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Deep Utopia: Life and Meaning in a Solved World Hardcover – March 27, 2024

3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 117 ratings

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Gold Medal Winner, Living Now Book Awards 2024


Bostrom’s previous book, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (OUP, 2014) sparked a global conversation on AI that continues to this day. That book, which became a surprise New York Times bestseller, focused on what might happen if AI development goes wrong.


But what if things go right? Suppose we develop superintelligence safely and ethically, and that we make good use of the almost magical powers this technology would unlock. We would transition into an era in which human labor becomes obsolete—a “post-instrumental” condition in which human efforts are not needed for any practical purpose. Furthermore, human nature itself becomes fully malleable.


The challenge we confront here is not technological but philosophical and spiritual. In such a “solved world”, what is the point of human existence? What gives meaning to life? What would we do and experience?


Deep Utopia—a work that is again decades ahead of its time—takes the reader who is able to follow on a journey into the heart of some of the profoundest questions before us, questions we didn’t even know to ask. It shows us a glimpse of a different kind of existence, which might be ours in the future.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“This is a wondrous book. It is mind-expanding. It is poetic. It is moving. It is funny. The writing is superb. Every page is full of ideas.” Russ Roberts, President of Shalem College

“Fascinating” The New York Times

“Yeah.” Elon Musk

“A major contribution to human thought and ways of thinking.” —Robert Lawrence Kuhn

“Brilliant! Hilarious, poignant, insightful, clever, important.” —Prof. Thaddeus Metz

“When technology has solved humanity’s deepest problems, what is left to do? … argues that beyond the post-scarcity world lies a ‘post-instrumental’ one … With the arrival of AI Utopia, this would be put to the test. Quite a lot would ride on the result.” The Economist

“Reminiscent of Plato’s dialogues—with a 21st-century twist.” Stuff (NZ)

“Bostrom is a marvelously energetic prose stylist … Wry understated humor that’s often very quiet in its punchlines. … A complex and stimulatingly provocative look at just how possible a fulfilling life might be.” Kirkus Reviews

“One of the strangest … books I’ve ever read.” Popular Science Books

“A really fun, and important, book… the writing is brilliant… incredibly rich… a constant parade of fascinating ideas.” —Prof. Guy Kahane, Oxford University

“Wow.” —Prof. Erik Brynjolfsson, Stanford University; Co-author of ‘The Second Machine Age’

About the Author

NICK BOSTROM is a Professor at Oxford University, where he is the founding director of the Future of Humanity Institute.  Bostrom is the world’s most cited philosopher aged 50 or under.  He is the author of more than 200 publications, including Anthropic Bias (2002), Global Catastrophic Risks (2008), Human Enhancement(2009), and Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (2014), a New York Times bestseller which sparked a global conversation about the future of AI.  His work has pioneered many of the ideas that frame current thinking about humanity’s future (such as the concept of an existential risk, the simulation argument, the vulnerable world hypothesis, the unilateralist’s curse, etc.), while some of his recent work concerns the moral status of digital minds.  His writings have been translated into more than 30 languages; he is a repeat main-stage TED speaker; and he has been interviewed more than 1,000 times by media outlets around the world.  He has been on Foreign Policy’s Top 100 Global Thinkers list twice and was included in Prospect’s World Thinkers list, the youngest person in the top 15.  He has an academic background in theoretical physics, AI, and computational neuroscience as well as philosophy.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Ideapress Publishing (March 27, 2024)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 536 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1646871642
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1646871643
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.88 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.1 x 1.3 x 9.2 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 117 ratings

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Nick Bostrom
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NICK BOSTROM is a Professor at Oxford University, where he is the founding director of the Future of Humanity Institute. Bostrom is the world’s most cited philosopher aged 50 or under. He is the author of more than 200 publications, including Anthropic Bias (2002), Global Catastrophic Risks (2008), Human Enhancement (2009), and Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (2014), a New York Times bestseller which sparked the global conversation about the future of AI. His work has pioneered many of the ideas that frame current thinking about humanity’s future (such as the concept of an existential risk, the simulation argument, the vulnerable world hypothesis, astronomical waste, the unilateralist’s curse, etc.), while some of his recent work concerns the moral status of digital minds. His writings have been translated into more than 30 languages; he is a repeat main-stage TED speaker; and he has been interviewed more than 1,000 times by media outlets around the world. He has been on Foreign Policy’s Top 100 Global Thinkers list twice and was included in Prospect’s World Thinkers list, the youngest person in the top 15. He has an academic background in theoretical physics, AI, and computational neuroscience as well as philosophy.

