Stephen Hawking said that "philosophy is dead". He believed that philosophers "have not kept up with modern developments in science" and that scientists "have become the bearers of the torch of discovery in our quest for knowledge"
Yes. I don't think they are mutually exclusive possibilities; however, the latter seems, by far, more probable than the former.Do you think these issues are solvable, and is technological ascendancy possible? or are we doomed to suffer and ultimately die out? — SpaceDweller
; however, the latter seems, by far, more probable than the former. — 180 Proof
A "technological ascendant" xeno-civilization is, much more likely than not, undetectable by our comparatively primitive technologies. We're observing one or more now and interpreting them only as natural phenomena (i.e. background radiation, etc) like a mayfly obliviously buzzing around a dog park in the heart of Los Angeles, Rome or Bangkok.(iv)
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from nature."
~Schroeder's Law — 180 Proof
K-T Boundary — James Riley
Awesome insight!And still time for something else to do it all over again; many, many times. Just like the ones before us. — James Riley
whether any alien civilizations have technologically ascended. That would clue us in to the possibility. Of course we would need to detect one, which raises the Fermi Paradox and the Great Filter solution as a possibility. No civilizations ascend. — Marchesk
A "technology ascendent" xeno-civilization is, much more likely than not, undetectable by our comparatively primitive technologies. We're observing one or more now and interpreting them only as natural phenomena (i.e. background radiation, etc) like a mayfly obliviously buzzing around a dog park in the heart of Los Angeles, Rome or Bangkok. — 180 Proof
However, is there any reason why would some super advanced space kind interfere into our technological advancement? — SpaceDweller
Advance technology may improve certain aspects of our lives but it won't solve all of our problems because as we advance such technology will create new issue, or make us have to address issues that we never did before. The very least of these will be the logistical issues on how to maintain such a technological society and how to best allocate the resources that are made available from it because even in advance civilizations there will be a limit to what resources can be produced and used and there will be an unlimited demand on such limited resources.What is Technological ascendancy?
By "Technological ascendancy" I mean a point where no new discoveries would be significant enough compared to existing technological discoveries and possibilities of practical application.
Technological ascendancy may (but is not required) to solve several of the great questions such as theory of everything and possibly rule out some of the great questions as meaningless such as theory of simulation or why is there something rather than nothing, given the scientific tipping point.
Technological ascendancy also solves all of the problems that we face, hunger, needing to go to work, illness etc. in other words people live in utopic world where all major problems are solved and handled by technology with minimum effort. — SpaceDweller
Your question reminds me of a video game that came out in the 90s called "Alpha Centauri" where humans are trying to colonize another world and deal with other factions who have different ideologies of their own.Question
Stephen Hawking for example also pointed out both the possible issues of the AI and the need to colonize outer space.
Do you think these issues are solvable, and is technological ascendancy possible? or are we doomed to suffer and ultimately die out? — SpaceDweller
What will be required for this to happen (ie war, climate change, civil unrest, etc.) I don't know but it is likely it will take quite some time unless there is something to motivate both people and the powers that be that something needs to be done so that we don't remain just as we are. — dclements
“There is an infinite amount of hope in the universe ... but not for us.” ~Franz KafkaIf there was ever something like an alien encounter/invasion, it would definitely fit the bill for something to motivate everyone to do whatever it takes to ramp up whatever is needed for us to become a more technologically advance society. — dclements
Maybe you'll find the following speculation a plausible path from our current Type 0.6 to a Type II civilization on the Kardashev scale:Is technological ascendancy possible? — SpaceDweller
:nerd:Firstly, the death of religion, then we'd merge with (be uplifted by) artificial intelligence and perhaps, in the end, attain transcension... — 180 Proof
Firstly, the death of religion, then we'd merge with (be uplifted by) artificial intelligence and perhaps, in the end, attain transcension... — 180 Proof
Various metals, types of fuel and similar are not unlimited We are consuming the futureYou provide no explanation as to what the limit of exploitation on the planet Earth actually is, so I fail to see why the colonization of space is necessary to achieve technological ascendancy — Sheffwally
For now yes, but hard to predict, mass destruction weapons are less than 100 years old invention compared to 7K+ years without them.The effective counter measure to nukes is the possibility of offense (M.A.D.). It's pretty hard to call this ineffective, considering the world hasn't been destroyed by nukes since their creation. — Sheffwally
True, that's truly something but only thanks to advancements in economics and agriculture, trade and business become much more profitable than wars.Also, consider the fact that we live in the most peaceful time in human history WITH the most powerful weapons. — Sheffwally
I have two small points here. The horrors of the last world wars have had a definitive affect on our overalls perspective of war, it is not as simple as the profitability of war. I think it's overly pessimistic to disregard this idea. Lastly, the dangers of overpopulation are a myth. It's a very outdated idea as younger working people are struggling to support growing older populations in some of the most population dense places in the world (lopsided populations). This is an interesting topic to research.True, that's truly something but only thanks to advancements in economics and agriculture, trade and business become much more profitable than wars.
