Physics of the Future: How Science Will Shape Human Destiny and Our Daily Lives by the Year 2100

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Physics of the Future: How Science Will Shape Human Destiny and Our Daily Lives by the Year 2100 Page 46

by Michio Kaku


  Commerce without morality,

  Science without humanity,

  Worship without sacrifice,

  Politics without principles.

  (The authors’ names refer to the books listed in Recommended Reading.)

  INTRODUCTION

  1 “In his newspapers of January 1, 1900”: Rhodes, pp. 29–30.

  2 “It will be as common for the citizen”: www.learner.org/workshops/primarysources/corporations/docs/.

  3 “Everything that can be invented”: quoted in Canton, p. 247.

  4 “Who the hell wants to hear actors talk?”: quoted in Canton, p. 247.

  5 “I think there is a world market”: quoted in Canton, p. 247.

  6 “It is now definitely established”: Cornish, p. 149. See also: “The Facts that Got Away,” New York Times, November 14, 2001.

  1. FUTURE OF THE COMPUTER: MIND OVER MATTER

  1 “Where a calculator like the ENIAC”: Popular Mechanics, quoted in Kurzweil, p. 56. See also: Andrew Hamilton, “Brains That Click,” Popular Mechanics, March 1940, p. 258.

  2 “Technology [is] the knack”: Rhodes, p. 206.

  3 “Those components will eventually include”: Babak A. Parvie, “Augmented Reality in a Contact Lens,” IEEE Spectrum, September 2009, www.spectrum.ieee.org/biomedical/bionics/augmented-reality-in-a-contact-lens/0.

  4 “There’s some physiological evidence”: Gary Stix, “Jacking into the Brain—Is the Brain the Ultimate Computer Interface?” Scientific American, November 2008, pp. 56–61.

  5 “It’s like being an astronomer”: Jeff Wise, “Thought Police: How Brain Scans Could Invade Your Private Life,” Popular Mechanics, October 15, 2007, www.popularmechanics.com/science/health/neuroscience/4226614.

  6 “possible to identify, from a large set of completely novel natural images”: New Scientist, October 15, 2008, issue 2678.

  7 “Can we tap into the thoughts of others”: David Baltimore, “How Biology Became Information Science,” in Denning, pp. 53–54.

  8 “I am told”: Ibid., p. 54.

  9 “Perhaps something like the Star Trek tricorder”: Bernhard Blümich, “The Incredible Shrinking Scanner: MRI-like Machine Becomes Portable,” Scientific American, November 2008, p. 68.

  2. FUTURE OF AI: RISE OF THE MACHINES

  1 “Scientists Worry Machines May Outsmart Man”: John Markoff, New York Times, July 25, 2009, p. A1, www.nytimes.com/2009/07/26/science/26robot.html?scp=1&sq=Scientists Worry Machines May Outsmart Man&st=cse.

  2 “Technologists are providing”: Ibid.

  3 “just at the stage where they’re robust”: Kaku, p. 75.

  4 “Machines will be capable, within twenty years”: Crevier, p. 109.

  5 “It’s as though a group of people”: Paul W. Abrahams, “A World Without Work,” in Denning and Metcalfe, p. 136.

  6 “Today, you can buy chess programs for $49”: Richard Strozzi Heckler, “Somatics in Cyberspace,” in Denning, p. 281.

  7 “To this day, AI programs”: Sheffield et al., p. 30.

  8 “100 million things, about the number a typical person knows”: Kurzweil, p. 267.

  9 In 2006, it was estimated that there were 950,000 industrial robots: World Robotics 2007, IFR Statistical Department (Frankfurt: International Federation of Robotics, 2007).

  10 “Discovering how the brain works”: Fred Hapgood, “Reverse Engineering the Brain,” Technology Review, July 11, 2006, www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=17111.

  11 He was in a semiconscious state for several weeks: John M. Harlow, M.D., “Passage of an Iron Rod Through the Head,” Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences 11, May 1999, pp. 281–83, www.neuro.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/11/2/281.

  12 “It is not impossible to build a human brain”: Jonathan Fildes, “Artificial Brain ‘10 Years Away,’ ” BBC News, July 22, 2009, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8164060.stm.

  13 “It’s not a question of years”: Jason Palmer, “Simulated Brain Closer to Thought,” BBC News, April 22, 2009, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/sci/tech/8012496.stm.

  14 “This is a Hubble Telescope of the mind … it’s inevitable”: Douglas Fox, “IBM Reveals the Biggest Artificial Brain of All Time,” Popular Mechanics, December 18, 2009, www.popularmechanics.com/technology/engineering/extreme-machines/4337190.