Customer reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
117 global ratings
Sadly, the worst work of non-fiction I have ever read
1 out of 5 stars
Sadly, the worst work of non-fiction I have ever read
I picked up a preprint of Nick Bostrom’s new tome at an AI conference, and what can I say — it has a great cover with a number of interesting questions and a subtitle that hints that it might address the meaning of life in a future where AI and robots can do everything. But alas, after much build up and anticipation, he leaves that question unanswered, with an abrupt “oops, out of time” on page 472. Not even an offbeat 42 to make us chuckle.My biggest frustration with the book is that he takes over 500 pages to convey what could be more clearly said in well under 50, and even then, I am hard pressed to come up with even a handful of compelling points from this book (I’ll share the contender quotes below). I can’t wait to run the text through a LLM for the compressed summary (it’s a bit ironic to use an AI this way, producing something like Wittgenstein’s Tractatus). If you do decide to slog through it, I can save you some time: skip the first 118 pages. You won’t miss anything in that preamble that is not repeated elsewhere, and you’ll avoid a pedantic revival of Malthusian immortality.My main concern with Bostrom’s overall framework is his baseline assumption that our future world has reached “technological maturity” (everything that can be invented or discovered has been) where humans are, at the same time, almost immortal and able to edit themselves and their emotional response and cognition with precision. You could say we have philosophical differences here:1) I don’t think there is an upper bound to ideas. Each idea is a recombination of prior ideas, and the space of possible idea pairings grows exponentially (Reed’s Law). The unfolding of certain iterative algorithms (evolution, ML, culture) is computationally irreducible, and learning its richness would require a simulator of comparable complexity. We will never finish exploring the universe, even if much of it end up being in deep simulations. We will never accumulate all possible ideas. And this opens a window to a rich panoply of possible meaning and purpose for humanity that Bostrom’s presumption forecloses. His subtitle of a “solved world” presumes the computational complexity of our existence reaches some terminus, a solution to the questions of life. He quibbles that increasingly insignificant discoveries may be possible, but “technology” has an upper asymptote making it effectively a ceiling. It feels like cosmological doomerism.2) I don’t think we will modify our core intelligence or achieve near-immortality in a timeframe of relevance to the core question: how do we find meaning in a post-AGI world of abundance? We will have to wrestle with the AI issues long before we get to edit our biology to such effect (and we may need AGI to have a chance). Reverse-engineering the human brain to enhance its core functionality is much more difficult that building an AGI of comparable complexity. Extending lifespan to near-immortality is a very long process with regulatory restraints on experimentation and a century of waiting to see the effects, and side effects. The pace of AI advancement will make biological change look glacial. Unfortunately, the vast majority of the book explores the bizarre implications of editing our biological consciousness (e.g., to edit out the feeling of boredom as a way to say boredom won’t be a problem) that will never happen in a timeframe of relevance. Very little of the book explores AGI on its own, before the magic biology. So, it fundamentally misses the mark as a thought exercise about our future in the AGI era, and many of possibilities explored without intellectual commitment bear an irrelevance to reality that I thought was only possible in the field of economics. Also, there is no high-level organization to the book; the chapters are just days of the week of a long rambling lecture given by Bostrom to his fawning pupils, interspersed with some animal characters on side adventures that are pure filler (often 20-40 pages at a time), and I can say in retrospect, they are best skipped. So, the overall experience is one of countless digressions without a clear arc of where we are going.But Bostrom does scatter some lovely turns of phrase, jovial nuggets, and poignant prose on a random walk through a soporific diatribe of digressions:“The concept of deep utopia can serve as a kind of philosophical particle accelerator in which extreme conditions are created that allow us to study the elementary constituents of our values.” (p.3., made me hopeful)“We need to develop a culture that is better suited for a life of leisure.” (119) “We would emphasize enjoyment and appreciation rather than usefulness and efficiency.” (129)“As we look deeper into the future, any possibility that is not radical is not realistic.” (129)“Some researchers have suggested that our Stone Age forbears had plenty of free time, that they may have worked as little as four hours a day.” (130)“We have to remember that ‘interesting times’ are often horrible times