the time of the agricultural revolution and again in the industrial revolution - we got from Stephenson's rocket to the diesel locomotive within 75 years; in the subsequent 97 years the train's evolution been somewhat more sedate. Eventually, the "S" curves Kurzweil mentions flatten out. They clearly aren't exponential, and pretending that an exponential parabola might emerge from a conveniently concatenated series of "S" curves seems credulous to the point of disingenuity. This extrapolation into a single "parabola of best fit" has heavy resonances of the planetary "epicycle", a famously desperate attempt of Ptolemaic astronomers to fit "misbehaving" data into what Copernicans would ultimately convince the world was a fundamentally broken model.

If this is right, then Kurzweil's corollary assumption - that there is a technological nirvana to which we're ever more quickly headed - commits the inverse fallacy of supposing the questions we will ask in the future - when the universe "wakes up", as he puts it - will be exactly the ones we anticipate now. History would say this is a naïve, parochial, chauvinistic and false assumption.

And that, I think, is the nub of it. One feels somewhat uneasy so disdainfully pooh-poohing a theory put together with such enthusiasm and such an energetic presentation of data (and to be sure, buried in Kurzweil's breathless prose is plenty of learning about technology which, if even half-way right, is fascinating), but that seems to be it. I suppose I am fortified by the nearby predictions made just four years ago, seeming not to have come anything like true just yet:

"By the end of this decade [i.e., by 2010] computers will disappear as distinct physical objects, with displays built in our eyeglasses and electronics woven into our clothing"

On the other hand I could find scant reference to "cloud computing" or equivalent phenomena like the Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing project which spawned schemes like SETI@home in Kurzweil's book. Now here is a rapidly evolving technological phenotype, for sure: hooking up thousands of serially processing computers into a massive parallel network, giving processing power way beyond any technology currently envisioned. It may be that this adaptation means we simply don't need to incur the mental challenge of molecular transistors and so on, since there must, at some point, be an absolute limit to miniaturisation, as we approach it the marginal utility of developing the necessary technology will swan dive just as the marginal cost ascends to the heavens; whereas the parallel network involves none of those limitations. You can always hook up yet another computer, and every one will increase performance.

I suppose it's easy to be smug as I type on my decidedly physical computer, showing no signs of being superseded with VR Goggles just yet and we're already six months into the new decade, but the point is that the evolutionary process is notoriously bad at making predictions (until, that is, the results are in!), being path-dependent as it is. You can't predict for developments that haven't yet happened. Kurzweil glosses over this shortfall at his theory's cost.

Olly Buxton

Summary of The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology

For over three decades, Ray Kurzweil has been one of the most respected and provocative advocates of the role of technology in our future. In his classic The Age of Spiritual Machines, he argued that computers would soon rival the full range of human intelligence at its best. Now he examines the next step in this inexorable evolutionary process: the union of human and machine, in which the knowledge and skills embedded in our brains will be combined with the vastly greater capacity, speed, and knowledge-sharing ability of our creations.

