Tag Archives: processing

The singularity vs. chauvinism

One of the speakers at the CWF made some very interesting points that I had already thought about but not really articulated in the fluid, structured way he did, but of course I need to start from the beginning.

The singularity I’m talking about is something that to some people might sound like a concept out of science fiction: the fact that in the next few years, the processing power of a computer will be reaching that of a human brain, and we will be able to augment our grey matter with cybernetic prostethics. As such, we will have more “processing muscle” than ever before, but our ability to imagine, that what takes us apart from machines, is what adds value. At the same time, we’re more connected than ever, but that doesn’t make us less chauvinistic, and maybe even more, because we’re able to see up close those things that we didn’t lay our sight on before, like poverty, war and strange people and customs. A point that was very important is that we don’t know where it’s taking us, how it is changing us and even whether we will survive these opposing forces bringing us together and at the same time further away from each other. I sure hope we do.