A greyhound catching the mechanical lure-what would he actually do with it? Has he given this any thought?
Bostrom's previous book, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies changed the global conversation on AI and became a New York Times bestseller. It focused on what might happen if AI development goes wrong. But what if things go right?
Suppose that we develop superintelligence safely, govern it well, and make good use of the cornucopian wealth and near magical technological powers that this technology can unlock. If this transition to the machine intelligence era goes well, human labor becomes obsolete. We would thus enter a condition of "post-instrumentality", in which our efforts are not needed for any practical purpose. Furthermore, at technological maturity, human nature becomes entirely malleable.
Here we confront a challenge that is not technological but philosophical and spiritual. In such a solved world, what is the point of human existence? What gives meaning to life? What do we do all day?
Deep Utopia shines new light on these old questions, and gives us glimpses of a different kind of existence, which might be ours in the future.
βThis is a wondrous book. It is mind-expanding. It is poetic. It is moving. It is funny. The writing is superb. Every page is full of ideas.β βRuss Roberts, President of Shalem College
βFascinatingβ βThe New York Times
βYeah.β βElon Musk
βA major contribution to human thought and ways of thinking.β βRobert Lawrence Kuhn
βBrilliant! Hilarious, poignant, insightful, clever, important.β βProf. Thaddeus Metz
βWhen technology has solved humanityβs deepest problems, what is left to do? β¦ argues that beyond the post-scarcity world lies a βpost-instrumentalβ one β¦ With the arrival of AI Utopia, this would be put to the test. Quite a lot would ride on the result.β βThe Economist
βReminiscent of Platoβs dialoguesβwith a 21st-century twist.β βStuff (NZ)
βBostrom is a marvelously energetic prose stylist β¦ Wry understated humor thatβs often very quiet in its punchlines. β¦ A complex and stimulatingly provocative look at just how possible a fulfilling life might be.β βKirkus Reviews
βOne of the strangest β¦ books Iβve ever read.β βPopular Science Books
βA really fun, and important, bookβ¦ the writing is brilliantβ¦ incredibly richβ¦ a constant parade of fascinating ideas.β βProf. Guy Kahane, Oxford University
βWow.β βProf. Erik Brynjolfsson, Stanford University; Co-author of βThe Second Machine Ageβ
NICK BOSTROM is a Professor at Oxford University, where he is the founding director of the Future of Humanity Institute.Β Bostrom is the worldβs most cited philosopher aged 50 or under.Β He is the author of more than 200 publications, including Anthropic Bias (2002), Global Catastrophic Risks (2008), Human Enhancement (2009), and Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (2014), a New York Times bestseller which sparked a global conversation about the future of AI.Β His work has pioneered many of the ideas that frame current thinking about humanityβs future (such as the concept of an existential risk, the simulation argument, the vulnerable world hypothesis, the unilateralistβs curse, etc.), while some of his recent work concerns the moral status of digital minds.Β His writings have been translated into more than 30 languages; he is a repeat main-stage TED speaker; and he has been interviewed more than 1,000 times by media outlets around the world.Β He has been on Foreign Policyβs Top 100 Global Thinkers list twice and was included in Prospectβs World Thinkers list, the youngest person in the top 15.Β He has an academic background in theoretical physics, AI, and computational neuroscience as well as philosophy.
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