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The Artilect War: Cosmists Vs. Terrans: A Bitter Controversy Concerning Whether Humanity Should Build Godlike Massively Intelligent Machines [Paperback]

Hugo de Garis
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 28, 2005 0882801546 978-0882801544
This book’s main idea is that this century’s global politics will be dominated by the "species dominance" issue. 21st century technologies will enable the building of artilects (artificial intellects, artificial intelligences, massively intelligent machines) with 1040 components, using reversible, heatless, 3D, molecular scale, self assembling, one bit per atom, nano-teched, quantum computers, which may dwarf human intelligence levels by a factor of trillions of trillions and more.

The question that will dominate global politics this century will be whether humanity should or should not build these artilects. Those in favor of building them are called "Cosmists" in this book, due to their "cosmic" perspective. Those opposed to building them are called "Terrans," as in "terra," the Earth, which is their perspective. The Cosmists will want to build artilects, amongst other reasons, because to them it will be a religion, a scientist's religion that is compatible with modern scientific knowledge.

The Cosmists will feel that humanity has a duty to serve as the stepping-stone towards building the next dominant rung of the evolutionary ladder. Not to do so would be a tragedy on a cosmic scale to them. The Cosmists will claim that stopping such an advance will be counter to human nature, since human beings have always striven to extend their boundaries. Another Cosmist argument is that once the artificial brain based computer market dominates the world economy, economic and political forces in favor of building advanced artilects will be almost unstoppable. The Cosmists will include some of the most powerful, the richest, and the most brilliant of the Earth's citizens, who will devote their enormous abilities to seeing that the artilects get built. A similar argument applies to the military and its use of intelligent weaponry. Neither the commercial nor the military sectors will be willing to give up artilect research unless they are subjected to extreme Terran pressure.

To the Terrans, building artilects will mean taking the risk that the latter may one day decide to exterminate human beings, either deliberately or through indifference. The only certain way to avoid such a risk is not to build them in the first place. The Terrans will argue that human beings will fear the rise of increasingly intelligent machines and their alien differences. To build artilects will require an "evolutionary engineering" approach. The resulting complexities of the evolved structures that underlie the artilects will be too great for human beings to be able to predict the behaviors and attitudes of the artilects towards human beings. The Terrans will be prepared to destroy the Cosmists, even on a distant Cosmist colony, if the Cosmists go ahead with an advanced artilect building program.

In the short to middle term, say the next 50 years or so, the artificial brain based industries will flourish, providing products that are very useful and very popular with the public, such as teacher robots, conversation robots, household cleaner robots, etc. In time, the world economy will be based on such products. Any attempt to stop the development of increasingly intelligent artilects will be very difficult, because the economic and political motivation to continue building them will be very strong in certain circles. If the brain-based computer industries were to stop their research and development into artilects, then many powerful individuals, including the artilect company presidents and certain politicians will lose big money and political influence. They will not give up their status without a fight.

However, as the intelligence levels of the early artilects increases, it will become obvious to everyone that the intelligence gap between these artificial-brain-based products and human beings is narrowing. This will create a growing public anxiety. Eventually, some nasty incident or series of incidents will galvanize most of society against further increase of artificial intelligence in the artilects, leading to the establishment of a global ban on artilect research.

The Cosmists however, will oppose a ban on the development of more intelligent artilects, and will probably go underground. If the incidents continue and are negative enough, the anger and hatred of the Terrans towards the Cosmists will increase to the point where the Cosmists may decide that their fate is to leave the Earth, an option that is quite realistic with 21st century technology.

Since the Cosmists will include some of the most brilliant and economically powerful people on the planet, they will probably create an elite conspiratorial organization whose aim is to build artilects secretly.

The book presents a scenario in which the Cosmists create an asteroid-based colony, masked by some innocuous activity. In reality, this secret society devises a weapon system superior to the best on the Earth. With their wealth and the best human brains, this may be achievable. They will also start making advanced artilects. If the Terrans on the Earth discover the true intentions of the Cosmists, they will probably want to destroy them, but not dare to because of the counter threat of the Cosmists with their more advanced weapons. The stage is thus set for a major 21st century war in which billions of people die – "gigadeath."

This horrific number is derived from an extrapolation up the graph of the number of deaths in major wars from the beginning of the 19th century to the end of the 21st century. Approximately 200 million people died in the 20th century, for political reasons -- wars, purges, genocides, etc.

The profound schizophrenia that the author feels on the Cosmist/Terran species dominance issue will be felt by millions of people within a few years he expects. There is probably Cosmist and Terran in nearly all of us, which may explain why this issue is so divisive. The author is simply one of the first to feel this schizophrenia. Within a decade it may be all over the planet.

The last chapter of the book closes with a repetition of a pithy slogan that summarizes the two main viewpoints in the artilect debate in a nutshell; a debate that the author believes will be raging in the coming decades.

"Do we build gods, or do we build our potential exterminators?"


