CBC • The National | Ray Kurzweil predicts end of disease, AI leaps
A video interview with host Peter Mansbridge.
March 27, 2017
CBC • The National — Janurary 22, 2017
http://www.kurzweilai.net/cbc-the-national-ray-kurzweil-predicts-end-of-disease-ai-leaps
video | CBC • The National
Host Peter Mansbridge interviews futurist Ray Kurzweil.
Host Peter Mansbridge interviews futurist Ray Kurzweil.
about from CBC • The National | Ray Kurzweil predicts end of disease and AI leaps. Tech guru Ray Kurzweil predicts that by the 2030s, nanotechnology will eliminate disease and humans will have relationships with artificial intelligence.
CBC • The National, presented by Peter Mansbridge, is the flagship news and current affairs program of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Canada’s public broadcaster. Broadcast 7 days a week, the show reports on major international news stories.
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* AI is artificial intelligence
* AI is artificial intelligence
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Ray Kurzweil featured stories, interviews & dialog.
Ray Kurzweil featured stories, interviews & dialog.
— 2016 —
CBC | Futurist Ray Kurzweil predicts computers as small as blood cells
more headline: Nanobots will battle disease, aging, inventor tells Vancouver tech conference.
date: January 25, 2016
more headline: Nanobots will battle disease, aging, inventor tells Vancouver tech conference.
date: January 25, 2016
CBC | British Columbia Tech Summit hopes to push province into the future
more headline: Fascinating forecasts & keynote by Ray Kurzweil.
date: January 17, 2016
more headline: Fascinating forecasts & keynote by Ray Kurzweil.
date: January 17, 2016
— 2015 —
CBC | Artificial intelligence, human brain to merge in 2030s, says futurist Ray Kurzweil
more headline: Ray Kurzweil, a director of engineering at Google, says we’re close to linking brains with AI.
date: June 9, 2015
more headline: Ray Kurzweil, a director of engineering at Google, says we’re close to linking brains with AI.
date: June 9, 2015
CBC | Sex-bots, laundroids & killer drones: the robot revolution got real in 2015
more headline: Most terrifying robot stories of 2015: from spying toys to human-crushing machines.
date: December 29, 2015
more headline: Most terrifying robot stories of 2015: from spying toys to human-crushing machines.
date: December 29, 2015
— 2012 —
CBC | Building a better brain: Ray Kurzweil on the future of artificial intelligence
more headline: Hostess Nora Young with Ray Kurzweil on his principles for understanding the brain, new advances.
date: October, 18, 2012
more headline: Hostess Nora Young with Ray Kurzweil on his principles for understanding the brain, new advances.
date: October, 18, 2012
* CBC is the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
Building a better brain: Ray Kurzweil on the future of Artificial Intelligence
You can think of the brain as an amazing feat of engineering. Researchers struggle to piece together just how the brain does what it does -- how nerve cells deep in the neocortex (a layer unique to us mammals) are involved in higher order functions like emotions, gut feelings and jokes. "For the first time now we can see inside a living, thinking brain with enough resolution to really see what's going on," Ray Kurzweil told Nora Young on Spark in a recent interview. "We not only see your brain create your thoughts, but we see your thoughts create your brain, because every time we think about something we're creating new connections that embody that thought. It's said 'you are what you eat' but really, you are what you think."
Kurzweil is an inventor, author and futurist. In his new book, How to Create a Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed, he discusses how the brain creates thought, and examines how we can use our understanding of that process to create better Artificial Intelligence. Kurzweil wants to reverse-engineer the brain, if that's possible. "If we understand how the brain works, we can create human-like intelligence in our machines, and then use that to make ourselves smarter," he explained.
Since the late 1980s, Kurzweil has written extensively on where he thinks humanity goes next. Kurzweil is a steadfast proponent of a particularly potent vision of AI: not just that we can create something that can pass for intelligence, but that we can create something that does what humans do when we think.
Human intelligence is already considerably dependent on digital technology. "I would say we're already in that process...all the gadgets and services we use like Google and Wikipedia do make us smarter," Kurzweil said.
First, though, we have to wrap our heads around one important concept: the pattern recognition theory of the mind, which Kurzweil considers the fundamental algorithm for thinking. "I've always felt that what the human brain does well is recognize patterns," he said. "And now that we're actually discovering how the brain works by looking inside it, we're discovering that's what it does. The same algorithm is repeated throughout the neocortex." And there's a hierarchy, from low-level pattern recognition like recognizing capital letters to higher level functions like identifying humour or irony.
"We have this capacity for hierarchical thinking. We have ideas that are composites of other ideas, and those ideas are composites of other ideas. We have this very elaborate hierarchy in the brain," he said. "And animals that don't have a neocortex can't do hierarchical thinking."
Of course, human thought is far from perfect. We're subjective and biased. Is there a risk of mimicking our flaws in addition to our strengths? "As we take on broader challenges, imperfection is inherently part of the test," said Kurzweil. "But I think this hierarchical structure that the neocortex represents is the best way to be intelligent. There are limitations that we can recognize, one of which is just capacity."
One of the goals is to expand the neocortex, according to Kurzweil. He pointed out that "300 million pattern recognizers [what our brains are currently made of, on average] sounds like a big number, and it was big enough for humans to master language and art and science, but it's also very limited. We see that in how long it takes us to master one book, and how many different subjects or languages you can learn. We could use a greater neocortex...why not a billion?"
http://www.cbc.ca/books/2012/10/building-a-better-brain-ray-kurzweil-on-the-future-of-artificial-intelligence.html