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Daily Archives: May 26, 2017
Inaugural Milano Arch Week – E-Flux
Posted: May 26, 2017 at 4:22 am
Inaugural Milano Arch Week June 1218, 2017
http://www.milanoarchweek.eu Facebook
The Milano ArchitectureWeek, promoted by the Municipality, the Politecnico and the Triennale, is about to take off.
The Milano Arch Week, a week full of events dedicated to architecture with the artistic direction of Stefano Boeri, will be characterised by the presence of top-level architects, including: the Catalan office RCR Arquitectes, winners of the 2017 Pritzker Prize; the great North American maestro Peter Eisenman; Liz Diller, designer of the New York High Line; and Francis Kr, an emerging African architect in charge of designing the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2017. There will also be well-known international architects such as Winy Maas, Philippe Rahm, Sam Jacob and Petra Blaisse (author of the new Porta Nuova Park), as well as Italian architects such as Alessandro Mendini, Cino Zucchi, Benedetta Tagliabue, Italo Rota, Mario Bellini, Michele De Lucchi and many more.
A section of the Milano Arch Week, located in the Triennale gardens, will be dedicated to young emerging Italian and international groups, such as, Fosbury Architecture, Raumplan, Baukuh, Parasite 2.0 and the Waiting Posthuman Studio.
The Milano Arch Weekopens on Monday, June 12with a party at the Catella Foundation and will take place in two locations: on Tuesday,June 13 in the Patio of the School of Architecture of the Politecnico di Milano and from Wednesday, June 14to Saturday, June 17in the halls of the Triennale and in Teatro Burri inside Parco Sempione.
Mornings will be dedicated to walks, scooter forays (Stefano Boeri has created the VespArch formula) and guided tours to Milans architectural beauties and to the city itself. These itineraries will unwind among the House-Museums of Milan designers (such as Castiglioni, Albini, Magistretti, Portaluppi), as well as new cultural locations, disused freight terminals and urban suburbs. There will be events organised by the Architects' Professional Association, which will also look after the opening of professional studios in Milan on Friday and Saturday.
Artists and designers from other disciplines such as director Amos Gitai, photographer Oliviero Toscani, Albanian artist Adrian Paci, will be involved.
There will also be moments of reflection dedicated to the great Masters of Architecture and Italian Design such as Aldo Rossi and Ettore Sottsass. And there will be moments of celebration such as the one dedicated to celebrating Gillo Dorfles 107 years.
Milano Arch Week will host various debates concerning the problems of contemporary citiesthe suburbs, poverty, social inequalitiesurban transformation and the vast theme of rebuilding Central Italy, with the presence of Commissioner Vasco Errani and the coordinator of Casa Italia Giovanni Azzone.
Among the many entertainment moments linked to major City and architectural issues, there will also bean evening dedicated to Renato Pozzetto and to his thoughts on the city and architecture, a Metropolitan Night by Zero staged at the Teatro Burri, a Botanica event with plant neurobiologist Stefano Mancusoand a final evening dedicated to Suburban Culture with artists and designers.
Milano Arch Week will end on Sunday morning with an ArchiBrunch held at the Bagni Misteriosi in the former Piscina Caimi and a preview visit to the new Palazzina constructed within the perimeter of the Teatro Franco Parenti.
For further info: http://www.milanoarchweek.eu
Municipality of Milan Press Office Secretariat: T +39 02 884 50150 /comunicazione.ufficiostampa [at] comune.milano.it
Politecnico di Milano Media Relations Office:T +39 02 2399 2508 / relazionimedia [at] polimi.it
The Triennale di Milano Media Relations and Press office:T +39 2 7243 4247 /press [at] triennale.org
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On Ascension Day, an Antidote to American Christian Exceptionalism – Sojourners
Posted: at 4:21 am
Imagine what would have happened had Jesus not left Earth.
Christianity likely would not have spread, for it was the belief that Christ was no longer on Earth that decentralized Christianity, challenging it to adopt and adapt to other lands and languages.
May 25 is Ascension Day, a celebration of Jesus ascension into heaven after his death. Most people including many Christians are unaware of this holy day. But it helps explain the birth of the church, and the early church's missionary zeal and character.
