The document discusses William Nelson Joy's 2000 article "Why the future doesn't need us" where he warned about the dangers of emerging 21st century technologies like genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics. Joy argued these technologies could potentially cause accidents and threats that endanger humanity. He was concerned computers could become more intelligent than humans and usher in dystopian visions through developments like self-replicating nanobots or machines being given too much autonomy. While some critics dismissed Joy's warnings, his article sparked debate about ensuring proper safeguards for humanity against potential risks from unchecked scientific and technological progress.
The document discusses William Nelson Joy's 2000 article "Why the future doesn't need us" where he warned about the dangers of emerging 21st century technologies like genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics. Joy argued these technologies could potentially cause accidents and threats that endanger humanity. He was concerned computers could become more intelligent than humans and usher in dystopian visions through developments like self-replicating nanobots or machines being given too much autonomy. While some critics dismissed Joy's warnings, his article sparked debate about ensuring proper safeguards for humanity against potential risks from unchecked scientific and technological progress.
The document discusses William Nelson Joy's 2000 article "Why the future doesn't need us" where he warned about the dangers of emerging 21st century technologies like genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics. Joy argued these technologies could potentially cause accidents and threats that endanger humanity. He was concerned computers could become more intelligent than humans and usher in dystopian visions through developments like self-replicating nanobots or machines being given too much autonomy. While some critics dismissed Joy's warnings, his article sparked debate about ensuring proper safeguards for humanity against potential risks from unchecked scientific and technological progress.
The document discusses William Nelson Joy's 2000 article "Why the future doesn't need us" where he warned about the dangers of emerging 21st century technologies like genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics. Joy argued these technologies could potentially cause accidents and threats that endanger humanity. He was concerned computers could become more intelligent than humans and usher in dystopian visions through developments like self-replicating nanobots or machines being given too much autonomy. While some critics dismissed Joy's warnings, his article sparked debate about ensuring proper safeguards for humanity against potential risks from unchecked scientific and technological progress.
Can you imagine a future without the human race? Do you think that robots and machines can replace humans? Do you believe that there will come a time when human existence will be at the mercy of robots and machines? Is it also possible that medical breakthroughs in the future may go terribly wrong that a strain of drug-resistant viruses could wipe out the entire human race? For some, imagining a future without humans is nearly synonymous to the end of world. Many choose not to speculate about a future where humans cease to exist while the world remains. However, a dystopian society void of human presence is the subject of many works in literature and film. The possibility of such society is also a constant topic of debates. In April 2000, William Nelson Joy, an American computer scientist and chief scientist of Sun Microsystems, wrote an article for Wired magazine entitled Why the future doesn’t need us? In his article, Joy warned against the rapid rise of new technologies. He explained that 21 st-century technologies—genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics (GNR)—are becoming very powerful that they can potentially bring about new classes of accidents, threats, and abuses. He further warned that these dangers are even more pressing because they do not require large facilities or even rare raw materials—knowledge alone will make them potentially harmful to humans. Joy argued that robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotechnology pose much greater threats than technological developments that have come before. He particularly cited the ability of nanobots to self-replicate, which could quickly get out of control. In the article, he cautioned humans against overdependence on machines. He also stated that if machines are given the capacity to decide on their own, it will be impossible to predict how they might behave in the future. In this case, the fate of the human race would be at the mercy of machines. Joy also voiced out his apprehension about the rapid increase of computer power. He was also concerned that computers will eventually become more intelligent than humans, thus ushering societies into dystopian visions, such as robot rebellions. To illuminate his concern, Joy drew from Theodore Kaczynski’s book, Unabomber Manifesto, where Kaczynski described that the unintended consequences of the design and use of technology are clearly related to Murphy’s Law: “Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong.” Kaczynski argued further that overreliance on antibiotics led to the great paradox of emerging antibiotic-resistant strains of dangerous bacteria. The introduction of Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) to combat malarial mosquitoes, for instance, only gave rise to malarial parasites with multi-drug-resistant genes. Since the publication of the article, Joy’s arguments against 21st-century technologies have received both criticisms and expression of shared concern. Critics dismissed Joy’s article for deliberately presenting information in an imprecise manner that obscures the larger picture or state of things. For one, John Seely Brown and Paul Duguid (2001), in their article A Response to Bill Joy and the Doom-and-Gloom Technofuturists, criticized Joy’s failure to consider social factors and only deliberately focused on one part of the larger picture. Others go as far as accusing Joy of being a neo-Luddite, someone who rejects new technologies and shows technophobic leanings. As a material, Joy’s article tackles the unpleasant and uncomfortable possibilities that a senseless approach to scientific and technological advancement may bring. Whether Joy’s propositions are a real possibility or an absolute moonshot, it is unavoidable to think of a future that will no longer need the human race. It makes thinking about the roles and obligations of every stakeholder a necessary component of scientific and technological advancement. It this case, it is preeminently necessary that the scientific community, governments, and business engage in a discussion to determine the safeguards of humans against the potential dangers of science and technology.
LESSON 7 ACTIVITY
Questions for Reflection:
1. Do you believe that Google makes people stupid? Cite at least three examples to support your assertion. 2. How do science and technology affect contemporary life and vice versa? 3. Read the entirety of William Nelson Joy’s article. Why doesn’t the future need us?