
The Age of AI: And Our Human Future
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Three of the world’s most accomplished and deep thinkers come together to explore Artificial Intelligence (AI) and the way it is transforming human society - and what this technology means for us all.
An AI learned to win chess by making moves human grand masters had never conceived. Another AI discovered a new antibiotic by analyzing molecular properties human scientists did not understand. Now, AI-powered jets are defeating experienced human pilots in simulated dogfights. AI is coming online in searching, streaming, medicine, education, and many other fields and, in so doing, transforming how humans are experiencing reality.
In The Age of AI, three leading thinkers have come together to consider how AI will change our relationships with knowledge, politics, and the societies in which we live. The Age of AI is an essential roadmap to our present and our future, an era unlike any that has come before.
- Listening Length7 hours and 13 minutes
- Audible release dateNovember 2, 2021
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB099TDYQZD
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Listening Length | 7 hours and 13 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Henry A. Kissinger, Eric Schmidt, Daniel Huttenlocher |
Narrator | Eric Pollins |
Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
Audible.com Release Date | November 02, 2021 |
Publisher | Little, Brown & Company |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B099TDYQZD |
Best Sellers Rank | #2,874 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #4 in Technology & Society #6 in Computer Science (Audible Books & Originals) #10 in Artificial Intelligence & Semantics |
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It is everything, and more.
As of writing, GPT-4 is the rave in artificial intelligence (AI). But the world has already had intimations of AI's power through its predecessors, particularly ChatGPT. In a deluge of information, it is necessary to have a voice of authority and wisdom to explain the phenomenon we face. This book fits the bill as a pamphlet that conceptually explains what AI is, without the technicalities that may baffle non-technical readers. (I have enjoyed an interview between one of the authors, Eric Schmidt and Alexandr Wang, on the subject, which inspired my purchase of the book).
As a compendium, the book catalogues the development in computing and situates modern AI as the culmination of years of progress. It posits that we have created a thing with processing power that outstrips human cognition and can capture aspects of reality beyond human detection. AI can now beat us, quite literally, at our own game, as seen in chess, where an AI trained on the rules of the game augments itself to make independent and more compelling moves beyond human comprehension. Similarly, AI can discover new antibiotics in record time by merely being exposed to fundamental principles. Chess and medical breakthroughs are frequent references in the book, demonstrating the extent to which AI would affect domains once reserved for humans.
Chapter 2 is particularly delightful, with sentences brimming with such verve that one wishes it never ends. It explores centuries of sociocultural and sociopolitical forces that paved the way for AI and pranced through the evolution of human ingenuity, reason, and intellect. The chapter posits that AI's ability to upend every aspect of society surpasses the revolutions wrought by the printing press and electricity. These earlier technologies not only introduced new forms; they disrupted every aspect of society. The printing press bestowed new roles on the Western individual by wresting powers away from the Church and equipping the individual - facilitated by the Protestant agitations - with scholarly access to the divine. This psychological shift in the Western mind - sufficiently explored in Joseph Henrich's work, The Weirdest People in the World - launched the Renaissance, ushering in flourishing in arts, architecture, literature, and civic participation, ensuring the greatness of Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and others. The authors contend that AI is destined to follow a similar trajectory.
The philosophical underpinnings of AI are captivating. The authors, probing AI's capture of reality, align it with Wittgenstein's view of making meaning through familiar connections rather than reducing reality to mechanistic explanations. Hence, the neural networks that inspire AI in mimicking the structure of the human brain place it far from mere computations of cause and effect, or garbage in, garbage out.
“To enable machine learning, what mattered was the overlap between various representations of a thing, not its ideal — in philosophical terms, Wittgenstein, not Plato. The modern field of machine learning — of programs that learn through experience — was born.”
Still, on philosophy, the book wonders if we are equipped to deal with our new fate. If AI can capture reality outside human conception, how do we retain our identity when perceptions would be determined by something beyond us? The authors concede that civilisation has been primarily created and sustained through the dynamics of Faith and Reason, and AI is designing a new form. It is a difficult notion to digest, since phenomena that thinkers and philosophers have grappled with, e.g., consciousness, divinity, nature/nurture, would become more challenging to comprehend.
