Can the proposed danger be said to be a real concern to the science community if knowledge development continues seemingly full speed ahead in every field?
That said, I am agreeable to relating to scientists as one would a highly skilled car mechanic. If the mechanic does the job you're paying him for, we applaud, and don't expect them to be responsible for air pollution. — Hippyhead
Ethics is an important aspect of scientific development, but it’s also an important aspect of interpreting and communicating scientific knowledge - it’s here that no-one seems to be taking responsibility. The scientific method includes interpreting and making conclusions from the data, but too often this bit is left to science journalists, whose short-term goal is consumption of information. So they will qualitatively structure that information in a way that increases consumption. — Possibility
You might be assuming that but I'm not — Srap Tasmaner
I thought your idea of their being two different rates of change was spot on, and very close to what others have said. Given that, we can demand that the new tech demonstrate first, or as it reaches development milestones, whatever, demonstrate that it can be controlled. — Srap Tasmaner
This is exactly what did not happen with nuclear weapons — Srap Tasmaner
If we block their use entirely, we miss out on a good. Are we to have a Ministry of Technology that would approve uses, and police and strictly control their distribution? I'm not in love with the idea, but maybe it's necessary. — Srap Tasmaner
2) Knowledge often delivers power to edit our environment, which is typically why we seek it. — Hippyhead
Another possible angle....
The problem is not knowledge, or even power, but rather the gap between power and our maturity, or rather relative lack thereof. If science could close this gap by somehow accelerating our maturity to match the demands that will increasingly be placed upon it, in theory that could be a solution. — Hippyhead
Would it be accurate to say that everyone involved is acting intelligently and professionally within their narrow lane, and some talk about the big picture, but nobody is responsible for the big picture? So this huge very intelligent knowledge machine keeps grinding on blindly towards the cliff.
Perhaps nobody is responsible for the big picture because we assume that no one could be, which seems a reasonable theory. If true, then we aren't really in charge, right? Should we reconfigure our view of this from "we are developing knowledge" to "knowledge is developing us"?
Sometimes I think of knowledge as another element of nature, like water, air, space, atoms etc. We've wandered in to a knowledge hurricane and don't know how to find our way out. Or more precisely, we typically don't realize that hurricanes are dangerous? — Hippyhead
Who said we were in charge? — Possibility
But the ‘big picture’ seems too big now for an individual mind - I think this has been our main issue for some time. — Possibility
We draw arbitrary boundaries where physics blends into chemistry and chemistry into biology, and we say ‘stay within your lane’ with clear funding and industry segmentation. It’s no wonder the big picture is out of our grasp — Possibility
We’ve looked up from focusing on our individual, specialised tasks and thought, “Crap - how did this happen?” — Possibility
Do we want to be in charge? Or are we content to ride on this train where ever it is going, even though the most logical outcome is likely some form of disaster? — Hippyhead
I must agree this is very understandable. After all, a "more is better" relationship with knowledge was perfectly sensible for our entire history, until quite recently. Given enough time, and enough pain, I'm sure we could adjust to the new reality. But we may not have much time, and the pain can now be fatal.
I think a key issue is the scale of the emerging powers.
With small powers one makes small mistakes and so can clean up the mess and correct the course.
With large powers one mistake can be game over, removing the ability to learn and adapt. With every day that passes the room for error is quietly shrinking, shrinking, shrinking, arguably at an ever quickening pace. — Hippyhead
Tell it to Oppenheimer? — Hippyhead
4) An ever accelerating rate of knowledge development results in an ever accelerating development of new powers.
5) Thus, science gives human beings new powers at an ever accelerating pace. — Hippyhead
First of all, the endless exponential grows doesn't exist in nature — Skeptic
The only hope is that wisdom will keep pace with scientific knowledge — EnPassant
Sooner or later it hits the wall and crashes. — Hippyhead
The only hope is that wisdom will keep pace with scientific knowledge — EnPassant
Either wisdom has to be dramatically accelerated somehow, or knowledge had to be slowed down dramatically, or some combination of the two. — Hippyhead
It is a pity that wisdom is not inherited — Skeptic
So it needs to be found somehow — EnPassant
by genetic engineering we could redesign ourselves in to a more intelligent species — Hippyhead
It means that in any given time in human society will be a significant number of people without wisdom and there is not way to avoid that (at least, without losing human nature) — Skeptic
Crafting a new species. I agree there is likely nothing at all realistic about such an idea. — Hippyhead
Or simply the advances just slows down and in the end state the technology doesn't change.All that said, you're right that exponential growth is not limitless in nature. Sooner or later it hits the wall and crashes. Just like I started this post to explain. — Hippyhead
I think you need to have greater faith in the "Silent Majority", the Philosophy of science and technological progress. — Chris1952Engineer
But I cannot understand your fatalism — Chris1952Engineer
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