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The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology Audible Audiobook – Unabridged
“Startling in scope and bravado.” (Janet Maslin, The New York Times)
“Artfully envisions a breathtakingly better world.” (Los Angeles Times)
“Elaborate, smart and persuasive.” (The Boston Globe)
“A pleasure to read.” (The Wall Street Journal)
One of CBS News’ Best Fall Books of 2005
Among St Louis Post-Dispatch’s Best Nonfiction Books of 2005
One of Amazon.com’s Best Science Books of 2005
A radical and optimistic view of the future course of human development from the best-selling author of How to Create a Mind and The Singularity is Nearer who Bill Gates calls “the best person I know at predicting the future of artificial intelligence”.
For over three decades, Ray Kurzweil has been one of the most respected and provocative advocates of the role of technology in our future. In his classic The Age of Spiritual Machines, he argued that computers would soon rival the full range of human intelligence at its best. Now he examines the next step in this inexorable evolutionary process: The union of human and machine, in which the knowledge and skills embedded in our brains will be combined with the vastly greater capacity, speed, and knowledge-sharing ability of our creations.
- Listening Length24 hours and 38 minutes
- Audible release dateDecember 10, 2019
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB07XPFT63D
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Listening Length | 24 hours and 38 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Ray Kurzweil |
Narrator | George Wilson |
Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
Audible.com Release Date | December 10, 2019 |
Publisher | Penguin Audio |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B07XPFT63D |
Best Sellers Rank | #12,218 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #3 in Biotechnology (Audible Books & Originals) #11 in Robotics & Automation (Books) #19 in Technology & Society |
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the ideas fascinating and compelling. They describe the book as well-written, deep, and worth reading. However, some readers find the writing style difficult, painful, and repetitive. Opinions are mixed on the pacing, with some finding it strong and complex, while others say it's repetitive and tiring.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book rich in concepts and information. They say it challenges the norm, is fascinating, and compelling. Readers also mention the core ideas are valid and that mankind is set upon a journey. They say the theories presented are interesting and Kurzweil has a lot to back up his claims. Overall, they describe the book as one of the most audacious books they have ever read.
"...However, let there be no mistake: he is an accomplished scientist and a highly sophisticated thinker...." Read more
"...His work is meticulously sourced, with many a footnote reference. His charts show that over and over again knowledge takes an exponential course...." Read more
"...Kurzweil backs up his extraordinary claims with a wealth of convincing data, in itself a significant contribution, but more important and the reason..." Read more
"...It never became stale, static, repetitious, or dull and never even approached boring...." Read more
Customers find the book well-written, eloquent, and concise. They say it's hopeful and enjoyable.
"...He is an extremely good writer, and while staying true to what is in fact pretty complex science, describes it all in a way that makes it reasonably..." Read more
"...His background is impeccable, but I wouldn't take dozens of pills as he does, but then I've given up living long enough to see The Singularity...." Read more
"...contribution, but more important and the reason this book is worth reading, is his exposition of how this confluence could take place...." Read more
"...Once again the narration was superb and no doubt added to hold my interest in this lengthy material." Read more
Customers find the book fast and accurate. They appreciate the excellent packaging and quick service. However, some readers mention the reading is not too easy, but it tells how the research has worked.
"...Yes, they will get smaller, faster, more efficient...." Read more
"...The reading is so not too easy, but it tells how really the research here has worked...." Read more
"...The book is well written and reads quickly. The footnotes are elaborate and add depth to his survey of advancements...." Read more
"Great conditiin. Book shipped quick. For anyone interested in Singularity, this book is a must read." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, frightening, and arresting.
"...then this volume is both riveting and a little scary, but in either case, I can't wait to see if it all proves..." Read more
"...its thesis -- that computers will soon overtake and subsume us -- is arresting and provocative, this lengthy meditation on the logic of Moore's Law..." Read more
"...His scientific insight into the future is fascinating and frightening. I am listing this as a "must read" to all of my top students." Read more
"Thought provoking, frightening but strangely logical......." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some mention it's strong, tough, and complex. Others say it gets repetitive, tiring, and annoying.
