When could it happen and what could the consequences be? Both Nick Bostrom and James Lovelock address these questions. Suppose, then, we take the proposition seriously. And the consequences of creating them, they say, could be either the best or the worst thing ever to happen to humanity. Scientists including Stephen Hawking and Max Tegmark believe that superintelligent machines are quite feasible. If you think this is all science fiction and fantasy, you may be wrong. Box-office success goes to tales in which intelligences created by humans rise up and destroy or enslave their makers. But the smart money – or rather most of the money – points another way. I'd like to think that if superintelligent beings did exist they would be at least as enlightened as, say, the theologian Thomas Berry, who wrote that once we begin to celebrate the joys of the Earth all things become possible. It's a vision that I find appealing compared with many other imagined worlds. T he Culture novels of Iain M Banks describe a future in which Minds – superintelligent machines dwelling in giant spacecraft – are largely benevolent towards human beings and seem to take pleasure from our creativity and occasional unpredictability.
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