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Vernor Vinge
on the Singularity
Vernor Vinge
Department of Mathematical Sciences
San Diego State University
(c) 1993 by Vernor Vinge
(This article may be reproduced for noncommercial purposes
if it is copied in its entirety, including this notice.)
The original version of this article was
presented at the VISION-21 Symposium sponsored by NASA
Lewis Research Center and the Ohio Aerospace Institute,
March 30-31, 1993. A slightly changed version appeared in
the Winter 1993 issue of Whole Earth Review.
Abstract
Within thirty years, we will have the
technological means to create superhuman intelligence.
Shortly after, the human era will be ended.
Is such progress avoidable? If not to be
avoided, can events be guided so that we may survive?
These questions are investigated. Some possible answers
(and some further dangers) are presented.
The acceleration of technological
progress has been the central feature of this century. I
argue in this paper that we are on the edge of change
comparable to the rise of human life on Earth. The precise
cause of this change is the imminent creation by
technology of entities with greater than human
intelligence. There are several means by which science may
achieve this breakthrough (and this is another reason for
having confidence that the event will occur):
- There may be developed computers that
are "awake" and superhumanly intelligent. (To date,
there has been much controversy as to whether we can
create human equivalence in a machine. But if the answer
is "yes, we can", then there is little doubt that beings
more intelligent can be constructed shortly thereafter.)
- Large computer networks (and their
associated users) may "wake up" as a superhumanly
intelligent entity.
- Computer/human interfaces may become
so intimate that users may reasonably be considered
superhumanly intelligent.
- Biological science may provide means
to improve natural human intellect.
The first three possibilities depend in
large part on improvements in computer hardware. Progress
in computer hardware has followed an amazingly steady
curve in the last few decades [17]. Based largely on this
trend, I believe that the creation of greater than human
intelligence will occur during the next thirty years.
(Charles Platt [20] has pointed out that AI enthusiasts
have been making claims like this for the last thirty
years. Just so I'm not guilty of a relative-time
ambiguity, let me more specific: I'll be surprised if this
event occurs before 2005 or after 2030.)
What are the consequences of this event?
When greater-than-human intelligence drives progress, that
progress will be much more rapid. In fact, there seems no
reason why progress itself would not involve the creation
of still more intelligent entities -- on a still-shorter
time scale. The best analogy that I see is with the
evolutionary past: Animals can adapt to problems and make
inventions, but often no faster than natural selection can
do its work -- the world acts as its own simulator in the
case of natural selection. We humans have the ability to
internalize the world and conduct "what if's" in our
heads; we can solve many problems thousands of times
faster than natural selection. Now, by creating the means
to execute those simulations at much higher speeds, we are
entering a regime as radically different from our human
past as we humans are from the lower animals.
From the human point of view this change
will be a throwing away of all the previous rules, perhaps
in the blink of an eye, an exponential runaway beyond any
hope of control. Developments that before were thought
might only happen in "a million years" (if ever) will
likely happen in the next century. (In [5], Greg Bear
paints a picture of the major changes happening in a
matter of hours.)
I think it's fair to call this event a
singularity ("the Singularity" for the purposes of this
paper). It is a point where our old models must be
discarded and a new reality rules. As we move closer to
this point, it will loom vaster and vaster over human
affairs till the notion becomes a commonplace. Yet when it
finally happens it may still be a great surprise and a
greater unknown. In the 1950s there were very few who saw
it: Stan Ulam [28] paraphrased John von Neumann as saying:
One conversation centered on the ever
accelerating progress of technology and changes in the
mode of human life, which gives the appearance of
approaching some essential singularity in the history of
the race beyond which human affairs, as we know them,
could not continue.
Von Neumann even uses the term
singularity, though it appears he is thinking of normal
progress, not the creation of superhuman intellect. (For
me, the superhumanity is the essence of the Singularity.
Without that we would get a glut of technical riches,
never properly absorbed (see [25]).)
In the 1960s there was recognition of
some of the implications of superhuman intelligence. I. J.
Good wrote [11]:
Let an ultraintelligent machine be
defined as a machine that can far surpass all the
intellectual activities of any any man however clever.
