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Kuiper belt AI will be amused by many things, but the antics of biolife and humans down here on our damp corrosive mudball will certainly be worth the tiny amount of sunlight we consume and the waste heat we generate. If we focus on expansion into space (shielded wheel habitats in zero gee), and build the necessary AI support systems, then we've made the first steps towards the massive expansion of cyberlife Out There rather than competing with us for our paltry pixel of sunlight Down Here. Kuiper belt AI will be amused by many things, but the antics of biolife and humans down here on our damp corrosive mudball will certainly be worth the tiny amount of sunlight we consume and the waste heat we generate. If we focus on expansion into space (shielded wheel habitats in zero gee), and build the necessary AI support systems, then we've made the first steps towards the massive expansion of cyberlife Out There rather than competing with us for our [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pale_Blue_Dot | paltry pixel of sunlit blue ]] Down Here.

Novacene

The Coming Age of Hyperintelligence

James Lovelock 2019 Tigard Lib 570.1 Lov


This is probably 99 year old James Lovelock's last book. I like it a lot, although it is not as bold as it could be.

Novacene is Lovelock's neologism for the geological era after the Anthropocene, which he dates from the invention of coal-powered machinery.

Lovelock contends that humans are absurdly unlikely, and that we are the only intelligence currently existing in the entire universe. Extinction is also likely (war, asteroid impact, climate destruction, or eventual solar overheating).

Lovelock considers himself an intuitive engineer, an agnostic with Quaker roots. The purpose of the universe ("tantamount to a religious statement") is to produce and sustain intelligent life. The cosmic anthropic principle and Gaia were two hypotheses that pointed a seemly way to the future.

"Cyborg" coined by Manfred Clynes and Nathan Kline in 1960, a self-sufficient cybernetic organism made of engineered materials.

No war between humans and machines because we need each other.

p036 The Newcomen steam engine was developed because it worked cheaper than human or horse power.

p043 Moore's law, doubling every two years, has continued for at least 40 years. He mentions a "possible" silicon stall, followed by a huge diamond chip advantage.

my note:

Silicon

Diamond

charge mobility

1400

3000

cm2/V−s

thermal conductivity

130

2000

W/m−K

electric field

3

10

MV/m

my additions

bandgap

1.1

5.5

eV

insulating "oxide"

Yes

No?

p47 Nuclear weapons are insane, nuclear power essential. A new source of cheap fossil fuel as bad as mines full of heroin and cocaine. The misuse of science is surely the greatest form of sin.

p50 Cities are efficient and natural (insect colonies)

p58 Steep rose in the number of asteroid strikes in the last 290 million years. Three times more likely to suffer an imact than the dinosaurs. (no cite, see : Ghent 2019 , comment , Ghent response )

p63 currently in warm period of glacial cycle, and a supervolcano or asteroid strike could put us in mortal danger. A rise to 47C leads to an irreversable phase change and a Venus-like state.

  • p64 CO2 was 180ppm 18,000 years ago, now 400 ppm.
  • p65 Paleocene/Eocene Thermal Maximum 55Ma, 5C hotter than today.
  • We need to keep the Earth as cool as possible to reduce accident vulnerability

Bad (Clive Hamilton) or Good (Ecomodernist)? Lovelock tends towards ecomodernist, if we solve problems. We replaced CFCs, next plastic packaging.

p72 "I think re-wilding and reforestation are worthwhile, but they should occur naturally. I know from personal experience that planting forests is no substitute and can even be harmful." I'd like to learn about that "personal experience".

p79 AlphaGo, Google DeepMind . Much faster than humans.

  • .. but those games interest us because they are "simple" but challenging to our differently-capable brains.

Lovelock then dwells on presumed continual rapid expansion driven by uninterrupted Moore's Law.

p91 Karel Čapek's (tchapek?) robots were slave-like flesh humanoids, not machines.

p102 The cyborgs could be friendly, or hostile, but because of the present age and state of the Earth they would have no option but to act and work together.

p104 All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace

  • p105 Above 50C Eart becomes corrosively destructive to all life, including cyborgs

p106 heat-reflecting mirrors in space, citing Lowell Wood

  • p111 Gaia with an inorganic coat
  • p112 Autopilots ... when they fail, control passes back to unprepared human pilots. This was written before B737 Max.In

Intelligent organisms must collaborate for survival.

  • p116 autonomous drones: It is horrific that our leaders, almost all of whom are wholly ignorant of science and engineering, are encouraging the development of these weapons.
  • p119 - we will be pets.

p120 human hearing can hear a sound with an amplitude equal to a tenth of a diameter of a proton

  • khl uh... LIGO is 1e-4 proton

memory 100 years ( except fallible memory morphs in decades), while "data smog" (Schneier neologism) persists forever

  • p126 In 1961 engineer Lovelock worked on NASA's 1963 soft landing technology (Surveyor actually 1966) 1964 Mariner. After 3 years as tenured full professor at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, he purchased and equipped a small laboratory in Bowerchalke. Now is 43 miles southwest in Chesil Beach

p130 Tennyson Ulysses

  • Tho' much is taken, much abides; and tho'
  • We are not now that strenght which in old days , Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are ...


I would date the Anthropocene from the use of metal agricultural tools and fire to change land use and release CO₂. That's a small quibble. Compared to the multibillion-year tenure of Earth life, or even compared to a fraction of a Milanković cycle, these are practically simultaneous events.

In Lovelock's Novacene, machine intelligence displaces human intelligence as Earth's master, reversing climate change for its own survival. The unmentioned assumption is that machine and human will remain discrete unitary entities. As individuals devolve essential mammalian traits (like navigation and trust) to machines, it seems that a merger has already begun. The few humans who guide this merger will chart the path that other people and their machines will follow.

Lovelock writes about sunscreens to cool the Earth, but most of the sunlight reaching the Earth's mostly-ocean surface does not drive photosynthesis and carbon capture; artificial lifeforms (designed, modelled, and tested by imaginative bioengineers with the help of computers) could reduce atmospheric CO₂ by 30 ppm per year. That could feed other artificial lifeforms that lift nutrients from the ocean's floor, as well as spin gigatonnes per year of superstrength carbon fiber for mega-structures.

While 174e15 watts of sunlight reaches the Earth's surface ( and electric launchers could use 5% of that for 100 megatonne per second space launch ), two billion times more power is emitted by the Sun, mostly launched into the empty void. Feeding that power into machine computation, and emitting the waste heat into 2.7 Kelvin deep space, would power vastly more Novacene machine intelligence than Earth's puny share. If that capture and emission occured at 50 AU distance, where the black body temperature of the capture system might be 60K rather than 300K, and the energy per computation reduced by 5x, the Arrhenius chemical decay rates reduced by factors of billions, then "intelligence per watt" would be perhaps 1e20 higher than the mere 100 billion watts of human brain on Earth today.

Kuiper belt AI will be amused by many things, but the antics of biolife and humans down here on our damp corrosive mudball will certainly be worth the tiny amount of sunlight we consume and the waste heat we generate. If we focus on expansion into space (shielded wheel habitats in zero gee), and build the necessary AI support systems, then we've made the first steps towards the massive expansion of cyberlife Out There rather than competing with us for our paltry pixel of sunlit blue Down Here.

MoreLater

Novacene (last edited 2019-12-19 05:40:36 by KeithLofstrom)