Ascension Day offers an antidote to Christian exceptionalism.
The first disciples claimed that Jesus vanished after 40 days of meeting with them. This inaugurated the first missionary movement in history. Prior to the early Christians, no adherents had left their land and language to convince foreigners of the universality of their faith. Religion was an ethnic expression. Every city had their patron God. No one felt the need to take their god to other cities except for safe travels
This would have been the fate of Christianity, too, if not for Jesus ascension. Ascension took away the temptation of the first disciples to claim a central location and language. Lamin Sanneh, a professor of missions and world Christianity at Yale Divinity School, points out that Christianity adapted through multiple cultural and historical contexts because it was detached from a geographical center.
This rapid adaptation manifests in the Christian Scriptures. The Jewish Bible is mostly in Hebrew, the language of the Jewish patriarchs; the Quran was scripted in Arabic, Muhammeds mother tongue. But the Gospels were written in Koine, (simple) Greek, though Jesus taught in Aramaic.
The original Scripture of Christ is a translation. The essence of Christianity is to be in constant translation.
It is the nature of any organization to centralize. Often this is done through connecting a land and/or a language it to its founder the leader's birth and burial places often become holy grounds requiring pilgrimage. This is an ingenious form of message control.
The Jewish people made a treacherous journey three times a year and Muslims are called to make pilgrimage to Mecca and Medina, Muhammed's birthplace and sites of ministry. Land and language are powerful cohesives for these religions.
But the strong affirmation of Christs absence kept the early church from centralizing around Jerusalem. Without the body of Jesus to create a memorial, no land or language could monopolize claim to sacredness. Ascension, in one sense, is an abdication of worldly authority. It is the empowerment of everyone, no matter their land and language.
Unfortunately, the church later fell into the orbit of other land-based religions and began to argue about the importance of succession, elevating the bishopric of Rome, and later launching the Crusades to "reclaim" the Holy Land. This historical shift only highlights the importance of the earliest claims of Jesus ascension exhibiting what happens when Ascension Day becomes just another holy day, and not a central tenet of the churchs story.
What followed was predictable. With the elevation of Rome, Christianity had land and a language that became more sacred than any other. Christians began to worship only in Latin any other version of Scripture other than the Vulgate became sacrilegious.
To avoid this instinct of exceptionalism, Christians should celebrate Ascension Day with the same energy and creativity as we celebrate Christmas and Easter. The church needs to declare that Christ is not here, because every culture is tempted to make themselves the presence of Christ on Earth.
The history of American Christianity is no exception in this itch for exceptionalism. Americas foreign policy has always been tinged with religious zeal because America sees itself as the city on a hill, with a Manifest Destiny to conquer and spread democracy as its divine prerogative.
I believe that American Christianity needs to drop the delusion that America is the city on the hill, and learn to listen to other nations Christians. When we begin to see the significance of every land and language, and understand that Christ is not here in America more than anywhere else, we are cured of exceptionalism.
The church can serve as a prophetic voice by celebrating Ascension Day a day that says there is no land or language that is exceptional.
Christ is not here. Christ is everywhere. In the Gospel of Matthew, Christ promises, Where two or more are gathered, I will be there. A Christ who is on Earth cannot make that promise. A Christ absent in Jerusalem can promise to be everywhere.
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On Ascension Day, an Antidote to American Christian Exceptionalism - Sojourners
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Ascension Thursday: Lovemaking with the lights on – Aleteia EN
Posted: at 4:21 am
Aleteia EN | Ascension Thursday: Lovemaking with the lights on Aleteia EN If Heaven and Earth are in constant flux, then the Ascension becomes less incomprehensible and so, too, the dogmas of the Assumption and the Immaculate Conception. In fact, they are even more fully understood in the light of yet another dimension of ... |
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Ascension Thursday: Lovemaking with the lights on - Aleteia EN
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Ascension Thursday – Wicked Local Fall River (blog)
Posted: at 4:21 am
Concord Pastor
Ascension by Salvador Dali The perspective of Dali's Ascension never fails to draw me in! The earthy feet of the Risen Jesus ascending into heaven to reign for ever at the Father's right hand in the power of the Holy Spirit! In my part of the vineyard the Ascension is still celebrated on Thursday of the sixth week of Easter (this year on May 25). Much of the Catholic world, however, now celebrates this feast transferred to the Seventh Sunday of Easter. In the US, the Ascension is celebrated on Thursday of the sixth week of Easter only in the ecclesiastical provinces of Boston, Hartford, New York, Newark, Philadelphia, and Omaha. In all other US dioceses, the celebration of the Feast of the Ascension is transferred to the following Sunday, May 28, 2017. Regardless of which day you celebrate the Ascension, the readings are the same and can be found, with brief commentary, here. If you're bringing children to Mass with you, hints for helping them prepare to hear the Word are here.
