WHAT'S THE PURPOSE OF LIFE?
NANOTECHNOLOGY MIGHT PROVIDE THE ANSWER
By Ronald Bailey
May 1, 2002
Two different types of cutting-edge technology are promising
(or threatening, as the fearful might see it) to radically
change human abilities and capacities-and even our identities.
One-already the subject of plenty of political maneuvering-is
the biotechnological revolution. The other, not yet of major
political significance, is nanotechnology-the ability to
manipulate matter precisely on the atomic level.
The Foresight Institute http://www.foresight.org/,
an organization dedicated to nanotech, sponsored a meeting in
Palo Alto over the weekend featuring around 100 of the
industry's leading doers and speculators. Attendees heard from
Zyvex's http://www.zyvex.com/
Ralph Merkle, inventor Ray Kurzweil http://www.kurzweilai.net/,
futurist author Stewart Brand of the Long Now Foundation http://www.longnow.org/
and Long Bets Foundation http://www.longbets.org/,
and Neil Jacobstein of the Institute for Molecular Manufacturing
http://www.imm.org/,
among others.
The meeting featured a colorful debate on the relative
importance of nanotech and biotech between Ray Kurzweil and
Gregory Stock http://research.mednet.ucla.edu/pmts/Stock.htm.
Kurzweil is an inventor of note and the author of a number of
books, including The Age of Spiritual Machines. Stock is the
director of the program on medicine, technology, and society at
UCLA, and author, most recently, of Redesigning Humans. Billed
as the "Debate of the Decade: 'BioFuture or MachineFuture?'"
their discussion ranged from gee-whiz gadgetry to the question
that bedevils most human beings: "What is the purpose of
life?"
Stock began by challenging Kurzweil's brisk timetable for the
cyborgization of humanity-which Kurzweil sees happening within a
few decades. "I know some of you are eagerly anticipating
transmogrification into some sort of cyborg chipheads,"
said Stock. "I know biological enhancement sounds so stodgy
compared to some of the things talked about by Ray. But I don't
think that a migration to a non-organic substrate is going to
happen any time soon."
Stock foresees instead that rapid advances in biological
research will soon change how we manage our emotions, how we
have children, and how long we live. New psychoactive drugs will
enable us to short-circuit the emotional pathways that have
evolved to reward behaviors that increase our chances of
surviving to reproduce. These new side-effect-free drugs will
allow us to feel really happy and fulfilled all the time.
"Are you going to be able to resist that?" Stock
wonders.
"I know that many of you are thinking, 'why talk about
biology when we're going to achieve personal immortality by
joining a superconsciousness that is nonbiological?'" noted
Stock. He admitted that he found that vision "very
seductive, but even with exponential advances in technology, we
are still not going to become cyborgs." Why not?
Because trying to meld biology and machinery is incredibly
complex. So for the next few decades, until all the bugs in nano
are worked out, biotech will be the technology that will boost
life expectancy and expand our physical capacities. Given the
relatively primitive state of electromechanical technology,
"why would we bother to implant computers?" asked
Stock. "I'm not going to have brain surgery in order to
install the moral equivalent of an electronic toaster."
Kurzweil thinks the future will be both biotech and nanotech.
The first two decades of the 21st century will be the golden age
of biotechnology, featuring tissue engineering, the
immortalization of cells and organs using telomeres, rational
drug design, simulations replacing animal testing, and the
repair of genetic defects. The third and fourth decades will be
the golden age of bionanotechnology, in which biology and
nanotechnology will meld. "Nanotech is behind biotech, but
consider the law of accelerating returns. We will make progress
equivalent to that of the whole 20th century in the next 15
years," Kurzweil predicts. "Progress in the 21st
century will be equivalent to 20,000 years of progress at
today's rate of progress."
