From: eder@hsvaic.hv.boeing.com (Dani Eder) Newsgroups: sci.nanotech Subject: Re: The Singularity Date: 23 May 94 03:51:48 GMT Organization: Boeing AI Center, Huntsville, AL > What is this Singularity? Is it a science-fiction thing >invented by Vernor Vinge? The Singularity Human history has been characterized by an accelerating rate of technological progress. It is caused by a positive feedback loop. A new technology, such as agriculture, allows an increase in population. A larger population has more brains at work, so the next technology is developed or discovered more quickly. In more recent times, larger numbers of people are liberated from peasant-level agriculture into professions that entail more education. So not only are there more brains to think, but those brains have more knowledge to work with, and more time to spend on coming up with new ideas. We are still in the transition from mostly peasant-level agriculture (most of the world's population is in un-developed countries), but the fraction of the world considered 'developed' is constantly expanding. So we expect the rate of technological progress to continue to accelerate because there are more and more scientists and engineers at work. Assume that there are fundamental limits to how far technology can progress. These limits are set by physical constants such as the speed of light and Planck's constant. Then we would expect that the rate of progress in technology will slow down as these limits are approached. From this we can deduce that there will be some time (probably in the future) at which technological progress will be at it's most rapid. This is a singular event in the sense that it happens once in human history, hence the name 'Singularity'. This is my definition of the concept. Vernor Vinge, in his series of stories 'The Peace War' and 'Marooned in Real Time' had a different definition. He implicitly assumed that there was no limit to how far technology could progress, or that the limit was very very high. The pace of progress became very rapid, and then at some point mankind simply disappeared in some mysterious way. It is implied that they ascended to the next level of existence or something. From the point of view of the 20th century, mankind had become incomprehensively different. So that time horizon when we can no longer say anything useful about the future is Vinge's Singularity. One would expect that his version of the Singularity would recede in time as time goes by, i.e. the horizon moves with us. When will the Singularity Occur? The short answer is that the near edge of the Singularity is due about the year 2035 AD. Several lines of reasoning point to this date. One is simple projection from human population trends. Human population over the past 10,000 years has been following a hyperbolic growth trend. Since about 1600 AD the trend has been very steadily accelerating with the asymptote located in the year 2035 AD. Now, either the human population really will become infinite at that time (more about that later), or a trend that has persisted over all of human history will be broken. Either way it is a pretty special time. If population growth slows down and the population levels off, then we would expect the rate of progress to level off, then slow down as we approach physical limits built into the universe. There's just one problem with this naive expectation - it's the thing you are probably staring at right now - the computer. Computers aren't terribly smart right now, but that's because the human brain has about a million times the raw power of todays' computers. Here's how you can figure the problem: 10^11 neurons with 10^3 synapses each with a peak firing rate of 10^3 Hz makes for a raw bit rate of 10^17 bits/sec. A 66 MHz processor chip with 64 bit architecture has a raw bit rate of 4.2x10^9. You can buy about 100 complete PC's for the cost of one engineer or scientist, so about 4x10^11 bits/sec, or about a factor of a millionless than a human brain. Since computer capacity doubles every two years or so, we expect that in about 40 years, the computers will be as powerful as human brains. And two years after that, they will be twice as powerful, etc. And computer production is not limited by the rate of human reproduction. So the total amount of brain-power available, counting humans plus computers, takes a rapid jump upward in 40 years or so. 40 years from now is 2035 AD. Can the Singularity be avoided? There are a couple of ways the Singularity might be avoided. One is if there is a hard limit to computer power that is well below the human-equivalent level. Well below means like a factor of 1000 below. If, for example, computer power were limited to only a factor of 100 short of human capacity, then you could cram 100 CPU chips in a box and get the power you wanted. And you would then concentrate on automating the chip production process to get the cost down. Current photolithography techniqes seem to be good for a factor of 50 improvement over today's chips (maybe a real expert can correct this figure for me if I am off). So it seems that we need at least one major process change before the Singularity and maybe it doesn't exist. Another way to possibly avoid the Singularity is by humans messing themselves up sufficiently. The argument goes that the work involved in killing people is roughly constant over time, but the energy and wealth available to each person goes up over time. So it becomes easier over time for small numbers of people to kill ever larger numbers of people. Then, given a small but finite rate of loonies bent on mass murder, you eventually kill off large numbers of people and set things back. The usual technologies pointed to are nuclear weapons and engineered plagues. One can describe scenarios like the hobbyist mad scientist of the future extracting Uranium from sea-water (where it is present in a few parts per billion), and then separating the U-235 with a home mass-spectrometer, and building a bomb with his desktop milling machine. It all is designed on his 'SuperCAD version 9.0' design software. Some Other Interesting Thresholds Human life expectancies have been increasing at about 0.1 years per calendar year. If the rate of progress in medical areas increases by a factor of 10, then life expectancy will be increasing as fast as you are aging. This means your projected lifespan suddenly jumps from being in the mid to upper 80 year range to a much larger number. From my point of view as a 36 year old, biotechnology is making gratifyingly rapid progress even today, and I hope that this will feed jumps in life expectancy in the future. Whether the size of a factory or a Drexler-style assembler, the complexity of a self-replicating machine is probably about constant. At some point we will have tools capable of modeling and designing such machines, and shortly therafter building them. A finite investment in building the first such machine will yield an exponentially expanding output. This has radical consequences for wealth levels, etc. Even nearly self- replicating machines (say 99% capable) will have dramatic economic effects. Dani Eder -- Dani Eder/Rt 1 Box 188-2/Athens AL 35611/(205)232-7467