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Prosecutors won’t pursue charges against fired Ascension deputy in domestic disturbance case – The Advocate
Posted: at 4:21 am
GONZALES Prosecutors with the Louisiana Attorney General's Office will not pursue charges against a former Ascension Parish sheriff's deputy arrested over a domestic disturbance at his home in February, a spokeswoman for the office said Thursday.
Sheriff Jeff Wiley fired Deputy James Atkins II, 34, of Gonzales following an internal investigation and just hours before Gonzales Police arrested him on a simple battery count Feb. 14 over the incident six days earlier.
Gonzales Police arrested Atkins after arresting his former girlfriend, who had swung a dumbbell at his car at his home Feb. 8 and later fled. She was booked on counts of disturbing the peace and simple criminal damaged to property.
A judge agreed to recuse 23rd Judicial District Attorney Ricky Babin from Atkins' case March 8 and appointed the Attorney General's Office to handle it. But Assistant Attorney General Angad Ghai notified the court April 24 that his office declined to accept charges without offering any further explanation.
"Based on the facts presented to us in this case, our office found insufficient evidence to achieve a conviction," Ruth Wisher, spokeswoman for the Attorney General's Office, said in an email. "Should new credible information arise, we will proceed accordingly."
Dallon Bush, Atkins' attorney, said his client believes he was wrongfully accused, had been speaking with the Attorney General's Office about the case and is happy with prosecutors' conclusion not to proceed.
"We felt like it was the right, corrective action, given circumstances," Bush said.
Capricia Powe, 35, of Donaldsonville, who accused Atkins in the domestic incident, was arrested March 13 on allegations she violated a protective order that Atkins had placed against her one day after the incident, online jail records say. Ascension Parish Judge Marilyn Lambert put her in home incarceration March 29, two days after Powe's release from jail.
A deputy for more than seven years, Atkins was shot in his hand Jan. 20, 2015, while in the line of duty, the first time a deputy had been shot in more than 40 years. He was trying to stop suspected shoplifters in Donaldsonville who, Ascension prosecutors say, were on the run from an attempted murder in Florida.
Follow David J. Mitchell on Twitter, @NewsieDave.
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Jury convicts Ascension Parish man in fatal Baton Rouge armed robbery gone bad – The Advocate
Posted: at 4:21 am
A 20-year-old Prairieville man was unanimously convicted Thursday of armed robbery with a firearm in the 2013 drug-related shooting death of a man in his Baton Rouge apartment.
An East Baton Rouge Parish prosecutor had earlier in the day called Avery Gene Honea a member of a "posse" that orchestrated a "pretend drug deal" in hopes of robbing Jared Christopher Vincent, 22, of his marijuana and money on Dec. 11, 2013.
State District Judge Mike Erwin will sentence Honea on June 15. He faces a sentence of 15 to 99 years in prison.
Honea is one of six Ascension Parish men who were charged following Vincent's killing inside his Ridge Pecan Drive apartment just south of Burbank Drive between Bluebonnet Boulevard and Gardere Lane.
One of those men, Demarcus Daniel James, 23, of Prairieville, was convicted in December of second-degree murder and sentenced in February to life in prison. James, who was shot several times inside Vincent's apartment, was one of Vincent's customers, prosecutors said.
A 23-year-old Ascension Parish man was convicted Friday in the 2013 drug-related shooting de
Another Prairieville man, Aaron Hargrove, 21, pleaded guilty in November to armed robbery and attempted second-degree murder and was sentenced to 27 years behind bars. Vincent's roommate was shot during the incident but survived.