  15 “After we solve this”: Sally Adee, “Reverse Engineering the Brain,” IEEE Spectrum, June 2008, http://spectrum.ieee.org/biomedical/ethics/reverse-engineering-the-brain/0.

  16 “Within thirty years”: Vernor Vinge, “What Is the Singularity?” paper 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 Whole Earth Review, Winter 1993, http://mindstalk.net/vinge/vinge-sing.html.

  17 “I’d be very surprised if anything remotely like this happened”: Tom Abate, “Smarter Than Thou? Stanford Conference Ponders a Brave New World with Machines More Powerful Than Their Creators,” San Francisco Chronicle, May 12, 2006, http://articles.sfgate.com/2006–05–12/business/17293318_1_ray-kurzweil-machines-artificial-intelligence.

  18 “If you could blow the brain up”: Kurzweil, p. 376.

  19 Philosopher David Chalmers has even catalogued: http://consc.net/mindpapers.com.

  20 “life may seem pointless if we are fated”: Sheffield, p. 38.

  21 “One conversation centered”: Kurzweil, p. 10.

  22 “It’s not going to be an invasion”: Abate, San Francisco Chronicle, May 12, 2006.

  23 “intelligent design for the IQ 140 people”: Brian O’Keefe, “The Smartest (or the Nuttiest) Futurist on Earth,” Fortune, May 2, 2007, http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2007/05/14/100008848/.

  24 “It’s as if you took a lot of good food”: Greg Ross, “An Interview with Douglas R. Hofstadter,” American Scientist, January 2007, www.americanscientist.org/bookshelf/pub/douglas-r-hofstadter.

  25 “will evolve into socially intelligent beings”: P. W. Singer, “Gaming the Robot Revolution,” Slate, May 21, 2009, www.slate.com/id/2218834/.

  26 “When I was a kid”: Rodney A. Brooks, “Making Living Systems,” in John Brockman, ed., Science at the Edge: Conversations with the Leading Scientific Thinkers of Today (New York: Sterling, 2008), p. 250.

  27 “My prediction is that by the year 2100”: Rodney A. Brooks, “Flesh and Machines,” in Denning, p. 63.

  28 “At Little League games”: Pam Belluck, “Burst of Technology Helps Blind to See,” New York Times, September 27, 2009, p. A1, www.nytimes.com/2009/09/27/health/research/27eye.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=“burst of technology”&st=cse.

  29 “It’s great. I have a feeling”: BBC-TV, October 18, 2009.

  30 “Over the next ten to twenty years … wireless Internet”: Rodney A. Brooks, “The Merger of Flesh and Machines,” in John Brockman, ed., The Next Fifty Years (New York: Vintage, 2002), p. 189.

  31 “Fifty years from now … Darwinian evolution”: Ibid., pp. 191–92.

  32 “When I try to think of what I might gain”: Stock, p. 23.

  3. FUTURE OF MEDICINE: PERFECTION AND BEYOND

  1 “Biology is today an information science”: David Baltimore, “How Biology Became an Information Science,” in Denning, p. 43.

  2 “You have to have a strong stomach”: Nicholas Wade, “Cost of Decoding a Genome Is Lowered,” New York Times, August 10, 2009, p. D3, www.nytimes.com/2009/08/11/science/11gene.html.

  3 “Embryonic stem cells represent”: Jeanne Lenzer, “Have We Entered the Stem Cell Era?” Discover, November 2009, p. 33, http://discovermagazine.com/2009/nov/14-have-we-entered-the-stem-cell-era/article_view?b_start:int=1&-C=.

  4 “It’s gorgeous”: Ibid.

  5 By 2001, there were more than 500: Stock, p. 5.

  6 But there have been setbacks: Ibid., p. 36.

  7 “What we are seeing today”: Kate Kelland, “Gene Maps to Transform Scientists’ Work on Cancer,” Reuters, December 18, 2009.

>   8 “Cancer is an army of cells”: David Baltimore, “How Biology Became an Information Science,” in Denning, p. 54.

  9 “Homo sapiens, the first truly free species”: Kurzweil, p. 195.

  10 “Although many genes are likely to be involved in the evolution”: Stock, p. 108.

  11 “It’s as if they remember”: Jonah Lehrer, “Small, Furry … and Smart?” Nature 461 (October 2009): 864.

  12 “The obstacles to his understanding”: Ibid.

