154 research outputs found
How does Artificial Intelligence Pose an Existential Risk?
Alan Turing, one of the fathers of computing, warned that Artificial Intelligence (AI) could one day pose an existential risk to humanity. Today, recent advancements in the field AI have been accompanied by a renewed set of existential warnings. But what exactly constitutes an existential risk? And how exactly does AI pose such a threat? In this chapter we aim to answer these questions. In particular, we will critically explore three commonly cited reasons for thinking that AI poses an existential threat to humanity: the control problem, the possibility of global disruption from an AI race dynamic, and the weaponization of AI
Quantum metalanguage and the new cognitive synthesis
Problems with mechanisms of thinking and cognition in many ways remain unresolved. Why are a priori inferences possible? Why can a human understand but a computer cannot? It has been shown that when creating new concepts, generalization is contradictory in the sense that to be created concepts must exist a priori, and therefore, they are not new. The process of knowledge acquisition is also contradictory, as it inevitably involves recognition, which can be realized only when there is an a priori standard. Known approaches of the framework of artificial intelligence (in particular, Bayesian) do not determine the origins of knowledge, as these approaches are effective only when âgoodâ hypotheses are made. The formation of âgoodâ hypotheses must occur a priori. To address these issues and paradoxes, a fundamentally new approach to problems of cognition that is based on completely innate behavioral programs is proposed. The process of cognition within the framework of the concept of a quantum metalanguage involves the selection of adequate a priori existing (innate) programs (logical variables and rules for working with them) that are most adequate to a given situation. The quantum properties of this metalanguage are necessary to implement such programs
Life Expansion: Toward an Artistic, Design-Based Theory of the Transhuman / Posthuman
The thesisâ study of life expansion proposes a framework for artistic, design-based
approaches concerned with prolonging human life and sustaining personal identity. To
delineate the topic: life expansion means increasing the length of time a person is alive and
diversifying the matter in which a person exists. For human life, the length of time is
bounded by a single century and its matter is tied to biology. Life expansion is located in
the domain of human enhancement, distinctly linked to technological interfaces with
biology.
The thesis identifies human-computer interaction and the potential of emerging and
speculative technologies as seeding the promulgation of human enhancement that approach
life expansion. In doing so, the thesis constructs an inquiry into historical and current
attempts to append human physiology and intervene with its mortality. By encountering
emerging and speculative technologies for prolonging life and sustaining personal identity
as possible media for artistic, design-based approaches to human enhancement, a new axis
is sought that identifies the transhuman and posthuman as conceptual paradigms for life
expansion.
The thesis asks: What are the required conditions that enable artistic, design-based
approaches to human enhancement that explicitly pursue extending human life? This
question centers on the potential of the studyâs proposed enhancement technologies in their
relationship to life, death, and the human condition. Notably, the thesis investigates artistic
approaches, as distinct from those of the natural sciences, and the borders that need to be
mediated between them.
The study navigates between the domains of life extension, art and design,
technology, and philosophy in forming the framework for a theory of life expansion. The
critical approach seeks to uncover invisible borders between these interconnecting forces
by bringing to light issues of sustaining life and personal identity, ethical concerns,
including morphological freedom and extinction risk. Such issues relate to the thesisâ
interest in life expansion and the use emerging and speculative technologies.
4
The study takes on a triad approach in its investigation: qualitative interviews with
experts of the emerging and speculative technologies; field studies encountering research
centers of such technologies; and an artistic, autopoietic process that explores the heuristics
of life expansion. This investigation forms an integrative view of the human use of
technology and its melioristic aim. The outcome of the research is a theoretical framework
for further research in artistic approaches to life expansion
Brain-Computer Interface
Brain-computer interfacing (BCI) with the use of advanced artificial intelligence identification is a rapidly growing new technology that allows a silently commanding brain to manipulate devices ranging from smartphones to advanced articulated robotic arms when physical control is not possible. BCI can be viewed as a collaboration between the brain and a device via the direct passage of electrical signals from neurons to an external system. The book provides a comprehensive summary of conventional and novel methods for processing brain signals. The chapters cover a range of topics including noninvasive and invasive signal acquisition, signal processing methods, deep learning approaches, and implementation of BCI in experimental problems
- âŠ