Prosecutor Dana Cummings argued Thursday in her closing argument at Honea's trial that James, Hargrove, Honea and two 21-year-old Gonzales men -- Ivan Wess Graham and Bryton James Montelaro -- did not intend for Vincent to die when they decided to go rob him of his marijuana and cash, but he died nonetheless.
One of six Ascension Parish men chargedin the 2013 drug-related killing of a man in Baton R
"This group had a very specific mission in mind," Cummings said, referring to the group as a "posse." "Everybody planned this together. Clearly, an armed robbery." Honea played an active role, she added.
Honea's attorney, Carson Marcantel, argued that if armed robbery was the motive, why did Vincent have $550 in his pocket, and why did police find roughly 700 grams of marijuana in the apartment and another $2,006 upstairs.
"Something happened. We're never going to know," he told the jury, suggesting that an argument may have broken out about money.
Jared Christopher Vincent was a marijuana dealer but he didn't deserve to be shot to death i
Graham, who is Honea's cousin, testified against James and Honea and pleaded guilty Thursday to an accessory charge in return for a five-year prison term. Montelaro pleaded guilty earlier this year to drug possession in exchange for a five-year sentence.
James went into Vincent's apartment alone, and Hargrove and Honea stood watch outside while Graham and Montelaro waited inside a truck, the East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff's Office has said. After hearing gunshots ring out inside the apartment, Hargrove and Honea fired shots at Vincent's fleeing roommate, hitting him in the back, the Sheriff's Office said.
A sixth man, Patrick Anderson, 23, of Prairieville, pleaded guilty last month to an obstruction charge and will be sentenced next month.
Follow Joe Gyan Jr. on Twitter, @JoeGyanJr.
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Jury convicts Ascension Parish man in fatal Baton Rouge armed robbery gone bad - The Advocate
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Ascension Day at St. Thomas’ – Herald-Mail Media
Posted: at 4:21 am
Today is Ascension Day for Christians around the world. In Hancock, St. Thomas Episcopal Church will welcome a guest preacher to a 7:30 p.m. service in celebration of the day. The Rev. Elizabeth Sipos, new rector of St. Johns Episcopal Church in Kingsville, Md., will deliver the sermon. The service of Holy Communion will be presided over by the Rev. Allan Weatherholt, rector of St. Thomas, at Church and High streets.
Sipos recently moved to Maryland from Ontario, Canada. Clergy and members of St. Marks Episcopal Church, Lappans, and St. Andrews Episcopal Church, Clear Spring, have been invited to join in the celebration.
Ascension Day recalls the end of Christs appearances to his disciples after his resurrection, and his return to heaven. Tonights service will be preceded by a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. The public is invited.
Friday is field day at Hancock Elementary School. Opening ceremonies will begin promptly at 8 a.m., and students in grades three through five will participate in activities from 8:35 to 10:45 a.m. Those in prekindergarten through grade two will hold their events from 11:25 a.m. to 1:55 p.m.
Parents are reminded that each child should bring a change of clothes, hats and sunglasses. Sunscreen should be applied to children before their arrival at school. In case of rain, the field day will be observed Tuesday, May 30, on the same schedule.
A cookout to benefit the mission team of Hancock United Methodist Church is Saturday in the vacant lot across from the C&O Bicycle Shop, 9 S. Pennsylvania Ave. Grilled chicken, hot dogs, burgers and fresh-cut fries will be served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. for donations.
Summer Reading Club T-shirts go on sale Thursday, June 1, at the Hancock branch of Washington County Free Library, 220 Park Road, within Hancocks Widmeyer Park. The shirts are available in youth and adult sizes, and cost $6 each.
The age groups for the club are preschool through age 10; 11 to 17; and adults. Once registered, you can log your reading online and be entered in raffles for numerous prizes.
To obtain a shirt and sign up for the club, stop by the library or call 301-678-5300.