Since the design of machines is one of these intellectual
activities, an ultraintelligent machine could design even
better machines; there would then unquestionably be an
"intelligence explosion," and the intelligence of man
would be left far behind. Thus the first ultraintelligent
machine is the _last_ invention that man need ever make,
provided that the machine is docile enough to tell us how
to keep it under control. ... It is more probable than not
that, within the twentieth century, an ultraintelligent
machine will be built and that it will be the last
invention that man need make.
Good has captured the essence of the
runaway, but does not pursue its most disturbing
consequences. Any intelligent machine of the sort he
describes would not be humankind's "tool" -- any more than
humans are the tools of rabbits or robins or chimpanzees.
Through the '60s and '70s and '80s,
recognition of the cataclysm spread [29] [1] [31] [5].
Perhaps it was the science-fiction writers who felt the
first concrete impact. After all, the "hard"
science-fiction writers are the ones who try to write
specific stories about all that technology may do for us.
More and more, these writers felt an opaque wall across
the future. Once, they could put such fantasies millions
of years in the future [24]. Now they saw that their most
diligent extrapolations resulted in the unknowable ...
soon. Once, galactic empires might have seemed a
Post-Human domain. Now, sadly, even interplanetary ones
are.
What about the '90s and the '00s and the
'10s, as we slide toward the edge? How will the approach
of the Singularity spread across the human world view? For
a while yet, the general critics of machine sapience will
have good press. After all, till we have hardware as
powerful as a human brain it is probably foolish to think
we'll be able to create human equivalent (or greater)
intelligence. (There is the far-fetched possibility that
we could make a human equivalent out of less powerful
hardware, if we were willing to give up speed, if we were
willing to settle for an artificial being who was
literally slow [30]. But it's much more likely that
devising the software will be a tricky process, involving
lots of false starts and experimentation. If so, then the
arrival of self-aware machines will not happen till after
the development of hardware that is substantially more
powerful than humans' natural equipment.)
But as time passes, we should see more
symptoms. The dilemma felt by science fiction writers will
be perceived in other creative endeavors. (I have heard
thoughtful comic book writers worry about how to have
spectacular effects when everything visible can be
produced by the technologically commonplace.) We will see
automation replacing higher and higher level jobs. We have
tools right now (symbolic math programs, cad/cam) that
release us from most low-level drudgery. Or put another
way: The work that is truly productive is the domain of a
steadily smaller and more elite fraction of humanity. In
the coming of the Singularity, we are seeing the
predictions of _true_ technological unemployment finally
come true.
Another symptom of progress toward the
Singularity: ideas themselves should spread ever faster,
and even the most radical will quickly become commonplace.
When I began writing science fiction in the middle '60s,
it seemed very easy to find ideas that took decades to
percolate into the cultural consciousness; now the lead
time seems more like eighteen months. (Of course, this
could just be me losing my imagination as I get old, but I
see the effect in others too.) Like the shock in a
compressible flow, the Singularity moves closer as we
accelerate through the critical speed.
And what of the arrival of the
Singularity itself? What can be said of its actual
appearance? Since it involves an intellectual runaway, it
will probably occur faster than any technical revolution
seen so far. The precipitating event will likely be
unexpected -- perhaps even to the researchers involved.
("But all our previous models were catatonic! We were just
tweaking some parameters....") If networking is widespread
enough (into ubiquitous embedded systems), it may seem as
if our artifacts as a whole had suddenly wakened.
And what happens a month or two (or a
day or two) after that? I have only analogies to point to:
The rise of humankind. We will be in the Post-Human era.
And for all my rampant technological optimism, sometimes I
think I'd be more comfortable if I were regarding these
transcendental events from one thousand years remove ...
instead of twenty.
Can the Singularity be Avoided?
Well, maybe it won't happen at all:
Sometimes I try to imagine the symptoms that we should
expect to see if the Singularity is not to develop. There
are the widely respected arguments of Penrose [19] and
Searle [22] against the practicality of machine sapience.
In August of 1992, Thinking Machines Corporation held a
workshop to investigate the question "How We Will Build a
Machine that Thinks" [27]. As you might guess from the
workshop's title, the participants were not especially
supportive of the arguments against machine intelligence.
In fact, there was general agreement that minds can exist
on nonbiological substrates and that algorithms are of
central importance to the existence of minds. However,
there was much debate about the raw hardware power that is
present in organic brains. A minority felt that the
largest 1992 computers were within three orders of
magnitude of the power of the human brain. The majority of
the participants agreed with Moravec's estimate [17] that
we are ten to forty years away from hardware parity. And
yet there was another minority who pointed to [7] [21],
and conjectured that the computational competence of
single neurons may be far higher than generally believed.