for those who have to live through them. An uneventful and orderly future, in contrast, can be a great place to inhabit.” (152)“For each category of utopia, there is a correlate category of dystopia… usually not as a prediction of the future but as a critique of some pernicious pattern in the author’s contemporary society. In classical governance & culture dystopias, for example, the problematic pattern might be oppressive totalitarianism (Nineteen Eighty-Four) or dehumanizing consumerism (Brave New World).” (203)He tries to address meaty topics like, what keeps life interesting? What is our purpose and meaning when the struggle is gone? Can fulfillment get full? But in each case, the pedagogy is more of a survey of all possible answers versus the much more difficult task of making specific predictions. He even invokes multiple universes, unicorn breeding, Jupiter brains and interstellar travel to make sure he’s exhausting all possible scenarios.“Why do you think people are interested in interestingness?The learning and exploration hypothesis: The value we place on interestingness derives from a kind of learning instinct and/or an exploration bias. We seek out situations that present us with significant new information and novel varied challenges, because doing so led our ancestors to acquire more knowledge and skills, which was adaptive in our evolutionary environment.” (230, followed by three other, less compelling hypotheses)“We can think of intrinsified values as motivational flywheels” (236)And of course, if all ideas have been had already, “we seem bound to encounter diminishing returns quite quickly, after which successive life years bring less and less interestingness.” (253)“And although the years may bring some modicum of understanding of the workings of the world, it tends to come late, often too late — making it seem like the only fruit that grows on the tree of experience is resignation. Wisdom withered on the bough.” (259)“Objective interestingness will probably peak around the development of machine superintelligence. Depending how steep the takeoff is, interestingness might then remain at unprecedentedly high levels for a decade or so, before gradually trailing off to levels far lower than we have seen even in relatively stagnant period of human history. The most important things that can be discovered may by then already have been discovered.” (265, one of the few specific forecasts, and one I believe to be patently false)“Usually, the conclusion has been that the best and most fulfilling way to live a human life, and the most praiseworthy one, is in fact to be a philosopher.” (311)“The value of fulfillment may be satiable in a way that the value of interestingness is not.” (314)“I expect that virtual worlds will be experienced as decidedly more real than the physical world” (323)“All of us have aims, many of us have goals, but relatively few have missions.” (325)“Feelings of alienation could be easily banished with mature neurotechnoogy” (335, just one example of countless appeals to bio magi that really makes his whole thought experiment useless and non-actionable)“Cultural and interpersonal complications might provide us with purposes in utopia beyond those which we may create for ourselves individually by setting ourselves challenging goals.” (336)Augment early and often I used to joke, 20 years ago, when discussing humanity’s futile attempt to stay relevant in a future of superintelligence. So, I chuckled at “To have a chance at being task-optimal at technological maturity, you would probably have to start your transformation early and proceed at close to maximal speed.” (355)And finally, an observation I agree with, with the framework of Wolfram’s computational universe in mind: “To the extent that meaning can be derived from scientifically or artistically representing continually changing patterns in the world, as opposed to fundamental timeless conditions, there would be better prospects of never running out of material. Yet this would still leave us with the second problem, which is that other minds and mechanisms would far surpass ours in the efficiency with which they could discover these truths and patterns” (415)And then, after the unresolved cliffhanger of the meaning of life on p.472, he transitions back to the inane chatter of side characters. It makes sense as a literary construct if literally, he was paid by the page and needed some padding at the end, figuring no one would make it this far.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2024
Years ahead of the debate, once again.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2024
I am a fan of Nick Bostrom and his book Superintelligence. I didn't love this book however. I found it to be overly wordy and complicated to read. This book has an interesting and unusual style of how it's all laid out but it didn't work for me and I just felt a bit confused most of the time.
5 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2024
I wish that I could report that this was a good book. Instead, I regret the time that I put into reading it. "Superintelligence" was worth reading, especially in 2014. "Deep Utopia" is not so in 2024.