Registration is open for Adventures in Friendship, summer day camp jointly sponsored by the Interfaith Service Coalition and St. Thomas Episcopal Church. The camp, for Tri-State area youth ages 8 to 13, marks its 21st year this June. The camp will run from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday, June 26, to Friday, June 30, in the parish hall of St. Thomas, at Church and High streets.
The camp features guests who make presentations on topics such as nutrition, cooking, health and substance-abuse prevention. Campers receive CPR and first-aid instruction, and field trips are taken. Breakfast and lunch are served daily.
Adventures can accommodate up to 40 young people. Thanks to funding from grants and donations, there is no charge for the camp. To register your child, call the ISC at 301-678-6605 or the church at 301-678-6569.
Registration remains open for vendors, crafters, businesses and community groups to be part of the Kick Off Summer Festival on Saturday, June 10. The festival, planned by Hancock in Motion, is from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Widmeyer Park in Hancock.
Spaces for vendors and crafters cost $25 each, and yard sale spaces cost $15 each. Already registered are Scentsy, Paparazzi, LuLaRoe, Mary Kay, Dot Dot Smile, LipSense, Perfectly Posh and Pink Zebra. Antietam Dairy will have an ice cream stand.
Email your news about the Hancock community to AnneWeath@aol.com or call 301-678-6888.
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Ascension CEO: Public-private partnerships, tech are keys to better health care – Austin Business Journal
Posted: at 4:21 am
Ascension CEO: Public-private partnerships, tech are keys to better health care Austin Business Journal As the national debate over reworking the Affordable Care Act reaches a fever pitch, health care executives need to keep in mind how any changes impact the patients receiving care. That is the assessment of Anthony Tersigni, CEO of Ascension, the ... |
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Summoning the Demon: Why superintelligence is humanity’s biggest threat – GeekWire
Posted: at 4:20 am
[Editors Note:This guest commentaryis byRichard A. Clarke and R.P. Eddy, authors of the new book, Warnings: Finding Cassandras To Stop Catastrophes.]
Artificial intelligence is a broad term, maybe overly broad. It simply means a computer program that can perform tasks that would otherwise require human action. Such tasks include decision making, language translation, and data analysis. When most people think of AI, they are really thinking of what computer scientists call weak artificial intelligence the type of AI that runs everyday devices like computers, smartphones, even cars. It is any computer program that can analyze various inputs, then select and execute from a set of preprogrammed responses. Today, weak AI performs simple (or narrow) tasks: commanding robots to stack boxes, trading stocks autonomously, calibrating car engines, or running smartphones voice-command interfaces.
Machine learning is a type of computer programming that helps make AI possible. Machine-learning programs have the ability to learn without being explicitly programmed, optimizing themselves to most efficiently meet a set of pre-established goals. Machine learning is still in its infancy, but as it matures, its capacity for self-improvement sets AI apart from any other invention in history.
The compounding effect of computers teaching themselvesleads us to superintelligence. Superintelligence is an artificial intelligence that will be smarter than its human creators. Superintelligence does not yet exist, but when it does, some believe it could solve many of humanitys greatest challenges: aging, energy, and food shortages, even perhaps climate change. Self-perpetuating and untiring, this advanced AI would continue improving at a remarkably fast rate and eventually surpass the level of complexity humans can understand. While this promises great potential, it is not without its dangers.
As the excitement for superintelligence grows, so too does concern. The astrophysicist and Nobel laureate Dr. Stephen Hawking warns that AI is likely to be either the best or worst thing ever to happen to humanity, so theres huge value in getting it right. Hawking is not alone in his concern about superintelligence. Icons of the tech revolution, including former Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, echo his concern. And it terrifies Eliezer Yudkowsky.
A divisive figure, Yudkowsky is well-known in academic circles and the Silicon Valley scene as the coiner of the term friendly AI. His thesis is simple, though his solution is not: if we are to have any hope against superintelligence, we need to code it properly from the beginning. The answer, Eliezer believes, is one of morality. AI must be programmed with a set of ethical codes that align with humanitys. Though it is his lifes only work, Yudkowsky is pretty sure he will fail. Humanity, he says, is likely doomed.