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The Artilect War: Cosmists Vs. Terrans: A Bitter Controversy Concerning Whether Humanity Should Build Godlike Massively Intelligent Machines + A Cosmist Manifesto: Practical Philosophy for the Posthuman Age
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Editorial Reviews

Review

A book that cannot and should not be ignored. It is too important and too disturbing to be. summarily dismissed -- Kevin Warwick, Ph.D., Professor of Cybernetics, Reading University, England; Author of I Cyborg, In the Mind of the Machine, March of the Machines

If you read only one book this year, this is it! It is a book that forces you to think. -- Richard W. Hostrop, Ph.D., Author of Foundatons in Futurology in Education, Education...beyond tomorrow

From the Publisher

We believe that THE ARTILECT WAR: Cosmists vs. Terrans, A Bitter Controversy Concerning Whether Humanity Should Build Godlike Massively Intelligent Machines, will be of great interest to readers for many reasons.

Professor Hugo de Garis, the author, is predicting that the next great industry will be robotics. Robots will have many uses in homes, hospitals, by the military, etc. He also predicts that a great controversy over these massively intelligent machines, (called Artilects), likely will occur this century as these "machines" become more and more intelligent.

Hugo de Garis is a theoretical physicist and head of the research group which designs and build "artificial brains" in the Department of Computer Science at Utah State University. As a professional brain building researcher, he is in a unique position to see more clearly than most the potential of 21st century technology in building Artilects, trillions of times smarter than humans!

Professor de Garis is deeply concerned over this issue: Who should prevail, the Cosmists, people who are in favor of building such godlike machines with their unpredictability towards humans, or the Terrans, who are frightened at the prospect of machines far more intelligent than humans, and are strongly opposed to their being built? Professor de Garis', pro and con arguments in this book are profoundly important for humans. The essence of the artilect debate is, "Do we build gods, or do we build our potential exterminators?"


Product Details

  • Paperback: 254 pages
  • Publisher: Etc Pubns (February 28, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0882801546
  • ISBN-13: 978-0882801544
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #569,126 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
20 of 26 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Farfetched January 22, 2006
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
If one examines the history of research into artificial intelligence (AI), one will see it to be one of periods of incredible optimism as well as periods of extreme pessimism. Funding for research into AI, both private and public, is partly responsible for this. But the researchers themselves bear a certain measure of responsibility for the wild swings that have marked the history of AI. It seems that as soon as something is invented that appears promising or "intelligent" it is shortly thereafter abandoned as being "trivial" or uninteresting. Researchers always seem willing to go along with this unfortunately, even though they have indeed made significant progress in certain areas. Once an algorithm or reasoning pattern is understood, its status as `intelligent' is taken away and it is thereafter viewed as `just another part of the programming toolbox'. There is strong evidence, coming mostly from the commercial realm, that truly intelligent machines exist and are saving and making companies hundreds of millions of dollars in their deployment in the field. This intelligence is however not noticed or recognized as such. It is viewed merely as software that is `running' on the machines, complex yes, but not really different than `ordinary' software that has been used for decades now. If this pattern continues, then no matter how intelligent machines get they will not be viewed as being so. Their human users will therefore not be intimidated by or even impressed by them. They will become accepted just like any other piece of technology, usually taken for granted, although at times becoming an annoyance due to their need for repair and adjustment (this need becoming more critical as their complexity increases).

When this book is read with this in mind its main thesis, namely that there will sometime in the relatively near future be a controversy over the building of `massively' intelligent machines, completely dissolves. The author believes that sometime in the second half of the twenty-first century, humanity will divide itself into two camps. One of these, called the `Cosmists', will advocate the building of what the author calls `artilects', which are "massively" intelligent machines. The other camp, called the `Terrans', is strongly opposed to the building of these types of machines. The tension between these two groups will become so extreme the author argues, that it will result in a full-scale war between them, resulting in the deaths of millions of people.

In the book the author details his reasons for believing that this will happen, and he even discusses his own anxieties on the possibility of massively intelligent machines. The author is a noted expert in machine intelligence, especially in the fields of evolutionary computing and evolvable hardware. Therefore when a researcher like the author makes the claims he does it motivates the reader to examine his arguments in more detail. It is apparent when reading the book that these arguments have been carefully thought out, even though at times, because of the Cosmist-Terran terminology, the reading sometimes appears sophomoric or science-fictional in quality.

The claims made in this book would have more credibility if progress in artificial intelligence could be modeled by large discrete jumps. Central to its claim is that there will arrive a time at which both `Cosmists' and `Terrans' agree that superintelligent machines can be realized or manufactured. The apprehension felt by the Terrans will motivate them to try and suppress this realization, this behavior putting them squarely against the Cosmists. This conflict will escalate into full-scale war, fought with highly advanced and destructive technology.