  13 In fact, scientists believe that there has to be a balance: Jonah Lehrer, “Smart Mice,” The Frontal Cortex, October 15, 2009, http://scienceblogs.com/cortex/2009/10/smart_mice.php.

  14 “We all know that good-looking people do well”: Sheffield et al., p. 107.

  15 “There is nothing in biology yet found that indicates the inevitability of death”: Kurzweil, p. 320.

  16 “If something like age-1 exists in humans”: Kaku, p. 211.

  17 Finally, in 2009, the long-awaited results came in: Nicholas Wade, “Tests Begin on Drugs That May Slow Aging,” New York Times, August 17, 2009, p. D4, www.nytimes.com/2009/08/18/science/18aging.html?ref=caloric_restriction.

  18 Scientists have found that sirtuin activators: Nicholas Wade, “Quest for a Long Life Gains Scientific Respect,” New York Times, September 29, 2009, p. D4, www.nytimes.com/2009/09/29/science/29aging.html?ref=caloric_restriction.

  19 His colleague Sinclair, in fact, admits that he: Nicholas Wade, “Scientists Find Clues to Aging in a Red Wine Ingredient’s Role in Activating a Protein,” New York Times, November 26, 2008, p. A30, www.nytimes.com/2008/11/27/health/27aging.html?scp=6&sq=sinclair%20resveratrol&st=cse.

  20 “In five or six or seven years”: Wade, “Quest for a Long Life,” New York Times, September 28, 2009, p. D4, www.nytimes.com/2009/09/29/science/29aging.html?ref=caloric_restriction.

  21 “Such interventions may become commonplace”: Kurzweil, p. 253.

  22 “Gradually, our agonizing”: Stock, p. 88.

  23 In 2002, with the best demographic data: Ciara Curtin, “Fact or Fiction?: Living People Outnumber the Dead,” Scientific American, March 2007.

  24 Every year, 79 million: Brown, p. 5.

  25 “I believe that by 2050”: Richard Dawkins, A Devil’s Chaplain: Reflections on Hope, Lies, Science, and Love (New York: Houghton Mifflin Mariner, 2004), p. 113.

  26 Even more interesting is the HAR1 region of the genome: Katherine S. Pollard, “What Makes Us Human?” Scientific American, May 2009, p. 44.

  27 This cell would then be reprogrammed to revert: Nicholas Wade, “Scientists in Germany Draft Neanderthal Genome,” New York Times, February 12, 2009, p. A12, www.nytimes.com/2009/02/13/science/13neanderthal.html?scp=3&sq=neanderthal

  &st=cse.

  28 “Are you going to put them in Harvard”: Ibid.

  29 “will doubtless raise”: Dawkins, p. 114.

  30 “A year ago, I would have said”: Kate Wong, “Scientists Sequence Half the Woolly Mammoth’s Genome,” Scientific American, January 2009, p. 26, www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=woolly-mammoth-genome-sequenced.

  31 “Traditional Darwinian evolution now produces”: Stock, p. 183.

  4. NANOTECHNOLOGY: EVERYTHING FROM NOTHING?

  1 “The grandest dream of nanotechnology”: Carl T. Hall, “Brave New NanoWorld Lies Ahead, “San Francisco Chronicle, July 19, 1999, http://articles.sfgate.com/ 1999–07–19/news/17694442_1_atom-molecules-nanotech.

  2 “Eventually, the goal is not just to make computers”: Ibid.

  3 “Nanotechnology has the potential”: quoted in Kurzweil, p. 226.

  4 The key to these nanoparticles is their size: James R. Heath, Mark E. Davis, and Leroy Hood, “Nanomedicine—Revolutionizing the Fight Against Cancer,” Scientific American, February 2009, p. 44.

  5 “Because the self-assembly doesn’t require”: Emily Singer, “Stealthy Nanoparticles Attack Cancer Cells,” Technology Review, November 4, 2009, www.technologyreview.com/business/23855/.

  6 “It’s basically like putting”: “Special Gold Nanoparticles Show Promise for ‘Cooking’ Cancer Cells,” www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2009–03/acs-sgn030909.php.

  7 Yet another way to steer a molecular machine: Thomas E. Mallouk and Ayusman Sen, “How to Build Nanotech Motors,” Scientific American, May 2009, p. 72.

  8 “Today, it takes a room filled with computers”: Katherine Harmon, “Could a Microchip Help to Diagnose Cancer in Minutes,” Scientific American blog post, September 28, 2009, http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=could-a-microchip-help-to-diagnose-2009–09–28.