Humanity has a long history of ignoring seers carrying accurate messages of our doom. You may not remember Cassandra, the tragic figure in Greek mythology for whom this phenomenon is named, but you will likely recall the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. That explosion, and the resultant deaths of the seven astronauts, was specifically presaged in warnings by the selfsame scientists responsible for the o-ring technology that failed and caused the explosion. They were right, they warned, and they were ignored. Is Yudkowsky a modern-day Cassandra? Are there others?
Regardless of the warnings of Yudkowsky, Gates, Musk, Hawking, and others, humans will almost certainly pursue the creation of superintelligence relentlessly as it holds unimaginable promise to transform the world. If or when it is born, many believe it will rapidly become more and more capable, able to tackle and solve the most advanced and perplexing challenges scientists pursue, and even those that they cant yet. A superintelligent computer will recursively self-improve to as-of-yet uncomprehended levels of intelligence, although only time will tell whether this self-improvement will happen gradually or within the first second of being turned on. It will carve new paths in fields yet undiscovered, fueled by perpetual self-improvements to its own source code and the creation of new robotic tools.
Artificial intelligence has the potential to be dramatically more powerful than any previous scientific advancement. Superintelligence, according to Nick Bostrom at Oxford, is not just another technology, another tool that will add incrementally to human capabilities. It is, he says, radically different, and it may be the last invention humans ever need to make.
Yudkowsky and others concerned about super intelligence view the issue through a Darwinian lens. Once humans are no longer the most intelligent species on the planet, humankind will survive only at the whim of whatever is. He fears that such superintelligent software would exploit the Internet, seizing control of anything connected to it electrical infrastructure, telecommunications systems, manufacturing plants Its first order of business may be to covertly replicate itself on many other servers all over the globe as a measure of redundancy. It could build machines and robots, or even secretly influence the decisions of ordinary people in pursuit of its own goals. Humanity and its welfare may be of little interest to an entity so profoundly smart.
Elon Musk calls creating artificial intelligence summoning the demon and thinks its humanitys biggest existential threat. When we asked Eliezer what was at stake, his answer was simple: everything. Superintelligence gone wrong is a species-level threat, a human extinction event.
Humans are neither the fastest nor the strongest creatures on the planet but dominate for one reason: humans are the smartest. How might the balance of power shift if AI becomes superintelligence? Yudkowsky told us, By the time its starting to look like [an AI system] might be smarter than you, the stuff that is way smarter than you is not very far away. He believes this is crunch time for the whole human species, and not just for us but for the [future] intergalactic civilization whose existence depends on us. This is the hour before the final exam and were trying to get as much studying done as possible. The AI does not hate you, nor does it love you, but you are made out of atoms which it can use for something else.
Self-aware computers and killer robots are nothing new to the big screen, but some believe the intelligence explosion will be far worse than anything Hollywood has imagined. In a 2011 interview on NPR, AI programmer Keefe Roedersheimer discussed The Terminator and the follow-up series, which pits the superintelligent Skynet computer system against humanity. Below is a transcript of their conversation:
Mr. Roedersheimer:The Terminator [is an example of an] AI that could get out of control. But if you really think about it, its much worse than that.
NPR: Much worse than Terminator?
Mr. Roedersheimer: Much, much worse.
NPR: How could it possibly thats a moonscape with people hiding under burnt-out buildings and being shot by lasers. I mean, what could be worse than that?
Mr. Roedersheimer: All the people are dead.
NPR: In other words, forget the heroic human resistance. Thered be no time to organize one. Somebody presses enter, and were done.
Yudkowsky believes superintelligence must be designed from the start with something approximating ethics. He envisions this as a system of checks and balances so that its growth is auditable and controllable; so that even as it continues to learn, advance, and reprogram itself, it will not evolve out of its own benign coding. Such preprogrammed measures will ensure that superintelligence will behave as we intend even in the absence of immediate human supervision. Eliezer calls this friendly AI.
According to Yudkowsky, once AI gains the ability to broadly reprogram itself, it will be too late to implement safeguards, so society needs to prepare now for the intelligence explosion. Yet, this preparation is complicated by the sporadic and unpredictable nature of scientific advancement and the numerous covert efforts to create superintelligence around the world. No supranational organization can track all of the efforts, much less predict when or which one of them will succeed.