However this also resulted in larger population and population growth which can't end up good. — SpaceDweller
Stephen Hawking said that "philosophy is dead". He believed that philosophers "have not kept up with modern developments in science" and that scientists "have become the bearers of the torch of discovery in our quest for knowledge" — SpaceDweller
We have already reached technological ascendancy. Many times over. We have everything we need to reach utopia, if that's your goal. The real enemy is greed, which you have alluded to in premise 1. There's no cure for greed, no technology advanced enough to suppress greed. And by greed, I include power-hungry groups and individuals.Do you think these issues are solvable, and is technological ascendancy possible? or are we doomed to suffer and ultimately die out? — SpaceDweller
Technological ascendancy also solves all of the problems that we face, hunger, needing to go to work, illness etc. in other words people live in utopic world where all major problems are solved and handled by technology with minimum effort. — SpaceDweller
If premise 1 is true then given the human nature it is necessary that escalation of war (caused by people) is inevitable either leading to an end of human kind or making enslavement even harder to resist.
Otherwise, if control over the AI is lost, human kind gets either destroyed or dictated by the AI sooner or later.
For the premise 1 to be false, non controlled counter measures on a global scale must be implemented to prevent such scenarios, which is very unlikely given the fact we have nukes but no effective countermeasures. (again thirst toward rule and security prevails, offense over defense) — SpaceDweller
If premise 2 is true then technological ascendancy is impossible, because it's more likely we'll just die out due to lack of resources. — SpaceDweller
Human obsolescence? :chin:A technological utopia is a programmed society, a well-oiled machine, withall ofits members obeying the imperative of efficiency, maximum production. The threat of an AI, if it isn't just a silly sci fi trope, comes precisely from the AIs recognition of the inefficiency of human nature; humans aretoounpredictable, too emotional; they experience exhaustion andcanthink for themselves. The automated society reduces the job of humans to that of maintenance, and if that too can be automated, then there is no need for humans. — _db
Perhaps one day we'll engineer "gods" (e.g. the Tech Singularity) but they will not be us. If we're lucky they will delay us taking our rightful place among Earth's fossil record by becoming our zookeepers (e.g. the Matrix). — 180 Proof
But why zookeep us? Wouldn't it be more efficient (or something) to exterminate us? [ ... ] we are only one data point of evolved biological intelligence (EBI) and the only such resource with which to (1) run simulations of prospective 'first contacts' with extraterrestial EBIs (xEBI) and (2) run eugenics-like experiments to try to instantiate 'superhuman level machine intelligence' in precisely engineered living, phenomenological bodies (BMI+). At minimum, maybe, these are some reasons to keep Dodo birds like us around ... in ambiguous utopias / post-scarcity cages ... safe secure & controlled. — 180 Proof
I agree with you that the distribution of wealth is a big problem in our modern time, but you should realize that in almost of human history it has always been a big problem,I can't not to agree with all that you said.
For technological advancement, biggest problem seems to be insecurity and wealth inequality, there are 200+ countries each seeking security and spending a lot on military, and then also 85% of global wealth is in hands of 12% of the population which only contributes to social instability and government insecurity, ex:
Distribution Of Global Wealth
I don't see what kind of technology could help solve these seemingly unsolvable issues, not even world war or revolution could help. — SpaceDweller
I'm not sure if that quote is directed to us as human beings individually or the human race as a whole.“There is an infinite amount of hope in the universe ... but not for us.” ~Franz Kafka — 180 Proof
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