Big Think | Ray Kurzweil: can you read 100 million web pages in a few seconds, your robot assistant will

May 11, 2015

Big Think — May 11, 2015

This is a summary. Read original article in full here.

Big Think | Ray Kurzweil has made some strong statements and bold predictions here at Big Think. Among them is the fusion between digital technology and the human body in an event called the singularity, allowing an essentially cloud based consciousness to arise — though hopefully a less aggressive one than the Borg’s.

In our most recent discussion with Kurzweil, he discusses the ability of natural language machines, such as IBM’s Jeopardy! slaying computer named Watson, to overleap our own cognitive abilities.

He says the result will be a computerized personal assistant to help us throughout the day. But by scaling the human ability to comprehend the world, a brave new future awaits.

Comprehension is the human genius. But in a world where computers can process all of human history in a flash, that genius can be scaled. What possible industries would this eliminate risk from? Could scaled comprehension reliably create new business opportunities, each more efficient and profitable than the last?

Think not in terms of the bottom line, but the skyline. Using resources at peak efficiency in government and the private sector could mean consolidating the necessary resources to expedite a manned mission to Mars, mining asteroids for precious metals, or creating optimized health care.

We are talking about something more than augmenting human abilities with machine efficiency and power. We are talking about creating something that’s simply more human: more capable of creativity, of understanding, of love and of courage.


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full transcript:

RAY KURZWEIL: So that’s where we’re headed. Our search engines will actually also know us very well. We will let them listen in on conversations; verbal, written. They’ll watch everything we’re reading and writing and saying and hearing, and then they’ll be like an assistant.

It’ll say, “You know, you were talking about how you can get the supplement phosphatidylcholine into the cells yesterday in that conversation with Joe. There’s research that came out 13 minutes ago that speaks to that.”

It’ll be an assistant that helps you through the day, will answer your questions before you ask them or even before you realize you have a question, and you’ll just get used to this information popping up that you wanted and you’ll be frustrated if you’re thinking about something and it doesn’t immediately pop up without you even having to ask for it.

I’m not actually predicting that until 2029 that we will match human intelligence, but we can nonetheless do things that humans can’t do. I mean, Watson, if it read one page, as I said, wouldn’t be as strong as you or I, but it was able to read hundreds of millions of pages and its ability to read each page is going to increase.

So that’s where we’re headed. But then a comment on that is it’s not an alien invasion of these intelligent machines to displace us. We will use them to make ourselves smarter, which is what we do today.