Yes, there are a few paragraphs here and there that are worth reading. There's a bit of dialogue that is clever and a bit more that's amusing. The structure around a series of lectures might have worked out with some more refining of the concept --- I think that Bertrand Russell, for instance, did some of this in his autobiography, but Russell's use of his own correspondence to buttress that linear approach gave it a stronger foundation than Bostrom's attempt.

But the book overwhelmingly is a loss of one's time. The author did not manage to pull off a Hofstadterian feat like "Godel, Escher, and Bach", where a deeply playful approach worked out. He didn't even manage to pull off the somewhat lighter touch that Steven Pinker can bring to bear (and Pinker's interesting ability to flip his own argument around, at least occasionally, with grace and skill.)

Bostrom is a good writer; indeed, I think that prose style in "Deep Utopia" was more approachable than that of "Superintelligence". My own guess is that what Bostrom needed was a good editor to help navigate this project, one willing to challenge the author. Instead, too much material that should have not made it into this volume was left there. Material that should have been given a thorough trimming was allowed to run on.
12 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2024
*Ideapress should be ashamed of themselves.*

1. Don't let an author design their own cover. This is embarrassing work.
2. Use a printer that isn't absolutely bottom of the barrel. I can see through these pages. The book is barely readable because the print quality and paper quality so so low.
3. What editor let this happen? A dialogue? Seriously... no.

Bostrom is a smart thinker, but no genius deserves this level of mistreatment.
12 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2024
Important questions to think about as we are heading to obsolescence rapidly. I think most likely however that the capabilities of ai will enable personalized entertainment / distractions that will keep humans occupied. On the other hand, purpose is imaginary anyway. We have no more or less importance to the universe than an e. coli bacterium (and possibly less). One of the great potential benefits of AI in fact is in humbling humanity. That might be the greatest benefit any technology has yielded to mankind.
9 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 29, 2024
In my review of one of Nick Bostrom's previously published books, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies (2014), I noted that John H. Flavell was probably the first to use the term metacognition when suggesting that it "refers to one's knowledge concerning one's own cognitive processes or anything related to them, e.g., the learning-relevant properties of information or data. For example, I am engaging in metacognition if I notice that I am having more trouble learning A than B; if it strikes me that I should double check C before accepting it as fact." That was in 1976.

As I began to read Superintelligence, I was again reminded of Flavell's research. What does the term "superintelligence" mean? According to Bostrom, "We can tentatively define a superintelligence as [begin italics] any intellect that greatly exceeds the cognitive performance of humans in virtually all domains of interest [end italics]."

He focuses on three different forms of superintelligence and asserts that they are essentially equivalent: Speed superintelligence, a system that can do all that a human intellect can do, but much faster; Collective superintelligence, a system composed of a large number of smaller intellects such that the system's overall performance across many very general domains vastly outstrips that of any current cognitive system; and Quality superintelligence, a system that is at least as fast as a human mind and vastly qualitatively smarter.

Bostrom's focus in Deep Utopia is on the perils and potentialities of what could be characterized as "Artificial Superintelligence." That is, life and meaning -- for better or worse -- in a world transformed by very advanced AI systems (VAAIS) . Questions arise: What if those systems create new problems? If so, what will be their nature and extent? In a world in which all problems are solved by VAAIS, what will give purpose and value to human life? How can -- and should --  people spend their time and energy?