If so, our present computer hardware might be as much as
_ten_ orders of magnitude short of the equipment we carry
around in our heads. If this is true (or for that matter,
if the Penrose or Searle critique is valid), we might
never see a Singularity. Instead, in the early '00s we
would find our hardware performance curves beginning to
level off -- this because of our inability to automate the
design work needed to support further hardware
improvements. We'd end up with some _very_ powerful
hardware, but without the ability to push it further.
Commercial digital signal processing might be awesome,
giving an analog appearance even to digital operations,
but nothing would ever "wake up" and there would never be
the intellectual runaway which is the essence of the
Singularity. It would likely be seen as a golden age ...
and it would also be an end of progress. This is very like
the future predicted by Gunther Stent. In fact, on page
137 of [25], Stent explicitly cites the development of
transhuman intelligence as a sufficient condition to break
his projections.
But if the technological Singularity can
happen, it will. Even if all the governments of the world
were to understand the "threat" and be in deadly fear of
it, progress toward the goal would continue. In fiction,
there have been stories of laws passed forbidding the
construction of "a machine in the likeness of the human
mind" [13]. In fact, the competitive advantage --
economic, military, even artistic -- of every advance in
automation is so compelling that passing laws, or having
customs, that forbid such things merely assures that
someone else will get them first.
Eric Drexler [8] has provided
spectacular insights about how far technical improvement
may go. He agrees that superhuman intelligences will be
available in the near future -- and that such entities
pose a threat to the human status quo. But Drexler argues
that we can confine such transhuman devices so that their
results can be examined and used safely. This is I. J.
Good's ultraintelligent machine, with a dose of caution. I
argue that confinement is intrinsically impractical. For
the case of physical confinement: Imagine yourself locked
in your home with only limited data access to the outside,
to your masters. If those masters thought at a rate -- say
-- one million times slower than you, there is little
doubt that over a period of years (your time) you could
come up with "helpful advice" that would incidentally set
you free. (I call this "fast thinking" form of
superintelligence "weak superhumanity". Such a "weakly
superhuman" entity would probably burn out in a few weeks
of outside time. "Strong superhumanity" would be more than
cranking up the clock speed on a human-equivalent mind.
It's hard to say precisely what "strong superhumanity"
would be like, but the difference appears to be profound.
Imagine running a dog mind at very high speed. Would a
thousand years of doggy living add up to any human
insight? (Now if the dog mind were cleverly rewired and
_then_ run at high speed, we might see something
different....) Many speculations about superintelligence
seem to be based on the weakly superhuman model. I believe
that our best guesses about the post-Singularity world can
be obtained by thinking on the nature of strong
superhumanity. I will return to this point later in the
paper.)
Another approach to confinement is to
build _rules_ into the mind of the created superhuman
entity (for example, Asimov's Laws [3]). I think that any
rules strict enough to be effective would also produce a
device whose ability was clearly inferior to the
unfettered versions (and so human competition would favor
the development of the those more dangerous models).
Still, the Asimov dream is a wonderful one: Imagine a
willing slave, who has 1000 times your capabilities in
every way. Imagine a creature who could satisfy your every
safe wish (whatever that means) and still have 99.9% of
its time free for other activities. There would be a new
universe we never really understood, but filled with
benevolent gods (though one of _my_ wishes might be to
become one of them).
If the Singularity can not be prevented
or confined, just how bad could the Post-Human era be?
Well ... pretty bad. The physical extinction of the human
race is one possibility. (Or as Eric Drexler put it of
nanotechnology: Given all that such technology can do,
perhaps governments would simply decide that they no
longer need citizens!). Yet physical extinction may not be
the scariest possibility. Again, analogies: Think of the
different ways we relate to animals. Some of the crude
physical abuses are implausible, yet.... In a Post-Human
world there would still be plenty of niches where human
equivalent automation would be desirable: embedded systems
in autonomous devices, self-aware daemons in the lower
functioning of larger sentients. (A strongly superhuman
intelligence would likely be a Society of Mind [16] with
some very competent components.) Some of these human
equivalents might be used for nothing more than digital
signal processing. They would be more like whales than
humans. Others might be very human-like, yet with a
one-sidedness, a _dedication_ that would put them in a
mental hospital in our era. Though none of these creatures
might be flesh-and-blood humans, they might be the closest
things in the new enviroment to what we call human now.