There is a lot of caution in the book. The authors warn that where nuclear weapon is the most dreadful of human arsenals, AI surpasses it by an order of magnitude. This apocalyptic view is further compounded by the difficulty of designing effective verification systems for a rather inscrutable technology. It is to wonder what we have gotten ourselves into. Human ingenuity has birthed a hybrid of saint and devil. Where nuclear weapon is under international regulations in which nations with nuclear capabilities are under the watchful eyes of post-WWII and post-Soviet accords, how do we police something so insanely hard to detect, easily distributed, and accessible? Nuclear deterrence has so far saved us from annihilation. How do we protect ourselves from something that possesses the capacity to "transform conventional, nuclear, and cyber weapons strategy"? This makes the book an entreaty, inviting governments, policy wonks, and military thinkers to convene and hash out red lines that would ensure responsible applications.
For me, the positives outweigh the negatives if regulations are in place. And we must be careful to avoid stifling innovation under the guise of potential misuse. Moreover, as AI accelerates prosperity and instigates breakthroughs, how will it impact the global south? Will it leave a section of humanity behind while perpetuating historical patterns of economic inequities, a fact that Emad Mostaque of Stability AI has been vocal about? The book hints at it, but it would take a separate publication to articulate this concern.
Overall, it is a delightful book written by those who should write about AI and society.
What would be the best solution is to have a large group of persons that have experience with AI and other electrical technology such as the one already in place. This type of group is fully capable of making AI compatible with current technology in the countries they also represent. This is what a consortium has been doing with the internet and other technology: electric standards, radio standards, communications standards, the internet standards and now AI. No mention of this or IT Security. No Green ideas like have many people submitting to the electrical grid with the power they produce from solar and wind. Ideas like this are common now in the news. The authors wrote this before Ukraine in 2022 but there is an example of AI in warfare.
I am disappointment that these exceptional talented persons did not give examples of solutions that have been and are in use. No cautions about putting power and water on the internet. They currently should not be. They are not even upgrading software in those areas that is how important that is.
The first concrete example is a program that plays chess at the highest level possible. This program isn't the one you heard about years ago that finally was able to consistently beat chess grandmasters. Though that was a milestone, it wasn't an epoch-making one. This AI program beat the most powerful chess-winning programs, and not by just a little. The victories were complete blowouts. What's more, the chess experts who analyzed the program's moves were at a loss to figure out how it won. This book explains how this computer was trained to play chess differently.
A second contrete example is a program that discovered a new drug, Halicin, that can be used to treat patients infected with one of several bacteria strains that resist treatment with other anti-bacteria drugs. Without this AI program. the cost would have been way too high. There was only one molecule that had the unique properties necessary to be effective.
Still another example was an AI-style program that Google used to find how to cut its cooling costs for its ultra-powerful servers that it uses. Expert engineers had already improved energy-efficiency to the best of their ability. AI found ways to cut Google's another 40%.
The chess AI doesn't affect many ordinary people. The Halicin AI also will affect a relatively few, albeit with life-saving potential. But a cost-saving AI would benefit a much greater proportion of the general population.
However, its benefits are only half the story of AI. Risks are also present – risks so dire that they threaten to scuttle AI's rise to prominence. Indeed, the book's main thrust is how we might control the risks so that we can harvest AI's benefits as fully and safely as possible. A lot of thorny problems remain to be solved – which the book describes – before that can happen.
The book isn't perfect. It has three authors. This seems to have resulted, at times, in more repetition than necessary, though at other times it gives greater perspective on various aspects of AI. The book has a heavy overlay of philosophical musings about how AI has given glipses into a here-before hidden nature of reality. I found some of these philosophical discussions hard to grasp, especially those that reference Immanual Kant whose writings always seem to be unable to penetrate through my incomprehension.
Quite a bit of the book seems written for policy managers in business, government and universities, but there is enough directed at a general audience, including myself, to attract our attention. I'm glad of this because general audiences have a huge influence on policies by virtue of our election choices, our purchase choices, our school attendances, and our classroom interactions. All of these will shape the world going forward.
(This review is of the Kindle 2021 edition which has an afterword that covers new developments into 2022.)
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Dislike ..generalised implications when the authors know full well society and its structures are already being shaped by this movement...there is a vision in place that the movers and shakers are working towards... with or without the rest of us..

