Read The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology Online
Authors: Ray Kurzweil
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Fringe Science, #Retail, #Technology, #Amazon.com
N
ED:
Okay, I understand that designer baby boomers can’t get away completely from their predesigner genes, but with designer babies they’ll have the genes and the time to express them
.
R
AY:
The “designer baby” revolution is going to be a very slow one; it won’t be a
significant factor in this century. Other revolutions will overtake it. We won’t have the technology for designer babies for another ten to twenty years. To the extent that it is used, it would be adopted gradually, and then it will take those generations another twenty years to reach maturity. By that time, we’re approaching the Singularity, with the real revolution being the predominance of nonbiological intelligence. That will go far beyond the capabilities of any designer genes. The idea of designer babies and baby boomers is just the reprogramming of the information processes in biology. But it’s still biology, with all its profound limitations
.
N
ED:
You’re missing something. Biological is what we are. I think most people would agree that being biological is the quintessential attribute of being human
.
R
AY:
That’s certainly true today
.
N
ED:
And I plan to keep it that way
.
R
AY:
Well, if you’re speaking for yourself, that’s fine with me. But if you stay biological and don’t reprogram your genes, you won’t be around for very long to influence the debate
.
Nanotechnology: The Intersection of Information and the Physical World
The role of the infinitely small is infinitely large.
—L
OUIS
P
ASTEUR
But I am not afraid to consider the final question as to whether, ultimately, in the great future, we can arrange the atoms the way we want; the very atoms, all the way down!
—R
ICHARD
F
EYNMAN
Nanotechnology has the potential to enhance human performance, to bring sustainable development for materials, water, energy, and food, to protect against unknown bacteria and viruses, and even to diminish the reasons for breaking the peace [by creating universal abundance].
—N
ATIONAL
S
CIENCE
F
OUNDATION
N
ANOTECHNOLOGY
R
EPORT
Nanotechnology promises the tools to rebuild the physical world—our bodies and brains included—molecular fragment by molecular fragment, potentially
atom by atom. We are shrinking the key feature size of technology, in accordance with the law of accelerating returns, at the exponential rate of approximately a factor of four per linear dimension per decade.
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At this rate the key feature sizes for most electronic and many mechanical technologies will be in the nanotechnology range—generally considered to be under one hundred nanometers—by the 2020s. (Electronics has already dipped below this threshold, although not yet in three-dimensional structures and not yet self-assembling.) Meanwhile rapid progress has been made, particularly in the last several years, in preparing the conceptual framework and design ideas for the coming age of nanotechnology.
As important as the biotechnology revolution discussed above will be, once its methods are fully mature, limits will be encountered in biology itself. Although biological systems are remarkable in their cleverness, we have also discovered that they are dramatically suboptimal. I’ve mentioned the extremely slow speed of communication in the brain, and as I discuss below (see
p. 253
), robotic replacements for our red blood cells could be thousands of times more efficient than their biological counterparts.
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Biology will never be able to match what we will be capable of engineering once we fully understand biology’s principles of operation.
The revolution in nanotechnology, however, will ultimately enable us to redesign and rebuild, molecule by molecule, our bodies and brains and the world with which we interact.
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These two revolutions are overlapping, but the full realization of nanotechnology lags behind the biotechnology revolution by about one decade.
Most nanotechnology historians date the conceptual birth of nanotechnology to physicist Richard Feynman’s seminal speech in 1959, “There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom,” in which he described the inevitability and profound implications of engineering machines at the level of atoms:
The principles of physics, as far as I can see, do not speak against the possibility of maneuvering things atom by atom. It would be, in principle, possible . . . for a physicist to synthesize any chemical substance that the chemist writes down. . . . How? Put the atoms down where the chemist says, and so you make the substance. The problems of chemistry and biology can be greatly helped if our ability to see what we are doing, and to do things on an atomic level, is ultimately developed—a development which I think cannot be avoided.
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An even earlier conceptual foundation for nanotechnology was formulated by the information theorist John von Neumann in the early 1950s with his
model of a self-replicating system based on a universal constructor, combined with a universal computer.
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In this proposal the computer runs a program that directs the constructor, which in turn constructs a copy of both the computer (including its self-replication program) and the constructor. At this level of description von Neumann’s proposal is quite abstract—the computer and constructor could be made in a great variety of ways, as well as from diverse materials, and could even be a theoretical mathematical construction. But he took the concept one step further and proposed a “kinematic constructor”: a robot with at least one manipulator (arm) that would build a replica of itself from a “sea of parts” in its midst.
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It was left to Eric Drexler to found the modern field of nanotechnology, with a draft of his landmark Ph.D. thesis in the mid-1980s, in which he essentially combined these two intriguing suggestions. Drexler described a von Neumann kinematic constructor, which for its sea of parts used atoms and molecular fragments, as suggested in Feynman’s speech. Drexler’s vision cut across many disciplinary boundaries and was so far-reaching that no one was daring enough to be his thesis adviser except for my own mentor, Marvin Minsky. Drexler’s dissertation (which became his book
Engines of Creation
in 1986 and was articulated technically in his 1992 book,
Nanosystems
) laid out the foundation of nanotechnology and provided the road map still being followed today.
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Drexler’s “molecular assembler” will be able to make almost anything in the world. It has been referred to as a “universal assembler,” but Drexler and other nanotechnology theorists do not use the word “universal” because the products of such a system necessarily have to be subject to the laws of physics and chemistry, so only atomically stable structures would be viable. Furthermore, any specific assembler would be restricted to building products from its sea of parts, although the feasibility of using individual atoms has been shown. Nevertheless, such an assembler could make just about any physical device we would want, including highly efficient computers and subsystems for other assemblers.
Although Drexler did not provide a detailed design for an assembler—such a design has still not been fully specified—his thesis did provide extensive feasibility arguments for each of the principal components of a molecular assembler, which include the following subsystems:
Although many configurations have been proposed, the typical assembler has been described as a tabletop unit that can manufacture almost any physically possible product for which we have a software description, ranging from computers, clothes, and works of art to cooked meals.
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Larger products, such as furniture, cars, or even houses, can be built in a modular fashion or using larger assemblers. Of particular importance is the fact that an assembler can create copies of itself, unless its design specifically prohibits this (to avoid potentially dangerous self-replication). The incremental cost of creating any physical product, including the assemblers themselves, would be pennies per pound—basically the cost of the raw materials. Drexler estimates total manufacturing cost for a molecular-manufacturing process in the range of ten cents
to fifty cents per kilogram, regardless of whether the manufactured product were clothing, massively parallel supercomputers, or additional manufacturing systems.
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