These are among the passages of greatest interest and value to me, also listed to suggest the nature and extent of Bostrom's coverage in Deep Utopia:

o Economic growth (Pages 6-8, 17-28, 3w6-37, and 74-75)
o Unemployment (8-20,
o Inequalitgy (13-16,23-25, 53-54, and 70-75)
o Jobs (16-23, 83-94, and 111-112)
o Axiologica contours (69-81)

o Limita to automation (83-94)
o Moral status (86-88, 161-167, and 183-187)
o Human nature (125-130, 150-151, and 150-151)
o Purpose problem (129-131,
o Brain editing (136-141 269-285, and 165-166)

o Aesthetic experience (154-155and 221-229)
o Personal identity (165-166,269-285, and 352-@59)
o Fictional (171-187)
o Interestingness (205-269, 301-304, 308-309, 319-320, and 503-505)
o Evolution of motivation (230-236, 255-260, and 345-347)

o Big World hypothesis (245-251)
o Transhumanism (254-255)
o Religion and the meaning of life (306-307; 343-344, 364-365, and 446-448)
o Fulfillment/Joel Fineberg (311-319 and 316-319)
o Meaning of life (405-473)

According to Nick Bostrom, "Suppose that we develop superintelligence safely, govern it well, and make good use of the cornucopian wealth and near magical technological powers that this technology can unlock. If this transition to the machine intelligence era goes well, human labor becomes obsolete. We would thus enter a condition of "post-instrumentality", in which our efforts are not needed for any practical purpose. Furthermore, at technological maturity, human nature becomes entirely malleable.

Here we confront a challenge that is not technological but philosophical and spiritual. In such a solved world, what is the point of human existence? What gives meaning to life? What do we do all day?

Deep Utopia shines new light on these old questions, and gives us glimpses of a different kind of existence, which might be ours in the future."

Almost every day, I ask myself this question: "If I were to get everything I wish for in terms of my personal growth and professional development, how would that change what I do each day as well as where and how I do it?"

Hmmm....

* * *

Here are two suggestions while you are reading Deep Utopia: First, highlight key passages Also,  perhaps in a lined notebook kept near at hand, record your comments, questions, action steps (preferably with deadlines), page references, and lessons you have learned as well as your responses to key points posed within the narrative. Also record your responses to specific or major issues or questions addressed, especially in the 22 "Handouts" at the conclusion of the six daily components or portions thereof, such as the passages listed previously.

These two simple tactics — highlighting and documenting — will facilitate, indeed expedite frequent reviews of key material later.
30 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 29, 2024
Nothing novel. Collection of platitudes. Not well written, not well structured. Flat jokes and pointless outtakes.

There are much better books and articles about AI and possible post-AI societal outcomes.

Avoid.
30 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2024
The first question anyone should have before reading this is whether out greatest problem is like to be "we solved everything". Does this seem likely to anyone? Imagine the kind of person who takes this seriously. Imagine how self centered they would need to be - sure enough, that's what you get in arguments and writing style throughout this book.
13 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
biswajit mohanty
1.0 out of 5 stars Too small letters
Reviewed in India on June 1, 2024
Difficult to read due to extremely small size fonts.
F. Ealing
5.0 out of 5 stars clever and readable...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 28, 2024
Very enjoyable...
Loved the idea of realized ai as thought experiment equivalent to a particle accelerator

And discuss some hot topics that most authors would be very afraid to discuss

Whether inequality is good .. or the role of peace...
David
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking
Reviewed in Germany on April 6, 2024
Recommended for anyone interested in the (very) long-term future of humanity.

Gives you a sense of existential hope, something very much needed in these times. (For that, I also highly recommend Bostrom's working paper "Base Camp for Mt. Ethics".)

Perhaps not as excellent as Bostrom's previous work (could have used some editing at times) but still great.
Amazon カスタマー
3.0 out of 5 stars Good on human nature but not so much about society
Reviewed in Japan on July 26, 2024
本書はボストロム自身が述べているように 、人間とAIとの関係が将来現実にどのように展開するかについての予想を立てるものではなく、それを検討するに際しての考察の指針を提供する点で貴重な文献と言える。他方、その議論は多岐にわたって詳細に展開されているものの、全体に人間一人一人の内面の視点から見たテクニカルマチュリティー(TM: 著者が想定するユートピア)の議論が中心であり、人が構成する社会全体の視点からの考察は希薄である。それはTMにおいては完全な社会が実現しているとの仮想状況を議論の出発点にしていることからの必然的な制約ではある。
Bronwyn Hughes
4.0 out of 5 stars fiendishly clever and dense. Typical Bostrom.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 22, 2024
It was very heavy and difficult in parts.