Posts Tagged ‘Ray Kurzweil’
And That’s Before Getting Into the Whole ‘Roko’s Basilisk’ Mess
Here we see a real purpose behind lesswrong.com. Ultimately it doesn’t matter that people like Thiel or Kurzweil or Yudkowsky are pushing a crackpot idea like the singularity; what matters is that they are pushing the poisonous ideas that underlie Bayesianism. Thiel and others are funding an organisation that advances an ideological basis for their own predatory behaviour. Lesswrong and its sister sites preach a reductive concept of humanity that encourages an indifference to the world’s suffering, that sees people as isolated, calculating individuals acting in their self-interest: a concept of humanity that serves and perpetuates the scum at the top.
Stephen Bond on what’s wrong with LessWrong, with digressions into why all skepticism is neoliberalism and the rules of Fuck You, Buddy.
Monday Night Links
* Bernard Pollard doesn’t think the NFL will exist in 30 years… because it’s just becoming too darn safe.
* Wisconsin officials tout the UW Flexible Option as the first to offer multiple, competency-based bachelor’s degrees from a public university system. Officials encourage students to complete their education independently through online courses, which have grown in popularity through efforts by companies such as Coursera, edX and Udacity. No classroom time is required under the Wisconsin program except for clinical or practicum work for certain degrees.
* Also in local news: Milwaukee sheriff says the police won’t protect you, so get a gun.
* And again! Wisconsin’s Abortion Restrictions Deny Women The Right To Terminate A Pregnancy In Privacy.
* Presenting the quinoa backlash backlash.
* Thomas Friedman op-ed generator. Even better than the real thing.
* And with each new technology, the same hyperbole, the same evangelism. On-line education is great. MOOC is a wonderful concept. But most of the institutions in the world that are over 400 years old are universities and there is a reason for that. To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of the impending demise of the traditional university may be much exaggerated.
* What Are Low-Ranked Graduate Programs Good For?
* New Arctic Death Spiral Feedback: Melt Ponds Cause Sea Ice To Melt More Rapidly.
* Big Surprise: Yet Another Ed Reform Turns Out to be Bogus.
* Ray Kurzweil Says We’re Going to Live Forever.
* MetaFilter has a post on the Maria Bamford Show.
You Had Me At ‘Will Eventually Be Called Upon to Act as a Medical Doctor’
* What if DC published Marvel characters in the 1960s? What if DC published 1970s Marvel characters in the 1960s? I only wish there were more.
* I’m really looking forward to the Wachowskis’ Cloud Atlas.
* Forbes has what’s next for Wikileaks: taking down a big investment bank.
What do you want to be the result of this release?
[Pauses] I’m not sure. It will give a true and representative insight into how banks behave at the executive level in a way that will stimulate investigations and reforms, I presume.
Usually when you get leaks at this level, it’s about one particular case or one particular violation. For this, there’s only one similar example. It’s like the Enron emails. Why were these so valuable? When Enron collapsed, through court processes, thousands and thousands of emails came out that were internal, and it provided a window into how the whole company was managed. It was all the little decisions that supported the flagrant violations.
This will be like that. Yes, there will be some flagrant violations, unethical practices that will be revealed, but it will also be all the supporting decision-making structures and the internal executive ethos that cames out, and that’s tremendously valuable.
* I’m utterly shocked to discover that some of Ray Kurzweil’s insane predictions have not in fact come true.
By 2010 computers will disappear. They’ll be so small, they’ll be embedded in our clothing, in our environment. Images will be written directly to our retina, providing full-immersion virtual reality, augmented real reality. We’ll be interacting with virtual personalities.
Behold: the future!
* And behold: Scott’s First and Second Laws of Comic Book Medicine.
Scott’s Second Law of Comic Book Medicine: Any hero with a “doctor” in their name or an advanced degree — no matter their actual field of specialty — will eventually be called upon to act as a medical doctor.
I eagerly look forward to applying this standard in my own life.
A Little Later Tuesday Afternoon
* Books and magazines are apparently no longer allowed on flights to and from Canada. Because, you know, freedom.
* If you consider a stash of obscene videos scarier than a stash of firearms then this is the country for you. In America you have a constitutional right to own a gun, and you may traffic in firearms with legal impunity; but you risk being imprisoned for buying and selling arguably obscene pornography. And don’t even think about child porn (I mean that literally): possessing obscene cartoon images of imaginary children is a federal offense; so is communicating your sexual fantasies about children to other adults… Freedom! Via Srinivas.
* Great moments in bad science reporting: This weird article takes an interesting physiological result—that “men’s subjective ratings of arousal were in agreement with their body’s level of sexual arousal about 66 percent of the time, while women’s were in line only about 26 percent of the time”—and packages it inside a completely bizarre, misogynist frame: that women “may not know” when they are aroused. What?
* There’s currently an activist fight over whether or not to allow cameras into the upcoming Proposition 8 trial in California next week. I’m much more interested in the ruling than in my ability to see it happen, sincerely hoping it turns out that Prop 8 was never legal in the first place.
* h+ interviews Ray Kurzweil.
* And behold, Pocahontar. Via Boing Boing.
They Call It ‘Longevity Escape Velocity’
Ray Kurzweil: We are very close to the tipping point in human longevity… we are about fifteen years away from adding more than one year of longevity per year to remaining life expectancy.
Tuesday Morning Links
Tuesday morning links.
* “Kurzweil is 60, but he intends to be no more than 40 when the singularity arrives”: Wired profiles futurist and Singularity prophet Ray Kurweil.
Kurzweil predicts that by the early 2030s, most of our fallible internal organs will have been replaced by tiny robots. We’ll have “eliminated the heart, lungs, red and white blood cells, platelets, pancreas, thyroid and all the hormone-producing organs, kidneys, bladder, liver, lower esophagus, stomach, small intestines, large intestines, and bowel. What we have left at this point is the skeleton, skin, sex organs, sensory organs, mouth and upper esophagus, and brain.”
* How to Build a PhD Cohort That Doesn’t Fall Apart Five Years Later: Inside Higher Ed talks PhD completion rates, with some Duke-specific information.
…Siegel said interventions introduced after 1995 included reducing the emphasis on GREs and GPAs in selecting students, and publicly posting data on placement rates, time to degree, and completion, all in the name of transparency.
Unfortunately, those completion rate and time to degree statistics are getting a little hoary; they haven’t been updated in about one full time-to-degree. On the other hand, the admissions and enrollment data page is quite current, and proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that my cohort (2006-07) is the rockingest yet known.
* Also at Inside Higher Ed: more tenured academics speaking against tenure. So it’s not enough to just pull the ladder up after them; they also want to burn the whole treehouse down with them inside…