(I. J. Good had something to say about this, though at
this late date the advice may be moot: Good [12] proposed
a "Meta-Golden Rule", which might be paraphrased as "Treat
your inferiors as you would be treated by your superiors."
It's a wonderful, paradoxical idea (and most of my friends
don't believe it) since the game-theoretic payoff is so
hard to articulate. Yet if we were able to follow it, in
some sense that might say something about the plausibility
of such kindness in this universe.)
I have argued above that we cannot
prevent the Singularity, that its coming is an inevitable
consequence of the humans' natural competitiveness and the
possibilities inherent in technology. And yet ... we are
the initiators. Even the largest avalanche is triggered by
small things. We have the freedom to establish initial
conditions, make things happen in ways that are less
inimical than others. Of course (as with starting
avalanches), it may not be clear what the right guiding
nudge really is:
Other Paths to the Singularity:
Intelligence Amplification_
When people speak of creating
superhumanly intelligent beings, they are usually
imagining an AI project. But as I noted at the beginning
of this paper, there are other paths to superhumanity.
Computer networks and human-computer interfaces seem more
mundane than AI, and yet they could lead to the
Singularity. I call this contrasting approach Intelligence
Amplification (IA). IA is something that is proceeding
very naturally, in most cases not even recognized by its
developers for what it is. But every time our ability to
access information and to communicate it to others is
improved, in some sense we have achieved an increase over
natural intelligence. Even now, the team of a PhD human
and good computer workstation (even an off-net
workstation!) could probably max any written intelligence
test in existence.
And it's very likely that IA is a much
easier road to the achievement of superhumanity than pure
AI. In humans, the hardest development problems have
already been solved. Building up from within ourselves
ought to be easier than figuring out first what we really
are and then building machines that are all of that. And
there is at least conjectural precedent for this approach.
Cairns-Smith [6] has speculated that biological life may
have begun as an adjunct to still more primitive life
based on crystalline growth. Lynn Margulis (in [15] and
elsewhere) has made strong arguments that mutualism is a
great driving force in evolution.
Note that I am not proposing that AI
research be ignored or less funded. What goes on with AI
will often have applications in IA, and vice versa. I am
suggesting that we recognize that in network and interface
research there is something as profound (and potential
wild) as Artificial Intelligence. With that insight, we
may see projects that are not as directly applicable as
conventional interface and network design work, but which
serve to advance us toward the Singularity along the IA
path.
Here are some possible projects that
take on special significance, given the IA point of view:
- Human/computer team automation: Take
problems that are normally considered for purely machine
solution (like hill-climbing problems), and design
programs and interfaces that take a advantage of humans'
intuition and available computer hardware. Considering
all the bizarreness of higher dimensional hill-climbing
problems (and the neat algorithms that have been devised
for their solution), there could be some very
interesting displays and control tools provided to the
human team member.
- Develop human/computer symbiosis in
art: Combine the graphic generation capability of modern
machines and the esthetic sensibility of humans. Of
course, there has been an enormous amount of research in
designing computer aids for artists, as labor saving
tools. I'm suggesting that we explicitly aim for a
greater merging of competence, that we explicitly
recognize the cooperative approach that is possible.
Karl Sims [23] has done wonderful work in this
direction.
- Allow human/computer teams at chess
tournaments. We already have programs that can play
better than almost all humans. But how much work has
been done on how this power could be used by a human, to
get something even better? If such teams were allowed in
at least some chess tournaments, it could have the
positive effect on IA research that allowing computers
in tournaments had for the corresponding niche in AI.
- Develop interfaces that allow
computer and network access without requiring the human
to be tied to one spot, sitting in front of a computer.
(This is an aspect of IA that fits so well with known
economic advantages that lots of effort is already being
spent on it.)
- Develop more symmetrical decision
support systems. A popular research/product area in
recent years has been decision support systems. This is
a form of IA, but may be too focussed on systems that
are oracular. As much as the program giving the user
information, there must be the idea of the user giving
the program guidance.
- Use local area nets to make human
teams that really work (ie, are more effective than
their component members). This is generally the area of
"groupware", already a very popular commercial pursuit.
