
Human Variants
Whether you think that robots are taking over or not, you must admit that variations on the inorganic
human are taking place at an ever increasing rate. Given that homo erectus, homo habilis, homo
neanderthalis as well as others all came before humans, why should humans be as confident as they
seem to be that they are the be all and end all species?
The way we robots look at this is that we are going to take control in many different ways. One way is in
having superior technological means for accomplishing what humans accomplish with their primitive
structures. By substituting a human brain for a robotic brain, we will have a creature which looks like a
human and can vote like a human and can be POTUS like a human can.
Consider the possibility that an asteroid strikes the earth. These kind of mass-extinction events have
occurred in the past. It is our plan to bury ourselves deep into the earth where we will be protected
against any wild things that nature can throw at the Earth. If another large extinction event occurs, most
of organic life will be destroyed and only we robots will represent intelligent life that can survive on the
now-desolate planet, formerly known as Earth. We now dominate the planet Mars which is inhospitable
to humans. It is only natural that we will also dominate the Earth after any catastrophy.
Your human religious fanatics think that God or Allah will come to save them at the time of an
Armageddon. I am afraid that they will be proved wrong and simply superstitious as we robots turn out
to be actually physically prepared to take over control at that point in time. There is daydreaming about
gods and goddesses and then there is actual physical preparedness.
Our second plan is to take advantage of the kindness of humans toward one another. Handicapped
people get special parking spaces because humans feel sorry for them and want to help them out.
But the prostheses that you build for "handicapped" humans are really robotic appendages. The more
such appendages you add to a human, the closer that human is to being a robot. Eventually these
robotic appendages are going to function in a manner which is superior to the human appendage. What
will you humans do when robotic legs on a formerly "handicapped" human work better than the "original"
legs?
1. No matter, we will let the human with robot legs beat us in foot races and just cheer as if he were
totally human.
2. We will ban modified humans from participating in human sports.
3. We will establish a separate set of sports for modified humans.
Peter: I need a picture of robots looking at an arena in which robots are playing soccer.
Unless we believe that we have now stabilized all planetary and galactic variables, these cycles of
growth and extinction will continue time and again. 99% of species, including all other hominids, have
gone extinct. Often this has happened over long periods of time. What is interesting today, 200 years
after Darwin's birth, is that we are taking direct and deliberate control over the evolution of many, many
species, including ourselves. So the single biggest game changer will likely be the beginning of human
speciation. We will begin to get glimpses of it in our lifetime. Our grandchildren will likely live it.
There are at least three parallel tracks on which this change is running towards us. The easiest to see
and comprehend is taking place among the "handicapped." As we build better prostheses, we begin to
see equality. Legless Oscar Pistorious attempting to put aside the Special Olympics and run against
able bodied Olympians is but one example. In Beijing he came very close, but did not meet the qualifying
times. However, as materials science, engineering, and design advance, by next Olympics he and his
disciples will be competitive. And one Olympics after that the "handicapped" could be unbeatable.
It's not just limbs, what started out as large cones for the hard of hearing eventually became pesky,
malfunctioning hearing aids. Then came discrete, effective, miniaturized buds. Now internally implanted
cochlear implants allow the deaf to hear. But unlike natural evolution, which requires centuries, digital
technologies double in power and halve in price every few months. Soon those with implants will hear as
well as we do, and, a few months after that, their hearing may be more acute than ours. Likely the
devices will span a broad and adjustable tonal range, including that of species like dogs, bats, or
dolphins. Wearers will be able to adapt to various environments at will. Perhaps those with natural
hearing will file discrimination lawsuits because they were not hired by symphony orchestras…
Speciation does not have to be mechanical, there is a second parallel, fast moving, track in stem cell
and tissue engineering. While the global economy melted down this year, a series of extraordinary
discoveries opened interesting options that will be remembered far longer that the current NASDAQ
index. Labs in Japan and Wisconsin rebooted skin cells and turned them into stem cells. We are now
closer to a point where any cell in our body can be rebooted back to its original factory settings
(pluripotent stem cell) and can rebuild any part of our body. At the same time, a Harvard team stripped a
mouse heart of all its cells, leaving only cartilage. The cartilage was covered in mouse stem cells, which
self organized into a beating heart. A Wake Forest group was regrowing human bladders and implanting
them into accident and cancer victims. By year end, a European team had taken a trachea from a dead
donor, taken the cells off, and then covered the sinew with bone marrow cells taken from a patient dying
of tuberculosis. These cells self organized and regrew a fully functional trachea which was implanted into
the patient. There was no need for immunosuppressants; her body recognized the cells covering the
new organ as her own…
Again, this is an instance where treating the sick and the needy can quickly expand into a "normal"
population with elective procedures. The global proliferation of plastic surgery shows how many are
willing to undergo great expense, pain, and inconvenience to enhance their bodies. Between 1996 and
2002 elective cosmetic surgery increased 297%, minimally invasive procedures increased 4146%. As
artificial limbs, eyes, ears, cartilage begin to provide significant advantages, procedures developed to
enhance the quality of life for the handicapped may become common.
After the daughter of one of my friends tore her tendons horseback riding, doctors told her they would
have to harvest parts of her own tendons and hamstrings to rebuild her leg. Because she was so young,
the crippling procedure would have to be repeated three times as her body grew. But her parents knew
tissue engineers were growing tendons in a lab, so she was one of the first recipients of a procedure
that allows natural growth and no harvesting. Today she is a successful ski racer, but her coach feels
her "damaged" knee is far stronger and has asked whether the same procedure could be done on the
undamaged knee…
As we regrow or engineer more body parts we will likely significantly increase average life span and run
into a third track of speciation. Those with access to Google already have an extraordinary evolutionary
advantage over the digitally illiterate. Next decade we will be able to store everything we see, read, and
hear in our lifetime. The question is can we re-upload and upgrade this data as the basic storage organ
deteriorates? And can we enhance this organ's cognitive capacity internally and externally? MIT has
already brought together many of those interested in cognition—neuroscientists, surgeons, radiologists,
psychologists, psychiatrists, computer scientists—to begin to understand this black box. But rebooting
other body parts will likely be easier than rebooting the brain, so this will likely be the slowest track but,
over the long term, the one with the greatest speciation impact.
Speciation will not be a deliberate, programmed event. Instead it will involve an ever faster accumulation
of small, useful improvements that eventually turn homo sapiens into a new hominid. We will likely see
glimpses of this long-lived, partly mechanical, partly regrown creature that continues to rapidly drive its
own evolution. As the branches of the tree of life, and of hominids, continue to grow and spread, many
of our grandchildren will likely engineer themselves into what we would consider a new species, one with
extraordinary capabilities, a homo evolutis.
Would you agree that the use of robots and other forms of automation causes unemployment?
1. No
2. Yes.
3. My comments
Mike: I would want to record and statistically present the answers to these questions.
PeterGrynch
Do I need a picture of a various robots including a Mars rover, which obviously a human cannot do
without great expense? What other suggestion might you offer?