"...The math starts quickly approaching infinity, which is why it's so weird...." Read more
"...Some criticisms of this book are that it's repetitive, but Kurzweil has to show that everything points to it...." Read more
"...It never became stale, static, repetitious, or dull and never even approached boring...." Read more
"...And some parts of the book are simply annoying, like the smug pseudo-conversations among past, present, and future personages that appear..." Read more
Customers find the writing style of the book difficult to read, clumsy, and poorly written. They also say it's tedious and full of words they struggle to pronounce.
"...I would drop another star for his writing style which is redundant, disjointed (the sudden dialogues are out of place and seem silly) and even boring..." Read more
"...Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology," and like its title, the book is verbose and very, very speculative. I know, I know...." Read more
"...This is NOT a sit-down-and-read-for-fun book. It's difficult, time-consuming, and full of words you'll likely struggle to pronounce, especially if..." Read more
"...has a lot to back up his suppositions with, but, his writing style is almost painful...." Read more
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Anyone who has ever played around with the arithmetic of compounding and exponential growth knows how crazy the numbers get as growth feeds on itself. The phenomenon is quite real in the world, and it describes everything from viral epidemics to Warren Buffet's fortune. Kurzweil applies the exponential growth paradigm to the future of technology. He sees not only change itself accelerating, but the rate of change too, if you can go back to your high school calculus and wrap your mind around that stomach-churning concept. The math starts quickly approaching infinity, which is why it's so weird.
"Singularity" is a common term-of-art among theoretical physicists, who apply it to a variety of seemingly irrational constructs, such as an infinitely large mass compressed towards an infinitely small point. Kurzweil co-opts the term for his own purpose here to mean the point in time where artificial intelligence starts exceeding human intelligence. Thereafter, it takes over its own programming and, being so powerful, does a better and better job of it. Because things are already moving so fast today, the accelerating rate of change means that Kurzweil's Singularity is closer than even optimists might imagine - hence the book's title. He projects it to occur somewhere in the middle of this century. Afterwards, nothing will ever again be the same.
In physics, unimaginable things start happening at singularity points, like energy explosions within black holes. Following Kurzweil's Singularity, the most garish science fiction fantasies start becoming commonplace. The combination of genetics, nanotechnology and robotics - which he refers to collectively as GNR - will transform all aspects of human existence. He believes, for example, that nanobots released into a person's bloodstream, will facilitate a comprehensive (that is to say, 100%) map of that person, including genetic code and nervous system, that can be uploaded and downloaded at will onto new "substrates". In other words, robotic copies of human beings - body, mind, memories, and (one presumes) soul - can be made that will appear indistinguishable from the originals. And for that matter, those originals themselves can be re-shaped at will, giving us all the opportunity to become brilliant, strong, happy, and beautiful.
Kurzweil tells us that artificial circuits replicating themselves at a molecular level will merge with the biological circuits that constitute our nervous systems, giving rise an "enhanced" human super-intelligence. Once this starts happening, what we now call the Internet will in effect become telepathic, giving these enhanced humans instantaneous access to all available knowledge and information as they fashion their brave new world. You see how explosive this gets? And it's just the beginning.
Once the process gets underway, the evolving super-intelligence keeps expanding until it permeates the entire planet and, still accelerating, eventually the universe. Kurzweil suggests that movement though time-space "wormholes" should one day facilitate rapid travel beyond our own galaxy, taking the process literally everywhere.
I realize that my amateur's survey of Kurzweil's thinking here makes him sound like a crank. However, let there be no mistake: he is an accomplished scientist and a highly sophisticated thinker. MIT-trained, he's an expert in artificial intelligence and has put his ideas into practice as a successful tech entrepreneur. Most of this book is not even devoted to prognostications, but to an in-depth review of research currently underway that lays the practical groundwork for virtually everything he talks about (except maybe the wormhole business). While he makes numerous leaps of faith in taking us from here to there, none of his forecasts represent sheer fantasy. He is an extremely good writer, and while staying true to what is in fact pretty complex science, describes it all in a way that makes it reasonably clear to lay readers.
For all his hardcore materialism, Kurzweil also has a whimsical streak. Every 50 pages or so, he breaks up his text with imaginary light-hearted debates among himself (appearing as "Ray"), various historical figures - Darwin, Freud, etc. - and a person named "Molly", who seems to be a student. Molly is bright, curious, skeptical, and not in the least bit awed by Ray or the others. The thing about Molly is that she appears in two separate guises: Molly 2004 (the year this book was being written), and Molly 2104, which is of course well beyond the Singularity. One of Kurzweil's key forecasts is that future science will learn how to arrest and even reverse the aging process, allowing people more-or-less to live forever at whatever age they choose. So Molly has made it through the Singularity and returned as a still-young woman to speak about it from experience.