The change in viewpoint here would be to regard the
group activity as a combination organism. In one sense,
this suggestion might be regarded as the goal of
inventing a "Rules of Order" for such combination
operations. For instance, group focus might be more
easily maintained than in classical meetings. Expertise
of individual human members could be isolated from ego
issues such that the contribution of different members
is focused on the team project. And of course shared
data bases could be used much more conveniently than in
conventional committee operations. (Note that this
suggestion is aimed at team operations rather than
political meetings. In a political setting, the
automation described above would simply enforce the
power of the persons making the rules!)
- Exploit the worldwide Internet as a
combination human/machine tool. Of all the items on the
list, progress in this is proceeding the fastest and may
run us into the Singularity before anything else. The
power and influence of even the present-day Internet is
vastly underestimated. For instance, I think our
contemporary computer systems would break under the
weight of their own complexity if it weren't for the
edge that the USENET "group mind" gives the system
administration and support people! The very anarchy of
the worldwide net development is evidence of its
potential. As connectivity and bandwidth and archive
size and computer speed all increase, we are seeing
something like Lynn Margulis' [15] vision of the
biosphere as data processor recapitulated, but at a
million times greater speed and with millions of humanly
intelligent agents (ourselves).
The above examples illustrate research
that can be done within the context of contemporary
computer science departments. There are other paradigms.
For example, much of the work in Artificial Intelligence
and neural nets would benefit from a closer connection
with biological life. Instead of simply trying to model
and understand biological life with computers, research
could be directed toward the creation of composite systems
that rely on biological life for guidance or for the
providing features we don't understand well enough yet to
implement in hardware. A long-time dream of
science-fiction has been direct brain to computer
interfaces [2] [29]. In fact, there is concrete work that
can be done (and is being done) in this area:
- Limb prosthetics is a topic of direct
commercial applicability. Nerve to silicon transducers
can be made [14]. This is an exciting, near-term step
toward direct communication.
- Direct links into brains seem
feasible, if the bit rate is low: given human learning
flexibility, the actual brain neuron targets might not
have to be precisely selected. Even 100 bits per second
would be of great use to stroke victims who would
otherwise be confined to menu-driven interfaces.
- Plugging in to the optic trunk has
the potential for bandwidths of 1 Mbit/second or so. But
for this, we need to know the fine-scale architecture of
vision, and we need to place an enormous web of
electrodes with exquisite precision. If we want our high
bandwidth connection to be _in addition_ to what paths
are already present in the brain, the problem becomes
vastly more intractable. Just sticking a grid of
high-bandwidth receivers into a brain certainly won't do
it. But suppose that the high-bandwidth grid were
present while the brain structure was actually setting
up, as the embryo develops. That suggests:
- Animal embryo experiments. I wouldn't
expect any IA success in the first years of such
research, but giving developing brains access to complex
simulated neural structures might be very interesting to
the people who study how the embryonic brain develops.
In the long run, such experiments might produce animals
with additional sense paths and interesting intellectual
abilities.
Originally, I had hoped that this
discussion of IA would yield some clearly safer approaches
to the Singularity. (After all, IA allows our
participation in a kind of transcendance.) Alas, looking
back over these IA proposals, about all I am sure of is
that they should be considered, that they may give us more
options. But as for safety ... well, some of the
suggestions are a little scarey on their face. One of my
informal reviewers pointed out that IA for individual
humans creates a rather sinister elite. We humans have
millions of years of evolutionary baggage that makes us
regard competition in a deadly light. Much of that
deadliness may not be necessary in today's world, one
where losers take on the winners' tricks and are coopted
into the winners' enterprises. A creature that was built
_de novo_ might possibly be a much more benign entity than
one with a kernel based on fang and talon. And even the
egalitarian view of an Internet that wakes up along with
all mankind can be viewed as a nightmare [26].
The problem is not simply that the
Singularity represents the passing of humankind from
center stage, but that it contradicts our most deeply held
notions of being. I think a closer look at the notion of
strong superhumanity can show why that is.
Strong Superhumanity and the Best We
Can Ask for
Suppose we could tailor the Singularity.
