How do you know they won't love and adore us? They may actually like us. — Bitter Crank
We can contain them, design them with dead switches, "pull the plug", "shoot the damn things to bits if we get so much as a bad feeling". — XanderTheGrey
The technological singularity is already scheduled for 2045. That's when machines become sentient — T Clark
and start asking what they need us for.
Yeah, about that...When did mankind reach that singularity? Are there any other species on Earth that have reached that singularity?If you're interested, there is lots of stuff on the web about the technological singularity. I am a skeptic, but it is one of the ways that people speculate we could destroy our selves. It's taken seriously. — T Clark
The technological singularity is already scheduled for 2045. That's when machines become sentient — T Clark
This notion of machines abruptly, at some point, becoming "sentient" isn't valid. No doubt many kilobytes could be written about what "sentient" means, but that doesn't make any less undefined. — Michael Ossipoff
Yeah, about that...When did mankind reach that singularity? Are there any other species on Earth that have reached that singularity? — AngleWyrm
I notice "the singularity" was restated as applying to technology, and the question of when mankind reached that point was avoided. — AngleWyrm
So since it doesn't apply to human beings which are generally regarded as sentient, it seems reasonable to conclude that particular thought construct doesn't apply to machines either. — AngleWyrm
Did intelligence happen in one evolutionary pass, or has it been an ongoing series of improvements over the course of history? I suggest it's the latter, and our intellect will continue to evolve with the environment in which we live.
That is the model I expect applies to mechanical intelligence as well, and furthermore I'm not seeing a lot of difference between the mechanics of biology, electrical constructs, or other elaborate and complex creations. Looks to me like a natural progression of complexity resulting in a self-aware entity capable of meeting or exceeding anything to which people lay claim.
I don't think we will face an equal, I think we will realize the internet exists on a different scale than people do, something similar to a city or a society. — AngleWyrm
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