  9 The question—When will Moore’s law collapse?—sends shudders: Electronic News, September 18, 2007, www.edn.com/article/CA647968.

  10 “We see that for at least the next fifteen to twenty”: Electronic News, July 13, 2004. See also Kurzweil, p. 112, and www.nanotech-now.com/news.cgi?story_id=04803.

  11 “From the point of view of physics”: Alexis Madrigal, “Scientist Builds World’s Smallest Transistor, Gordon Moore Sighs with Relief,” Wired, www.wired.com/wiredscience/2008/04/scientists-buil/.

  12 “It’s about the smallest”: Ibid.

  13 “By 2050, we will surely have found ways to achieve”: Vint Cerf, “One Is Glad to Be of Service,” in Denning, p. 229.

  14 “Think of a mobile device”: Sharon Gaudin, “Intel Sees Future with Shape-shifting Robots, Wireless Power,” Computerworld, August 22, 2008, www.computerworld.com/s/article/9113301/Intel_sees_future_with_shape_shifting_robots_wireless_power?taxonomyId=12&pageNumber=2.

  15 “Sometime over the next forty years”: Ibid.

  16 “Why not?”: Ibid.

  17 “Much like you can’t make a boy and a girl fall in love”: Rudy Baum, “Nanotechnology: Drexler and Smalley Make the Case for and Against ‘Molecular Assemblers,’ ” Chemical & Engineering News 81, December 1, 2003, pp. 37–42, http://pubs.acs.org/cen/coverstory/8148/8148counterpoint.html.

  18 “If a self-assembler ever does become possible”: BBC/Discovery Channel, Visions of the Future, Part II, 2007.

  19 “Nanotechnology will thrive, much as photolithography thrives”: Rodney A. Brooks, “Flesh and Machines,” in Denning, p. 63.

  5. FUTURE OF ENERGY: ENERGY FROM THE STARS

  1 the world consumes about 14 trillion watts of power: Kurzweil, p. 242.

  2 U.S. oil reserves were being depleted so rapidly: www.mkinghubbert.com/speech/prediction.

  3 “Food and pollution are not”: Sheffield, p. 179.

  4 China will soon surpass the United States in wind power: www.gwec.net/index.php?id=125.

  5 “All the geniuses here at General Motors”: Tad Friend, “Plugged In,” The New Yorker, August 24, 2009, pp. 50–59.

  6 “You put your hand over the exhaust pipe”: “GM Convinced the Future Is in Fuel Cells,” CBS News, September 11, 2009, www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/09/11/tech/main5302610.shtml?tag=mncol;lst;6.

  7 The plant will occupy 200 acres: Business Wire, www.businesswire.com/portal/ge/index. See also www.swampfox.ws/node/26502.

  8 Greenland’s ice shelves shrank by twenty-four square miles: Brown, p. 63.

  9 Large chunks of Antarctica’s ice, which have been stable: Brown, p. 64.

  10 According to scientists at the University of Colorado: Brown, p. 65

  11 In 1900, the world consumed 150 million: Brown, pp. 56–57.

  12 “Envision Pakistan, India, and China”: Peter Schwartz and Doug Randall, “An Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and Its Implications for United States National Security,” Global Business Network, October 2003, p. 18. PDF available at www.gbn.com/search.php?topnavSearch=envision+pakistan%2C+india&x=0&y=0.

  13 countries bound by the London Convention: Cornelia Dean, “Experts Ponder the Hazards of Using Technology to Save the Planet,” New York Times, August 12, 2008, p. F4, www.nytimes.com/2008/08/12/health/12iht-ethics.3.15212327.html?_r=1&scp

  =10&sq=planktos&st=cse.

  14 The liquefied gas will be injected: Matthew L. Wal
d, “Refitted to Bury Emissions, Plant Draws Attention,” New York Times, September 29, 2009, p. A19, www.nytimes.com/2009/09/22/science/earth/22coal.html?ref=american_electric_power_company.

  15 “We view the genome as the software … There are already thousands … We think this field”: J. Craig Venter, quoted in Oil and the Future of Energy: Climate Repair, Hydrogen, Nuclear Fuel, Renewable and Green Sources, Energy Efficiency, editors of Scientific American (Guilford, Conn.: Lyons Press, 2007), pp. 220–21. From Venter’s presentation “Synthetic Genomics” at the Conference on Synthetic Biology (SB2.0), Berkeley, California, May 20, 2006. Audio available at http://webcast.berkeley.edu/event_details.php?webcastid=15766.

 

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