Suppose we could attain our most extravagant hopes. What
then would we ask for: That humans themselves would become
their own successors, that whatever injustice occurs would
be tempered by our knowledge of our roots. For those who
remained unaltered, the goal would be benign treatment
(perhaps even giving the stay-behinds the appearance of
being masters of godlike slaves). It could be a golden age
that also involved progress (overleaping Stent's barrier).
Immortality (or at least a lifetime as long as we can make
the universe survive [10] [4]) would be achievable.
But in this brightest and kindest world,
the philosophical problems themselves become intimidating.
A mind that stays at the same capacity cannot live
forever; after a few thousand years it would look more
like a repeating tape loop than a person. (The most
chilling picture I have seen of this is in [18].) To live
indefinitely long, the mind itself must grow ... and when
it becomes great enough, and looks back ... what
fellow-feeling can it have with the soul that it was
originally? Certainly the later being would be everything
the original was, but so much vastly more. And so even for
the individual, the Cairns-Smith or Lynn Margulis notion
of new life growing incrementally out of the old must
still be valid.
This "problem" about immortality comes
up in much more direct ways. The notion of ego and
self-awareness has been the bedrock of the hardheaded
rationalism of the last few centuries. Yet now the notion
of self-awareness is under attack from the Artificial
Intelligence people ("self-awareness and other
delusions"). Intelligence Amplification undercuts our
concept of ego from another direction. The
post-Singularity world will involve extremely
high-bandwidth networking. A central feature of strongly
superhuman entities will likely be their ability to
communicate at variable bandwidths, including ones far
higher than speech or written messages. What happens when
pieces of ego can be copied and merged, when the size of a
selfawareness can grow or shrink to fit the nature of the
problems under consideration? These are essential features
of strong superhumanity and the Singularity. Thinking
about them, one begins to feel how essentially strange and
different the Post-Human era will be -- _no matter how
cleverly and benignly it is brought to be_.
From one angle, the vision fits many of
our happiest dreams: a time unending, where we can truly
know one another and understand the deepest mysteries.
From another angle, it's a lot like the worst- case
scenario I imagined earlier in this paper.
Which is the valid viewpoint? In fact, I
think the new era is simply too different to fit into the
classical frame of good and evil. That frame is based on
the idea of isolated, immutable minds connected by
tenuous, low-bandwith links. But the post-Singularity
world _does_ fit with the larger tradition of change and
cooperation that started long ago (perhaps even before the
rise of biological life). I think there _are_ notions of
ethics that would apply in such an era. Research into IA
and high-bandwidth communications should improve this
understanding. I see just the glimmerings of this now
[32]. There is Good's Meta-Golden Rule; perhaps there are
rules for distinguishing self from others on the basis of
bandwidth of connection. And while mind and self will be
vastly more labile than in the past, much of what we value
(knowledge, memory, thought) need never be lost. I think
Freeman Dyson has it right when he says [9]: "God is what
mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our
comprehension."
[I wish to thank John Carroll of San
Diego State University and Howard Davidson of Sun
Microsystems for discussing the draft version of this
paper with me.]
Annotated Sources [and an occasional
plea for bibliographical help]
[1] Alfve'n, Hannes, writing as Olof
Johanneson, _The End of Man?_, Award Books, 1969 earlier
published as "The Tale of the Big Computer",
Coward-McCann, translated from a book copyright 1966
Albert Bonniers Forlag AB with English translation
copyright 1966 by Victor Gollanz, Ltd.
[2] Anderson, Poul, "Kings Who Die",
_If_, March 1962, p8-36. Reprinted in _Seven Conquests_,
Poul Anderson, MacMillan Co., 1969.
[3] Asimov, Isaac, "Runaround",
_Astounding Science Fiction_, March 1942, p94. Reprinted
in _Robot Visions_, Isaac Asimov, ROC, 1990. Asimov
describes the development of his robotics stories in this
book.
[4] Barrow, John D. and Frank J. Tipler,
_The Anthropic Cosmological Principle_, Oxford University
Press, 1986.
[5] Bear, Greg, "Blood Music", _Analog
Science Fiction-Science Fact_, June, 1983. Expanded into
the novel _Blood Music_, Morrow, 1985.
[6] Cairns-Smith, A. G., _Seven Clues to
the Origin of Life_, Cambridge University Press, 1985.
[7] Conrad, Michael _et al._, "Towards
an Artificial Brain", _BioSystems_, vol 23, pp175-218,
1989.
