A singularity, cosmologists say,
is the very centre of a black hole – a place of infinite density
and pressure where, in the twilight zone of relativity, space
and time are irretrievably intermixed. Black holes have a
perimeter – the event horizon – where the force of gravity
becomes so strong that nothing can escape. Like a cosmological
vortex, black holes suck everything inside this perimeter
into the singularity. And since nothing can escape once it
passes beyond the event horizon, everything that happens inside
this perimeter is unknown.
A German astronomer introduced the concept of the black
hole in 1916. Now astronomers have been joined by other
scientists who are applying the model in a totally different
context, to technological change.
The capabilities of computers are growing exponentially,
these scientists say, including the ability for machines
to act autonomously. And there is no apparent limit. We
are approaching an event horizon, they say, where we will
see accelerating hyper-growth in machine intelligence, hurtling
inevitably towards a singularity where machines will become
more intelligent than man. Proponents of the idea believe
that this is likely to happen no later than the year 2030.
The idea of a technological singularity was first introduced
by computer pioneer John Von Neumann in the 1950s, who observed,
“the ever accelerating progress of technology… gives the
appearance of approaching some essential singularity in
the history of the race beyond which human affairs, as we
know them, could not continue.”
Vernor Vinge, a mathematician and computer scientist at
San Diego State University, applied Von Neumann’s idea to
machine intelligence in a paper he gave at the VISION-21
Symposium sponsored by NASA Lewis Research Center and the
Ohio Aerospace Institute in March 1993.
“The acceleration of technological progress,” Vinge said,
“has been the central feature of this century. I argue in
this paper that we are on the edge of change comparable
to the rise of human life on Earth. The precise cause of
this change is the imminent creation by technology of entities
with greater than human intelligence.”
“I think it's fair to call this event a singularity,” he
said. “It is a point where our old models must be discarded
and a new reality rules. As we move closer to this point,
it will loom vaster and vaster over human affairs till the
notion becomes a commonplace. Yet when it finally happens
it may still be a great surprise and a greater unknown.”
Vinge’s ideas have since attracted a growing number of
serious scientists, as well as fringe groups who see this
as the next and final stage of human evolution.
One of the most articulate proponents of the idea is Raymond
Kurzweil –inventor of the first flatbed scanner, the first
text-to-speech synthesizer, the first reading machine for
the blind, the first computer-based music synthesizer and
the first commercially marketed speech recognition system.
Kurzweil has built and sold four companies that created
entirely new technologies and new markets. He continues
an astonishing track record of innovation with a number
of new initiatives, including FATKAT (applying evolutionary
algorithms to stock market decisions) and Medical Learning
Company (creating a simulated patient for medical education).
Kurzweil published his first book, The Age of Intelligent
Machines, in 1990. In 1999, he published The Age
of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence.
He is now working on his next book, which will be entitled:
The Singularity is Near. This book-in-progress is
précised on the web.
In the new book, Kurzweil ponders the implications of the
expected singularity. “The bulk of our experiences,” he
says, “will shift from real reality to virtual reality.
Most of the intelligence of our civilization will ultimately
be nonbiological, which by the end of this century will
be trillions of trillions of times more powerful than human
intelligence.”
Kurzweil provides numerous examples of accelerating exponential
growth, and predicts that technological change in the twenty-first
century will be almost a thousand times greater than the
change that occurred in the preceding one hundred years.
Kurzweil and others envision a future where the boundary
between biological and nonbiological life becomes increasingly
blurred. Predictions of brain scanners, brain enhancement,
experience beamers, and disembodied intelligence sound more
like science fiction than any conceivable reality and, while
intriguing, the prospect of this actually happening is profoundly
unsettling.
If we are truly hurtling down the path to such a singularity,
have we already passed the event horizon – the point of
no return? This question is now provoking intense debate,
as there is growing evidence that there may be more fact
than fiction in these speculations.