Kurzweil is fully aware of the potential downside to his vision. He devotes one long chapter to what he calls "The Deeply Intertwined Promise and Peril of GNR". He devotes another even longer chapter to responding to critics, who have attacked his ideas from every possible perspective. While he treats most criticisms respectfully, in the end he largely dismisses them all. One partial exception and the one specific fear he himself does seem to harbor is of self-replicating nanobots. He and other scientists who seriously debate such stuff even have a short-hand term for this specter: The Grey Goo Problem. Were self-replication somehow to spin out of control, Kurzweil explains to us that in a matter of days it could, in theory, consume the Earth's entire biomass and reduce it to "grey goo". This is indeed a troubling prospect, since this endangered biomass includes all of us.
Interestingly, the cluster of criticisms that he responds to most gently are those arising from a spiritualist perspective. In one of his imaginary debates with "Molly", she repeatedly asks "Ray" if he believes in God. Ray surprises by dodging the question every time rather than saying no. Badgered into a corner, he finally avers: "For the sake of your question, we can consider God to be the universe, and I said that I believe in the universe." This sounds suspiciously like a yes, albeit with a twist. He then goes on to explain how his entire vision can be described as a picture of the universe "waking up" as enhanced human intelligence pervades its many corners. Religious people of an unorthodox bent might be tempted to embrace this image as God's self-realization. Fundamentalists of every stripe, however, were they to take K's cosmology seriously at all, would view it with disgust as the self-realization of God's Opposite Number.
For me, the most unnerving question that this book triggers is who will control these accelerating technologies. Reading through many passages of the book, I found it hard not hard to be thinking about Nazi scientists beavering away at the design of their Master Race, or North Korean labs re-programming the neural patterns of citizens lacking enthusiasm for Kim Jong-Un. Kurzweil seems to trust in the pragmatic good will of the scientific community, buttressed by regulation. However, not all scientists have good will, and he says nothing about who he supposes will regulate the regulators. I also find it hard to see what joy or challenge there could be in a world where machines or enhanced humans dominate everything. People choosing not to become "enhanced" would either have it forced upon them or face life as a sub-species. The line between utopia and dystopia here is pretty fuzzy, and I find it a little scary that Kurzweil doesn't seem to care. Maybe I've seen too many science fiction movies.
All that aside, I highly recommend this book. Decades ago when I was in college I used to describe about every other book I read as "changing my life", as we said in the day. Nowadays, no book changes my life, although the best ones still move the needle for me. Whether I like it or not, this one has me looking at things a little differently than I did before.
You may know me as the genial, white-haired book reviewer, but I once had a secret identity. I was Doctor D. Filed, the mad scientist, and my job was to introduce children to "the future," around when they were nine years old.
You may remember "the future." We would zoom round the galaxy, meeting alien races, living forever, and having robot computers that were smarter than we are. However, all this would happen many years from now, and our great-great-grandchildren's great-great-grandchildren might catch a little glimpse of it. Otherwise the future we ourselves encountered would be just like today, only more so.
However, Ray Kurzweil has been doing the math on those last two things, and he has a revised date for when we'll be immortal and have super-smart computers. And his date is . . .
2045.
That's right, the year 2045, thirty-five years from now, less than half a lifetime. That means that more than half the people alive today will see that date. And don't take that to be some wishful thinking. Kurzweil has extrapolated the rate of change in technology and biology to arrive at that date. He points out that these technologies improve exponentially. That means that if our technology knowledge doubles every year, we are not going to see twenty times the knowledge in a decade, but two multiplied by itself ten times, or over a thousand times.
Kurzweil quotes the Human Genome Project, which after seven years of a fifteen-year process, had completed one percent of its work. However, it finished on time, because technology improved all through that period. His work is meticulously sourced, with many a footnote reference. His charts show that over and over again knowledge takes an exponential course. EDIT: I read recently of a human genome being read in four weeks, and today I hear of someone who did it in a week. Exponential enough for ya? EDIT of EDIT:An ex-ICU nurse told me today (9/9/09) that someone who nursed in an ICU as little as three years ago would have to go through months of training to get up to speed on ICU changes since then. AND THE LAST EDIT: "Complete Genomics has completed 14 genomes since March (20 human genomes in the world have been published), priced at $5000, and aims to complete 10,000 genomes by the end of 2010." (also 9/9/09, still less than twenty years since the first mapping.)