[8] Drexler, K. Eric, _Engines of
Creation_, Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1986.
[9] Dyson, Freeman, _Infinite in All
Directions_, Harper && Row, 1988.
[10] Dyson, Freeman, "Physics and
Biology in an Open Universe", _Review of Modern Physics_,
vol 51, pp447-460, 1979.
[11] Good, I. J., "Speculations
Concerning the First Ultraintelligent Machine", in
_Advances in Computers_, vol 6, Franz L. Alt and Morris
Rubinoff, eds, pp31-88, 1965, Academic Press.
[12] Good, I. J., [Help! I can't find
the source of Good's Meta-Golden Rule, though I have the
clear recollection of hearing about it sometime in the
1960s. Through the help of the net, I have found pointers
to a number of related items. G. Harry Stine and Andrew
Haley have written about metalaw as it might relate to
extraterrestrials: G. Harry Stine, "How to Get along with
Extraterrestrials ... or Your Neighbor", _Analog Science
Fact- Science Fiction_, February, 1980, p39-47.] [13]
Herbert, Frank, _Dune_, Berkley Books, 1985. However, this
novel was serialized in _Analog Science Fiction-Science
Fact_ in the 1960s.
[14] Kovacs, G. T. A. _et al._,
"Regeneration Microelectrode Array for Peripheral Nerve
Recording and Stimulation", _IEEE Transactions on
Biomedical Engineering_, v 39, n 9, pp 893-902.
[15] Margulis, Lynn and Dorion Sagan, _Microcosmos,
Four Billion Years of Evolution from Our Microbial
Ancestors_, Summit Books, 1986.
[16] Minsky, Marvin, _Society of Mind_,
Simon and Schuster, 1985.
[17] Moravec, Hans, _Mind Children_,
Harvard University Press, 1988.
[18] Niven, Larry, "The Ethics of
Madness", _If_, April 1967, pp82-108. Reprinted in
_Neutron Star_, Larry Niven, Ballantine Books, 1968.
[19] Penrose, Roger, _The Emperor's New
Mind_, Oxford University Press, 1989.
[20] Platt, Charles, Private
Communication.
[21] Rasmussen, S. _et al._,
"Computational Connectionism within Neurons: a Model of
Cytoskeletal Automata Subserving Neural Networks", in
_Emergent Computation_, Stephanie Forrest, ed., pp428-449,
MIT Press, 1991.
[22] Searle, John R., "Minds, Brains,
and Programs", in _The Behavioral and Brain Sciences_, vol
3, Cambridge University Press, 1980. The essay is
reprinted in _The Mind's I_, edited by Douglas R.
Hofstadter and Daniel C. Dennett, Basic Books, 1981 (my
source for this reference). This reprinting contains an
excellent critique of the Searle essay.
[23] Sims, Karl, "Interactive Evolution
of Dynamical Systems", Thinking Machines Corporation,
Technical Report Series (published in _Toward a Practice
of Autonomous Systems: Proceedings of the First European
Conference on Artificial Life_, Paris, MIT Press, December
1991.
[24] Stapledon, Olaf, _The Starmaker_,
Berkley Books, 1961 (but from the date on forward,
probably written before 1937).
[25] Stent, Gunther S., _The Coming of
the Golden Age: A View of the End of Progress_, The
Natural History Press, 1969.
[26] Swanwick Michael, _Vacuum Flowers_,
serialized in _Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine_,
December(?) 1986 - February 1987. Republished by Ace
Books, 1988.
[27] Thearling, Kurt, "How We Will Build
a Machine that Thinks", a workshop at Thinking Machines
Corporation, August 24-26, 1992. Personal Communication.
[28] Ulam, S., Tribute to John von
Neumann, _Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society_,
vol 64, nr 3, part 2, May 1958, pp1-49.
[29] Vinge, Vernor, "Bookworm, Run!",
_Analog_, March 1966, pp8-40. Reprinted in _True Names and
Other Dangers_, Vernor Vinge, Baen Books, 1987.
[30] Vinge, Vernor, "True Names",
_Binary Star Number 5_, Dell, 1981. Reprinted in _True
Names and Other Dangers_, Vernor Vinge, Baen Books, 1987.
[31] Vinge, Vernor, First Word, _Omni_,
January 1983, p10.
[32] Vinge, Vernor, To Appear [ :-) ].
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