Biotechnology Books

Book Subjects
Most talked about in Biotechnology Books
Bioengineering Fundamentals ImageBioengineering Fundamentals
by Ann Saterbak, Ka-Yiu San, Larry V McIntire
Prentice Hall; Published: 2007-01-15; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $129.24
Price in other shops: $191.00
Tissue Engineering ImageTissue Engineering
by Bernhard O. Palsson, Sangeeta N. Bhatia
Prentice Hall; Published: 2003-08-09; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $91.02
Price in other shops: $146.00
Laboratory Guide and Dissection Manual Human Anatomy (2nd Edition) ImageLaboratory Guide and Dissection Manual Human Anatomy (2nd Edition)
by Michael J. Timmons, Michael P. McKinley
Pearson Education; Published: 1999-11-22; Spiral-bound; Book
Best price: $120.00
Biomaterials: The Intersection of Biology and Materials Science ImageBiomaterials: The Intersection of Biology and Materials Science
by Johnna S. Temenoff, Antonios G. Mikos
Prentice Hall; Published: 2008-01-12; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $129.99
Price in other shops: $180.00
The Cytokine Handbook, Second Edition ImageThe Cytokine Handbook, Second Edition
by Author Unknown
Academic Press; Published: 1994-09-14; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $67.99
Price in other shops: $110.00
Biotechnology and Safety Assessment, Third Edition ImageBiotechnology and Safety Assessment, Third Edition
Academic Press; Published: 2002-08-12; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $59.98
Price in other shops: $160.00
Transgenic Animal Technology, Second Edition: A Laboratory Handbook ImageTransgenic Animal Technology, Second Edition: A Laboratory Handbook
by Carl A. Pinkert
Academic Press; Published: 2002-12-02; Spiral-bound; Book
Best price: $25.00
Price in other shops: $119.00
Advances in Planar Lipid Bilayers and Liposomes, Volume 9 (Advances in Planar Lipid Bilayers & Liposomes) ImageAdvances in Planar Lipid Bilayers and Liposomes, Volume 9 (Advances in Planar Lipid Bilayers & Liposomes)
Academic Press; Published: 2009-09-10; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $208.21
Price in other shops: $214.00
PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications ImagePCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications
Academic Press; Published: 1990-01-11; Paperback; Book
Best price: $287.39
Nuclear Structure and Gene Expression: Nuclear Matrix and Chromatin Structure (Cell Biology) ImageNuclear Structure and Gene Expression: Nuclear Matrix and Chromatin Structure (Cell Biology)
Academic Press; Published: 1996-12-02; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $281.19
Similar Books and other products
Darwin Among The Machines: The Evolution Of Global Intelligence (Helix Books) ImageDarwin Among The Machines: The Evolution Of Global Intelligence (Helix Books)
by George B. Dyson
Basic Books; Published: 1998-10-08; Paperback; Book
Best price: $8.95
Price in other shops: $16.95
Transcend: Nine Steps to Living Well Forever ImageTranscend: Nine Steps to Living Well Forever
by Ray Kurzweil, Terry Grossman
Rodale Books; Published: 2009-04-28; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $15.99
Price in other shops: $27.95
Our Posthuman Future: Consequences of the Biotechnology Revolution ImageOur Posthuman Future: Consequences of the Biotechnology Revolution
by Francis Fukuyama
Picador; Published: 2003-05-01; Paperback; Book
Best price: $6.75
Price in other shops: $16.00
What Is Posthumanism? (Posthumanities) ImageWhat Is Posthumanism? (Posthumanities)
by Cary Wolfe
Univ Of Minnesota Press; Published: 2009-12-31; Paperback; Book
Best price: $15.88
Price in other shops: $24.95
The Human Use Of Human Beings: Cybernetics And Society (Da Capo Paperback) ImageThe Human Use Of Human Beings: Cybernetics And Society (Da Capo Paperback)
by Norbert Wiener
Da Capo Press; Published: 1988-03-22; Paperback; Book
Best price: $6.45
Price in other shops: $15.00
Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever ImageFantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever
by Ray Kurzweil, Terry Grossman
Plume; Published: 2005-09-27; Paperback; Book
Best price: $4.97
Price in other shops: $17.00
Radical Evolution: The Promise and Peril of Enhancing Our Minds, Our Bodies -- and What It Means to Be Human ImageRadical Evolution: The Promise and Peril of Enhancing Our Minds, Our Bodies -- and What It Means to Be Human
by Joel Garreau
Broadway; Published: 2006-05-09; Paperback; Book
Best price: $8.89
Price in other shops: $16.99
Transcendent Man ImageTranscendent Man
New Video; Release date: 2011-05-24; DVD
Best price: $18.87
Price in other shops: $29.95
The Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence ImageThe Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence
by Ray Kurzweil
Penguin (Non-Classics); Published: 2000-01-01; Paperback; Book
Best price: $8.91
Price in other shops: $17.00
Transcend: Nine Steps to Living Well Forever ImageTranscend: Nine Steps to Living Well Forever
by Ray Kurzweil, Terry Grossman
Rodale Books; Published: 2010-12-21; Paperback; Book
Best price: $9.70
Price in other shops: $17.99