Spike: How Our Lives Are Being Transformed by Rapidly Advancing Technologies by Damien Broderick

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: February 2002
  • 384pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 2002
    • Publisher: Doherty, Tom Associates, LLC
    • Format: Paperback, 384pp

    Synopsis

    This book explores the idea that scientific change is accelerating at such a rapidly increasing rate that within fifteen to forty years, our existence will be so thoroughly transformed as to be unknowable and unpredictable.

    Publishers Weekly

    Is technological change advancing so rapidly that we can no longer chart its progress? Are we careening ever closer to the point that scientists have dubbed "the singularity," the moment when the pace of innovation will lead to changes so profound that attempting to envision the future becomes an impossible dream? According to Broderick (The Last Mortal Generation; Theory and Its Discontents), the answer is a resounding and enthusiastic yes. As he points out, the rate of scientific change has increased ("spiked") with exponential rapidity over the past 500 years; everyday machines such as personal computers already have microprocessing capacities that far surpass anything originally predicted when they were first invented. Virtual reality applications are routinely used in the operating room, while cloning has entered our world with astonishing speed. So why not, in the extremely near future, "smart paint" that changes color on command and converts light to electricity when no one is in the room? Some of the changes anticipated by Broderick include science-fiction staples such as uploading and copying one's consciousness; freezing terminally ill bodies for revival in the more medically sophisticated future; and so-called "Santa Claus machines," which can build almost anything "washing machines or teacups or automobiles or starships" out of highly abundant, naturally occurring materials. Broderick's freewheeling analysis of the "spike" a phenomenon already dubiously questioned, he admits, in otherwise sympathetic scientific circles may help bring this debate to a more mainstream audience, although his writing, despite its conversational tone, may still have too specialized a scientific and technological vocabulary for the average general reader. (Mar.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Damien Broderick is a noted Australian critic and scholar with an interdisciplinary Ph.D. in literature and science. He has published several SF novels and another important speculative science work, The Last Mortal Generation. He lives in Australia.

    Customer Reviews

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    Spike: How Our Lives Are Being Transformed by Rapidly Advancing Technologiesby Anonymous

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    April 17, 2002: Damien Broderick has done a wonderful job of outlining many of the technologies and technological trends that are driving exponential change in our world and then analyzing the impacts of those changes on humanity. Better than Moravec's Robot, and Kurzweil's Age of Spiritual Machines (wonderful books in their own right), Broderick has covered the subject of technological progress in the coming decades in a much more broad and practical manner. Easily understandable by the non-scientist and technology neophites, The Spike is nontheless very entertaining and captivating reading for anyone interested in the dynamic social landscape that is rapidly evolving as a result of the interactions between highly complex technologies and human reactions to them. A positive look at our collective future that embraces the possiblities and potentialities of what we might become. Highly recommended.

    Spike: How Our Lives Are Being Transformed by Rapidly Advancing Technologiesby Anonymous

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    January 25, 2001: We are already in the early stages of a transition that will radically alter civilization and even the human species itself. THE SPIKE, by Australia's respected cultural theorist and science writer Damien Broderick, offers an insightful survey of cutting-edge science of today and the not-so-distant future. First published in Australia in 1997, THE SPIKE has been thoroughly updated for it's release in the USA. Advances in several fields of applied science are following a course whose graphs have remained relatively flat throughout human history but are suddenly becoming steeper. If current trends continue, the graphs will become almost vertical within the next thirty to fifty years. Dr. Broderick refers to this interval of rapid change as The Spike, because that's what the graphs resemble. Probably the most commonly known of these trends Is Moore's Law, which holds that computing power (expressed as the number of components on an integrated circuit) per dollar will double every eighteen months to two years. The arithmetic is easy to do. Start with 2 x 1 = 2; 2 x 2 = 4; 2 x 4 = 8; by the time you've repeated the multiplication process twenty times you've increased computing power by a factor of a million, and the twenty-first multiplication increases it by a million more. Although trends do not always continue to the runaway Spike stage, there are no obvious reasons to anticipate that current growth will slow significantly within the next thirty years. Because The Spike represents such a dramatic shift in the rate of technological advance, it is impossible to accurately predict what the post-Spike world will be like, but by projecting existing trends into the future experts can make educated guesses. The three fields which are likely to have the greatest impact on the future are biotechnology, nanotechnology, and artificial intelligence. Broderick provides an intriguing tour of some of the technological wonders that may be part of our reality later this century. Genetic engineering, more fully covered in Broderick's book The Last Mortal Generation, could abolish disease, aging, and even death. Molecular Nanotechnology, or minting (from the initials MNT), may allow the assembly of goods at the molecular level. Using minting, you could produce 'whatever you want to build, if you have the plan and the laws of physics don't forbid it.' With self-replicating assemblers, finished products could be had for little more than the cost of the raw materials. Take diamonds. They're made of carbon, and carbon is cheap. The minting process could use diamond, with a strength-to-weight ratio fifty times greater than steel, to fashion the frames of high-rise buildings or space stations. A serving of perfectly aged and roasted prime rib could be constructed atom by atom. Walkways could be paved with photovoltaic cells. Artificial Intelligence, or AI, might take the form of a PC with the reasoning power of the human mind; or a self-aware Internet; or a Super Intelligent machine beside which a human would seem incredibly slow and stupid. Humans could enhance their brains by linking them to other brains or to machines. Or human personalities could be uploaded to machines. The last two possibilities add new dimensions to the question of self-identity. Such things as diamond sky scrapers and linked human brains may seem more like fantasy than science, but they are based on foreseeable development of existing technology....