Eli and his supporters believe a wait and see approach (a form of satisficing) is a Kevorkian prescription. [The birth of superintelligence] could be five years out; it could be forty years out; it could be sixty years out, Yudkowsky told us. You dont know. I dont know. Nobody on the planet knows. And by the time you actually know, its going to be [too late] to do anything about it.
Richard A. Clarke, a veteran of thirty years in national security and over a decade in the White House, is now the CEO ofGood Harbor Security Risk Management and author, with R.P. Eddy, of Warnings: Finding Cassandras To Prevent Catastrophes. Clarke is an adviser to Seattle-based AI cybersecurity company Versive.
R.P. Eddy is the CEO of Ergo, one of the worlds leading intelligence firms. His multi-decade career in national security includes serving as Director at the White House National Security Council.
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Summoning the Demon: Why superintelligence is humanity's biggest threat - GeekWire
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Summoning the Demon: Why superintelligence is humanity’s … – GeekWire
Posted: at 4:20 am
[Editors Note:This guest commentaryis byRichard A. Clarke and R.P. Eddy, authors of the new book, Warnings: Finding Cassandras To Stop Catastrophes.]
Artificial intelligence is a broad term, maybe overly broad. It simply means a computer program that can perform tasks that would otherwise require human action. Such tasks include decision making, language translation, and data analysis. When most people think of AI, they are really thinking of what computer scientists call weak artificial intelligence the type of AI that runs everyday devices like computers, smartphones, even cars. It is any computer program that can analyze various inputs, then select and execute from a set of preprogrammed responses. Today, weak AI performs simple (or narrow) tasks: commanding robots to stack boxes, trading stocks autonomously, calibrating car engines, or running smartphones voice-command interfaces.
Machine learning is a type of computer programming that helps make AI possible. Machine-learning programs have the ability to learn without being explicitly programmed, optimizing themselves to most efficiently meet a set of pre-established goals. Machine learning is still in its infancy, but as it matures, its capacity for self-improvement sets AI apart from any other invention in history.
The compounding effect of computers teaching themselvesleads us to superintelligence. Superintelligence is an artificial intelligence that will be smarter than its human creators. Superintelligence does not yet exist, but when it does, some believe it could solve many of humanitys greatest challenges: aging, energy, and food shortages, even perhaps climate change. Self-perpetuating and untiring, this advanced AI would continue improving at a remarkably fast rate and eventually surpass the level of complexity humans can understand. While this promises great potential, it is not without its dangers.
As the excitement for superintelligence grows, so too does concern. The astrophysicist and Nobel laureate Dr. Stephen Hawking warns that AI is likely to be either the best or worst thing ever to happen to humanity, so theres huge value in getting it right. Hawking is not alone in his concern about superintelligence. Icons of the tech revolution, including former Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, echo his concern. And it terrifies Eliezer Yudkowsky.
A divisive figure, Yudkowsky is well-known in academic circles and the Silicon Valley scene as the coiner of the term friendly AI. His thesis is simple, though his solution is not: if we are to have any hope against superintelligence, we need to code it properly from the beginning. The answer, Eliezer believes, is one of morality. AI must be programmed with a set of ethical codes that align with humanitys. Though it is his lifes only work, Yudkowsky is pretty sure he will fail. Humanity, he says, is likely doomed.
Humanity has a long history of ignoring seers carrying accurate messages of our doom. You may not remember Cassandra, the tragic figure in Greek mythology for whom this phenomenon is named, but you will likely recall the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. That explosion, and the resultant deaths of the seven astronauts, was specifically presaged in warnings by the selfsame scientists responsible for the o-ring technology that failed and caused the explosion. They were right, they warned, and they were ignored. Is Yudkowsky a modern-day Cassandra? Are there others?
Regardless of the warnings of Yudkowsky, Gates, Musk, Hawking, and others, humans will almost certainly pursue the creation of superintelligence relentlessly as it holds unimaginable promise to transform the world. If or when it is born, many believe it will rapidly become more and more capable, able to tackle and solve the most advanced and perplexing challenges scientists pursue, and even those that they cant yet. A superintelligent computer will recursively self-improve to as-of-yet uncomprehended levels of intelligence, although only time will tell whether this self-improvement will happen gradually or within the first second of being turned on. It will carve new paths in fields yet undiscovered, fueled by perpetual self-improvements to its own source code and the creation of new robotic tools.
