Google and Ray Kurzweil into advanced trans-humanism?
Google’s
New Director of Engineering Is Planning To Change The Future Of Humanity….Inventor
Ray Kurzweil hopes to develop ways from humans to live forever, and while he’s
at it, bring back his dead father. Behind him is the support of a tech giant…”
Ray
Kurzweil, Google's Director Of Engineering, Wants To Bring The Dead Back To
Life
Inventor
Ray Kurzweil hopes to develop ways for humans to live forever, and while he’s
at it, bring back his dead father.
Behind him
is the support of a tech giant. This month, Kurzweil, a futurist, stepped into
the role of Director of Engineering at Google, focusing on machine learning and
language processing.
"There
is a lot of suffering in the world," Kurzweil once said, according to
Bloomberg. "Some of it can be overcome if we have the right solutions."
Since his
father's death in 1970, Kurzweil has stored his keepsakes in hopes the data
will one day be fed into a computer capable of creating a virtual version of
him, Bloomberg reported. Interestingly, one of his novels lays out how humans
might "transcend biology."
According
to TechCrunch, his controversial theories are rooted in the idea of
technological singularity, a time when humans and machines sync up to the point
of nearly limitless advancement.
That idea,
which interests Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, could happen as
soon as 2030, Kurzweil says.
"We
are a human machine civilization and we create these tools to make ourselves
smarter," Kurzweil told Scientific American.
In his
latest book, "How To Create A Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed,"
he writes about wanting to engineer a computerized replica of the human brain. If
we understand the brain well enough, he says, we would be better equipped to
fix its problems, like mental and neurological illnesses.
He imagines
a search engine capable of accessing a database of your thoughts, stored in the
Cloud. It would anticipate what people are seeking before they even know.
Much of
this may sound nearly impossible, but Kurzweil has been spot-on about
technological forecasts in the past.
"In 1999,
I said that in about a decade we would see technologies such as self-driving
cars and mobile phones that could answer your questions, and people criticized
these predictions as unrealistic," he said in a statement announcing his
position at Google. "Fast forward a decade –- Google has demonstrated self-driving
cars, and people are indeed asking questions of their Android phones."
Digital
Trends places Kurzweil among the most-celebrated and recognized innovators of
the last four decades. In 1976, several of his innovations converged into the
first device that could read printed text out loud for the blind. He was 27
years old at the time.
Now, the
next generation of inventors will learn from him. Google recently allotted more
than $250,000 toward his graduate school, Singularity University , according to Bloomberg. After 10
weeks of a curriculum focusing on biotech, robots, and artificial intelligence,
students -- forgoing a traditional degree -- create their own startups.
"I'm
thrilled to be teaming up with Google to work on some of the hardest problems
in computer science so we can turn the next decade's 'unrealistic' visions into
reality," Kurzweil said in the statement.
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