Daily Archives: March 4, 2005

New Kurzweil Book

The Singularity Institute has the scoop on the new book by Ray Kurzweil, a follow-up to The Age of Spiritual Machines, which will be available in September:

The Singularity Is Near portrays what life will be like after this event–a human-machine civilization where our experiences shift from real reality to virtual reality and where our intelligence becomes nonbiological and trillions of times more powerful than unaided human intelligence. In practical terms, this means that aging and pollution can be reversed, hunger solved, and our bodies and environment transformed by nanotech to overcome the limitations of biology, including possibly death.

The Institute is making advanced signed copies available to donors who give $200 or more. Pretty good deal!

Or, if you want to be a cheapskate, click the link below to pre-order an unsigned copy at the normal price. You might as well pick up a couple other Kurzweil titles while you’re at it.

Why Live Longer?

Sure, this seems to be good news, but what’s really the point in adding years to our lives? Healthy life-extension advocate Reason has some thoughts:

What would I do with a thousand-year lifespan? I’d probably spend some of it trying to find a way to live longer. But I would not otherwise lack for things to do. It would take me at least 200 years to read my way through my book collection. I would like to gain mastery of mathematics, physics and chemistry. I would like to learn and practice medicine. I want to understand jurisprudence and practice law. I would like to master carpentry, plumbing and electrical skills — and build houses. I would like to master industrial design & fabrication, computers and biotechnology so as to start & operate productive businesses. I want to build financial empires. I want to learn to play musical instruments and explore the many worlds of music. I want to join and organize communities for social experimentation. I want to write great books. I want to do experimental scientific research. I want to explore the planet Earth with a deep enough knowledge of flora & fauna & geology that I can appreciate what I am seeing, hearing, smelling and touching.

He goes on to point out that it’s difficult to sell the idea of a longer lifespan to people who aren’t all that excited about life right now. Read the whole thing.

Reason’s comments about living longer remind me of what Aubrey de Grey had to say on the subject a while back:

Well, first of all I have a lot of catching up to do — all the films I haven’t seen, books I haven’t read, etc.— while I’ve been spending every spare minute in the fight against aging. But in addition, there are masses of things that I enjoy doing and will always enjoy — spending time with my wife and friends, taking a punt out on the river Cam, playing a game of Othello, etc.— and I reckon I’ll just carry on doing those things forever.

At root, the reason I’m not in favor of aging is because I like life as I know it.

Here’s to life as we know it, and life as we’ve only imagined it. I’m not sure when this place closes, but I suggest we all have at least one more round.