Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Doomed Doomed Doomed ... Can we change our future? Ask Dr Hawking

[British physicist, Professor Stephen Hawking / CP]

When Larry King first interviewed renowned physicist Stephen Hawking about the state of humankind, his outlook was bleak: “Mankind is in danger of destroying ourselves by our greed and stupidity.” 
That was six years ago. And it turns out his sentiment hasn’t changed. At all.

King reconnected with Hawking recently and asked if anything has shifted since the last time they spoke.

“Six years ago, I was warning about pollution and overcrowding, they have gotten worse since then,” he replied. “The population has grown by half a billion since our last interview, with no end in sight. At this rate, it will be eleven billion by 2100. Air pollution has increased by 8 percent over the past five years. More than 80 percent of inhabitants of urban areas are exposed to unsafe levels of air pollution.”

Girl Walks Through Smog In Beijing, Where Small-Particle Pollution Is 40 Times Over International Safety Standard
Girl Walks Through Smog In Beijing, Where Small-Particle Pollution Is 40 Times Over International Safety Standard

Child Drinks Water From Stream In Fuyuan County, Yunnan Province
Child Drinks Water From Stream In Fuyuan County, Yunnan Province

Worker Cleans Away Dead Fish At A Lake In Wuhan, Central China's Hubei Province
Fish dead from polluted water in lake In Wuhan, Central China’s Hubei Province

Hawking says the issue of pollution hasn’t been addressed and wonders if it’s too late to avoid dangerous levels of global warming.

The doom and gloom doesn’t end there. Another worry that plagues Hawking is the advance of artificial intelligence. He says governments are engaged in an AI arms race, putting funding into weapons with intelligent technology, rather than project that could directly benefit the human race, like improved medical screening.

“Artificial intelligence has the potential to evolve faster than the human race. Beneficially AI could co-exist with humans,” he says. “Once machines reach the critical stage of being able to evolve themselves, we cannot predict whether their goals will be the same as ours.”

Despite his disheartening predictions, Hawking isn’t ready to call it a day just yet. When he was asked what keeps him going, he replied: “There are questions I want to answer.”
Hawking is attending the Starmus Festival in the Canary Islands, where the festivities this year focus on his accomplishments and research.
But don't give up hope. If Dr Hawking is so knowledgeable about all our problems,
maybe he will come up with a few solutions. Isn't it about time we educated ourselves about pollution, global warming and the dawn of the 'Technological Singularity' ? In the future, knowledge will be our best defense.
 Blow your mind, go to http://futurism.com/

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