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Deus ex Machina sapiens [Paperback]

David Ellis (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

May 5, 2011
Watson’s win on Jeopardy came as no surprise to those who had read Deus ex Machina sapiens. It was written largely during the 1990s, around the time that another IBM supercomputer--Deep Blue--was trouncing world chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov. The book has since been updated on a few points of detail but its primary message remains intact: the Machine is rapidly evolving as Man’s rival if not replacement for the job of Steward of the Earth. Building upon the work of some of the world’s greatest scientists, philosophers, and religious thinkers, and drawing particularly from developments in the computing and cognitive sciences--particularly, the field of artificial intelligence, or AI--the book reveals the evolutionary emergence of a machine that is not just intelligent but also self-conscious, emotional, and free-willed. In the 1980s and ‘90s you used to hear grandiose claims about AI. Machines would soon surpass humans in intelligence, it was claimed by some. The Japanese government spent a billion dollars on one project to make it happen. Well, it didn’t happen, but that didn’t stop the development of intelligence in machines. AI research simply went underground, and has ever since been quietly incorporated into the “ordinary” programs we use every day, without fanfare, without hype. There is still no machine that rivals Homo sapiens in overall intelligence, but today there are machines that far exceed human intellectual capacity in specific domains, from games to engineering to art, and the number of domains is growing exponentially big and exponentially fast. The disappearance of AI from front stage was good insofar as it allowed machines to develop in the right way; that is, through an evolutionary process, which is the only way for something of such complexity to develop. But it was bad insofar as we lost sight of the development of the intelligent machine. Deus brings Machina sapiens back to front stage, where it belongs. After describing the evolutionary development of intelligence in machines it goes on to describe the emotional, intellectual, and ethical attributes of what is no less than an emergent new life form. It asks the Big Question that can only be asked if you accept the very possibility of the new life form: Will it be serpent or savior? The question is answered in the book’s title, which is intended to mean “God Emerging From the Intelligent Machine.” The author confesses to having never studied Latin and to have concocted the title from two known Latin phrases: “Deus ex Machina” and “Homo sapiens.” The concoction could be grammatically incorrect. The author would be pleased to be corrected.

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About the Author

David Ellis is a health futures author, speaker, and consultant. A former "China watcher" for the British government, he emigrated to the United States in 1983 and became managing editor of a demographic journal. He subsequently founded a successful US regional Internet service provider, won the 2000 HIMSS Book of the Year award for “Technology and The Future of Health Care,” founded the monthly online publication “Health Futures Digest” (hfd.dmc.org), co-founded MEMRI (www.memri.us), the Michigan Electronic Medical Record Initiative, and for six years served as corporate director of planning and future studies at the Detroit Medical Center. As a health futurist, his role is to help everyone involved in health and medicine to become and remain aware of the accelerating trends in health-related technologies and to position themselves and their organizations to take advantage of the opportunities afforded by those trends to advance their goals and fulfill their mission to improve the health of the people they serve. He serves and has served on numerous technology advisory committees, including those of Lawrence Technological University and the Michigan Osteopathic Association from (2002-2004), Crain’s Health Summit, and the New Medical Technologies Advisory Committee of the State of Michigan’s Certificate of Need Commission. His second book, “Deus ex Machina sapiens,” about the development of intelligent machines, was published in February 2011 and is available as an e-book for the Kindle, Nook, and iPad/iPhone. He is currently writing a book titled “Hope in Healthcare” with Dr. Charles Shanley for publication by the American Hospital Association Press. He was educated in England, Hong Kong, and the United States, and holds degrees in business studies, Chinese, and the information and communication sciences.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 292 pages
  • Publisher: David Ellis (May 5, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0615401368
  • ISBN-13: 978-0615401362
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.2 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,089,547 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

David Ellis is a futurist author, speaker, and consultant. His main, but not his sole, focus is healthcare.

A former "China watcher" for the British government, he emigrated to the United States in 1983 and became managing editor of a demographic journal. He subsequently founded a successful US regional Internet service provider, won the 2000 HIMSS Book of the Year award for "Technology and The Future of Health Care," founded the monthly online publication "Health Futures Digest" (www.hfdigest.com), co-founded MEMRI (www.memri.us), the Michigan Electronic Medical Record Initiative, and for six years served as corporate director of planning and future studies at the Detroit Medical Center.