By 2030, electronics will utilize molecule-size circuits and
be organized in three dimensions instead of the two dimensions
used today. Also by 2030, nano-electromechanical systems
combining computational power and the ability to manipulate
matter at the molecular level will be common. The accelerating
rate of progress will make human-level intelligence available in
a $1,000 computer by 2029. Humans will incorporate nano-scale
electromechanical devices in their bodies because "we are
not going to be able to expand our biological abilities. There
are profound limitations on biology, but nanotechnology is
infinitely expandable." Kurzweil foresees the replacement
of the nuclei of cells with nanotech structures that contain
genomic information and can make the proper proteins. (Of
course, cell nuclei are already, in a sense, bionanotech
devices.)
Kurzweil also outlined his vision of the increasingly
intimate and gradual inclusion of machines in the human body. He
suggested that people's notions of machines have to be revised
we will grow to see them not as merely cold, inflexible, and
brittle gadgets, but as helpful and necessary devices, as soft
and subtle as human tissues. Kurzweil is convinced that a
person's computationally powerful nonbiological components will
eventually overwhelm his biological remnants. Perhaps a person's
biology would then become simply superfluous.
Kurzweil also suggested that nanotechnology will succeed
because it is not controversial. He pointed out that biotech is
already politically and ethically controversial. Kurzweil asked,
"We're already putting computers in people's brains and are
there any people protesting against them? Is there any
controversy over that?"
The dialogue took a philosophical, even theological, turn.
Stock said, "If your goal is to feel good, to feel happy,
new biotech drugs without side effects will be able to hijack
neural circuits and mimic those feelings."
"I don't think that the purpose of human life is just to
feel good," Kurzweil responded. "Creating knowledge,
appreciating a jazz riff, a good conversation-they are really
the most profound and satisfactory experiences. It really comes
down to, what is the purpose of life? Is it to create knowledge
and new patterns of information?"
Stock wondered, "What is the purpose of life when
nonbiological intelligences of the sort you're talking about are
more creative than we are?" Kurzweil answered, "As we
become more intimate with our machines, biology does become
trivial. The nonbiological part will accelerate and become a
million trillion times more powerful than biology. Because it is
the nature of the nonbiological intelligence to grow
exponentially, it will eventually dominate. This whole period of
transhumanism is just an interim period." Although humans
as such may disappear in the nanotechnological future, that
which will endure beyond our biology will be an expression of
our civilization, Kurzweil asserted.
Stock noted, "There is this strange urge in us to
transcend our biology. If you can't buy Christianity, there is a
strong desire to create those same visions of heaven and
transcendence through our technologies." Kurzweil admitted
that the technological future he projects has similarities to
the Christian vision of heaven.
"Isn't there something better than people sinking into
being chemically inspired couch potatoes and letting the
machines get on with the future?" asked an audience member.
Kurzweil responded that there are always dead ends, and new
technologies will create new dead ends. But he believes that
despite the temptation to become nanotechnological couch
potatoes, many humans will continue to expand their horizons.
Asked if he was worried about rising hostility to technology,
Kurzweil noted that the luddite movement has always been there,
but that it had not appreciably slowed down technological
progress. "All of these ethical concerns are focused on
biology. You don't see demonstrations against computer
technologies," he declared.
Kurzweil may be declaring the "all clear" on
nanotech prematurely. After the debate, Leon Fuerth, Al Gore's
former national security advisor, led a session to discuss its
policy implications. Fuerth quickly punctured Kurzweil's
complacent claim that there is no political and ethical
controversy over nanotechnology.
"These guys talking here act as though the government is
not part of their lives. They may wish it weren't, but it
is," said Fuerth. "As we approach the issues they
debated here today, they had better believe that those issues
will be debated by the whole country. The majority of Americans
will not simply sit still while some elite strips off their
personalities and uploads themselves into their cyberspace
paradise. They will have something to say about that. There will
be a vehement debate about that in this country."
Indeed, there are activist groups like the Funders Group on
the Emerging Technologies http://www.the-scientist.com/yr2002/apr/goodman_p16_020429.html
and the ETC Group http://reason.com/rb/rb070401.shtml
mobilizing against nanotechnology. Fuerth made it clear that the
government will want to meddle in the coming nanotech
revolution. The future is bright, either biotech or nanotech,
but as always it is imperiled by those who would strangle it in
its crib.
From Reason.Com http://www.reason.com/rb/rb050102.shtml |