He believes that "the singularity," no matter how far away it seems today, will be here on time. This will mean that some technologies will reach their limits, but new technologies will arise before they're needed. The history of computer technology certainly bears him out. Equally biology is helping us understand the brain, so its re-creation in software is likely to happen.
You might think that there is too much to learn about the brain, but it's a reasonably simple machine with complex ways of doing things. So let's just concentrate on the higher powers, rather than reconstructing neurons. To give you an example, for more than a hundred years we have been able to fly. We've had birds around us all through human history, but we didn't copy them. Pretty much all our development has been with fixed- and rotating-wing aircraft being pulled through the air. Our "non-bird" flying has made us superior to birds, but we also have to get up there and come down safely. Hence a non-neuron brain, provided that it works at a higher level, can replace an incredibly complex series of cells.
Kurzweil believes that we'll see advances in GNR, or Genetics, Nanotechnologies, and Robotics. Our DNA will be transformed to make us unable to catch major diseases, we'll have tiny machines inside our bloodstream, and these machines will improve our health from within. The day before I wrote this I read of "bacteria-based computing," and we're already capable of putting together tiny machines atom by atom, so it's not far away.
Where does that leave us? Don't look at me - my white hair is a result of being born in World War II. I won't see the singularity - but you might. Many people try to believe that it will never happen as soon as Kurzweil says - but that's like going out in a thunderstorm "because hardly anybody gets killed by lightning." The day will come, because "Objects seen in the future are closer than they appear."
When those things happen it will cause a major disruptive force. Some understanding of what's to come makes us more able to judge these technologies when they occur. An unprepared population is likely to be panicked into making a wrong choice. I'm sure your reaction to this news was a kind of fear - when something needs fixing that you thought was OK. Kinda like your first reaction to Global Climate Change.
But just as we recognized and now are doing something toward fixing Global Warming, so we can recognize this and discuss it. It's obviously a far bigger problem, but even if the projections are off it's still likely to occur. Most people don't realize that there are more embedded computers than people in the world - chips that run your remote control, your car, and your dishwasher. We are so used to them we don't even know that they are there.
Some criticisms of this book are that it's repetitive, but Kurzweil has to show that everything points to it. His background is impeccable, but I wouldn't take dozens of pills as he does, but then I've given up living long enough to see The Singularity. I applaud him for not making the book into some kind of horror story, and his apparent optimism is simply explaining that the process will happen, and there are enough good things to look forward to dealing with it.
You may agree with Kurzweil or you may not, but at least you'll know that there is an issue coming up that you'll probably have to deal with. Parts of it may seem unlikely to happen, but you're reading this on a system that has just about all the knowledge in the world, and the half human/half computers will have direct access to it. In fact, we'll invent the last machine we need - the "inventing machine," which will be like the "mathematic machine" we call a computer, but it will invent new things and even improve itself.
So don't laugh at the white-haired book reviewer - in the late twenty-first century, and the twenty-second century, and the twenty-third century, this could be you, telling the youngsters how unlimited knowledge and life was once a figment of people's imaginations.
And if you have the slightest interest in this subject, buy this book. In 1975 - thirty-five years before now, imagine a book that told you what life would be like in 2010 - Communism crushed, a computer in just about every home, and all the knowledge in the world on tap. This book is far more important than the 1975 book, and I'll bet you wished you'd read the 1975 book and made a few wise investments. But "The Singularity Is Near" will prepare you for a major coming crisis, and you'd better be prepared.
Top reviews from other countries
I certainly do not want to live immortally.
It would seem that feelings and personality would disappear eventually if out of hand with this replacement parts and so on?
A bit extreme if it continues to upgrade in the far future like he suggests.
it begs the question : when does a Human no longer a Human being"?
Reviewed in Canada on March 7, 2021
I certainly do not want to live immortally.
It would seem that feelings and personality would disappear eventually if out of hand with this replacement parts and so on?
A bit extreme if it continues to upgrade in the far future like he suggests.
it begs the question : when does a Human no longer a Human being"?