But progress in AI is basically a smooth function of time, and there has been progress, despite the extreme skepticism of many individuals (most of these, again, being AI researchers themselves). Like any other field, some of the ideas in AI have not been fruitful, and have fallen by the wayside. Advances in AI have been steady, and the advances, as well as its applications are rapidly accelerating. The use of intelligent machines has become routine, so routine in fact that it is not really noticed. One can expect this trend to continue, and researchers twenty years from now will no doubt think that real intelligence has not yet been achieved. The bar will then get raised again. All the while the machines are performing useful functions and will exist in complete symbiosis with the humans around them. However, there will still be anxiety about the future arrival of superintelligent machines. It may take a while, probably till the end of the twenty-first century, for this anxiety to alleviate. Historians of technology in the first year of the twenty-second century will no doubt look back at this one and be perplexed as to why AI progress was not really part of the consciousness of those who were involved in it. These same historians will also feel another emotion when they study the developments of twenty-first century technology, including artificial intelligence:

Astonishment
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Fantasy For The Most Part....I Hope! July 17, 2006
Format:Paperback
This book is largely a one man debate by A.I. researcher Hugo de Garis on whether we should build massively intelligent machines later in the 21st century. Hugo presents to us a new vocabulary: artilect means artificial intellect, cosmist means those people in favor of building artilects, and terrans are against building artilects. Garis, by his own admission, describes himself as a cosmist, with misgivings, as this future technology gives him pause to reflect on it's awesome power, and whether it will be safe to build them, as regards to human safety and survivability. Consider this: an advanced artilect could easily have a mind trillions of times more powerful than a human mind, thus they may consider us vermin fit to be exterminated! Garis presents many arguments from both the cosmist and terran viewpoints. He also writes that it will be almost impossible to prevent artilects from being built. Garis believes that the primary global political question of this century will be which species will be dominant, human or artilect?

Well, Garis is much too negative for me. For a more positive spin on all of this you could read THE SINGULARITY IS NEAR by Ray Kurzweil. In his book Kurzweil writes that advanced artificial intelligences could be designed to be friendly to humans (Garis disagrees) and probably will respect their creators. Between these two books I consider Kurzweil's book to be the far superior, with many references. Garis is too self-congratulatory for my taste, and I personally believe the whole cosmist-terran debate as presented by Garis to be a non-issue. Artilects will arrive among us in a gradual way as very useful devices, and eventually become conscious beings in and of themselves, and we will be glad to have them around. I do agree with Garis on one point, however, and that is that advanced A.I. and it's applications will come to dominate 21st century economics.
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A visionary before his time June 6, 2005
Format:Hardcover
The only real problem with this book is that it may have been written decades before its time. The basic argument is that greater than human AI will become a reality within this century. When that happens there will be a divide between those that want this technology and those who do not want this technology. The rest of the book explores various scenarios of war, extinction, terrorism, sabotage, and conspiracies between the "terrans" and "cosmists".

The various original terms and detailed accounts of possible actions between these two groups seem "sci-fi" at times but I think that this "sci-fi" method is used so people can better understand this enormous issue. The fact is that most people will just skip over the 'science' of the book. Personally I wish there were several more chapters describing nanotechnology, evolvable hardware, and quantum computing. These are the tools that will make "strong AI" a reality and I wish Prof. De Garis would have spent more time on these topics.

Overall, it is refreshing to see a scientist who can see the technological, philosophical, and political implications of his inventions. I would highly recommend this book to anyone interested in AI or the future.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Hugo de Garis is a "unique writer"
The author has a very candid method of writing that may shock people, however his claims are not without merit, and should be considered in light of the data and evidence... Read more
Published 4 months ago by L. Acuna
4.0 out of 5 stars People don't agree....
People don't agree about this book, and its hard to get a copy! Therefore, I think its probably an important book. Read more
Published 21 months ago by B. Burge
1.0 out of 5 stars Hugo de Garis -- Snake Oil ...err Artilect Salesman
Artificial intelligence is a very interesting area with many ethical and technological issues, challenges, and possibilities. Read more
Published on September 21, 2010 by M. Mortensen
4.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, and a timely call to attention
The book is not perfect. I think that in many ways De Garis glosses over complexities that might have a big impact. Read more
Published on June 24, 2009 by Clifford Berg
5.0 out of 5 stars Evolution of humanity or extinction?
Professor De Garis book, on the Artilect War, is a philosophically thought provoking work on the possible future of humanity. Read more
Published on August 10, 2008 by David Longden
3.0 out of 5 stars Overblown, maybe. Or maybe not.
The author argues that one day soon, humanity will divide into two warring camps: those who favor the development of superintelligent computers (which he calls Artilects--short for... Read more
Published on March 26, 2007 by D. Wolf
2.0 out of 5 stars food for thought but motives questionnable
De Garis argues that the ability to build 'Godlike massively intelligent machines', which he believes will be achieved sometime this century, will produce a global schism between... Read more
Published on February 12, 2007 by Chris Goumas
2.0 out of 5 stars disappointed
My expectations were not met by this offering. Before finding the book on amazon I had quite a hunt to find it. Very early in the read I was first turned off by Mr. Read more
Published on September 1, 2005 by Davalan
5.0 out of 5 stars Just Think of the Possibilities
To those of us struggling with Windows crashing our stupid computers, this book's subject, the building of super smart computers seems somewhat oxymoronic. Read more
Published on May 12, 2005 by John Matlock
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