He was educated in England, Hong Kong, and the United States, and holds degrees in business studies, Chinese, and the information and communication sciences.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Don't look now, but there's a new kind of creature running loose on the planet, and this creature is very, very smart.

In some ways, in fact, the new arrival is already smarter than we are.

If you doubt that rather provocative statement, you might want to talk with one Garry Kimovich Kasparov, who was once known as "the world's greatest chess player."

Kasparov, the great Russian wizard at the Sport of Kings, went up against the newcomer a few years back . . . and promptly discovered that the alien being was far more intelligent that he was, at least when it came to analyzing the black and white squares on the chessboard.

It was no contest, actually. Kasparov played his Russian heart out . . . but when the smoke cleared, he'd been soundly defeated by a super-crafty IBM computer that bore the wonderful name of "Deep Blue."

That's right: the world's top human chess player couldn't keep up with a mere machine.

For science writer David Ellis - a nationally recognized expert on Information Technology and the Internet and a veteran IT consultant - Deep Blue's astonishing 1997 victory over the Russkie phenom was nothing less than a wakeup call for Homo sapiens.

Ellis' fascinating and thoroughly spooky message in Deus Ex Machina Sapiens: the human race is about to be surpassed by a new kind of being that promises to rapidly change our world beyond recognition.

That alien creature - "machine intelligence" - is probably also the next step in the evolution of life on our endlessly troubled but also endlessly interesting planet.

The bottom line, according to Ellis: "They" are coming (indeed, some of them are already here) . . . and there isn't anything we can do to prevent them from quickly becoming far more advanced and much cleverer than we are.

"The arrival of Machina sapiens will have a profound psychological, social, and economic impact," writes Ellis is his absorbing, 280-page explanation of the Brave New World now taking shape in our mostly undiscerning midst.

"Humans will have to get used to the fact," adds Ellis, "that we are no longer the smartest species on the planet, that Machina sapiens will run the factories, the economy and human services better than we can, and that we may no longer be God's only chosen vessel."

If the future as outlined in David Ellis' remarkable new book seems difficult to get your mind around, it's probably because of the way the author keeps challenging his readers to confront their own assumptions about what's really "real" in our increasingly fluid and difficult-do-define human reality.

Take the ordinary automobile, for example.

On Page 83 of Sapiens, you'll come across some very provocative evidence to suggest that the cars we drive are actually alive, just like you and me.

In this deeply unsettling passage, Ellis quotes physicist Frank Tipler, who several years ago pointed out in his controversial The Physics of Immortality:

"They [automobiles] self-reproduce in automobile factories. Granted, their reproduction is not autonomous; they need a factory external to themselves. But so do male humans: to make a male baby, an external biochemical factory called a `womb' is needed. . . .

"By my definition of life, not only automobiles but all machines - in particular computers - are alive."

Pretty spooky, huh? Describing the "machine intelligence" that will soon supplant our own, the daring Ellis suggests that the basic dynamics of computer software programming - an architecture in which groups of elementary calculations and instructions (aka "algorithms") meld seamlessly into higher-order entities that can "reason" their way to solutions (aka "heuristics") are in essence thesame dynamics that day in and day out manage the operations of the typical human brain.

It's a rather humbling insight, to say the least. But Ellis' crystal-ball vision of the new world that's coming isn't really dystopic (or even pessimistic) . . . and he seems thoroughly convinced that we won't need Arnold Schwarzenegger to save us from the depredations of heartless robots intent on crushing us in a monstrous world of icy digital repression.

Instead, argues Ellis in this highly readable exploration of the amazing world that he thinks lies ahead, we'll probably be able to live in creative harmony with the "cyborgs" (human-like computer-based servants who won't mind vacuuming the rug or washing the dishes) and the busy cyber-execs who will be running our fantastically altered world.

One thing we can be sure of, says David Ellis in this fast-paced and well-written survey of the uncanny era that surely awaits us now: It's going to be damn interesting.

So is this book. Before you open it, however, you might want to check your seatbelt in preparation for the twists and turns that lie ahead . . . while also recalling that famous scientific dictum: "The universe is not only stranger than we imagine; it's stranger than we can imagine!"
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