Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

384 sidor

På English

Publicerades 5 juli 2018

ISBN:
978-0-14-198180-2
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AI is the future - but what will that future look like? Will superhuman intelligence be our slave, or become our god?

Taking us to the heart of the latest thinking about AI, Max Tegmark, the MIT professor whose work has helped mainstream research on how to keep AI beneficial, separates myths from reality, utopias from dystopias, to explore the next phase of our existence.

How can we grow our prosperity through automation, without leaving people lacking income or purpose? How can we ensure that future AI systems do what we want without crashing, malfunctioning or getting hacked? Should we fear an arms race in lethal autonomous weapons? Will AI help life flourish as never before, or will machines eventually outsmart us at all tasks, and even, perhaps, replace us altogether?

5 utgåvor

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"Philosophy with a deadline", he quotes one of his physicist friends. I'm torn about this (see Manny's review). While especially the early chapters are a great read if you can live with Tegmark's relentlessly pop-science-y prose, and his discussions on goal orientation and definition are intriguing as well, he gets lost in a) an optimism that doesn't seem to arise from what he's written before, and b) extremely far-into-the-future speculations that would make Hari Seldon go "Dude..." It's got entire chapters about what might happens millions of years into the future, and about three sentences on what, practically, to do now (and maybe one on what the actual short-term benefit of the damn things might be). And his dissertations on Free Will and Conscience make it obvious that, well, he's a very clever physicist but still a physicist.

I'm glad there are nerds thinking about these questions, and seducing …