Artificial intelligence has the potential to be dramatically more powerful than any previous scientific advancement. Superintelligence, according to Nick Bostrom at Oxford, is not just another technology, another tool that will add incrementally to human capabilities. It is, he says, radically different, and it may be the last invention humans ever need to make.
Yudkowsky and others concerned about super intelligence view the issue through a Darwinian lens. Once humans are no longer the most intelligent species on the planet, humankind will survive only at the whim of whatever is. He fears that such superintelligent software would exploit the Internet, seizing control of anything connected to it electrical infrastructure, telecommunications systems, manufacturing plants Its first order of business may be to covertly replicate itself on many other servers all over the globe as a measure of redundancy. It could build machines and robots, or even secretly influence the decisions of ordinary people in pursuit of its own goals. Humanity and its welfare may be of little interest to an entity so profoundly smart.
Elon Musk calls creating artificial intelligence summoning the demon and thinks its humanitys biggest existential threat. When we asked Eliezer what was at stake, his answer was simple: everything. Superintelligence gone wrong is a species-level threat, a human extinction event.
Humans are neither the fastest nor the strongest creatures on the planet but dominate for one reason: humans are the smartest. How might the balance of power shift if AI becomes superintelligence? Yudkowsky told us, By the time its starting to look like [an AI system] might be smarter than you, the stuff that is way smarter than you is not very far away. He believes this is crunch time for the whole human species, and not just for us but for the [future] intergalactic civilization whose existence depends on us. This is the hour before the final exam and were trying to get as much studying done as possible. The AI does not hate you, nor does it love you, but you are made out of atoms which it can use for something else.
Self-aware computers and killer robots are nothing new to the big screen, but some believe the intelligence explosion will be far worse than anything Hollywood has imagined. In a 2011 interview on NPR, AI programmer Keefe Roedersheimer discussed The Terminator and the follow-up series, which pits the superintelligent Skynet computer system against humanity. Below is a transcript of their conversation:
Mr. Roedersheimer:The Terminator [is an example of an] AI that could get out of control. But if you really think about it, its much worse than that.
NPR: Much worse than Terminator?
Mr. Roedersheimer: Much, much worse.
NPR: How could it possibly thats a moonscape with people hiding under burnt-out buildings and being shot by lasers. I mean, what could be worse than that?
Mr. Roedersheimer: All the people are dead.
NPR: In other words, forget the heroic human resistance. Thered be no time to organize one. Somebody presses enter, and were done.
Yudkowsky believes superintelligence must be designed from the start with something approximating ethics. He envisions this as a system of checks and balances so that its growth is auditable and controllable; so that even as it continues to learn, advance, and reprogram itself, it will not evolve out of its own benign coding. Such preprogrammed measures will ensure that superintelligence will behave as we intend even in the absence of immediate human supervision. Eliezer calls this friendly AI.
According to Yudkowsky, once AI gains the ability to broadly reprogram itself, it will be too late to implement safeguards, so society needs to prepare now for the intelligence explosion. Yet, this preparation is complicated by the sporadic and unpredictable nature of scientific advancement and the numerous covert efforts to create superintelligence around the world. No supranational organization can track all of the efforts, much less predict when or which one of them will succeed.
Eli and his supporters believe a wait and see approach (a form of satisficing) is a Kevorkian prescription. [The birth of superintelligence] could be five years out; it could be forty years out; it could be sixty years out, Yudkowsky told us. You dont know. I dont know. Nobody on the planet knows. And by the time you actually know, its going to be [too late] to do anything about it.
Richard A. Clarke, a veteran of thirty years in national security and over a decade in the White House, is now the CEO ofGood Harbor Security Risk Management and author, with R.P. Eddy, of Warnings: Finding Cassandras To Prevent Catastrophes. Clarke is an adviser to Seattle-based AI cybersecurity company Versive.
R.P. Eddy is the CEO of Ergo, one of the worlds leading intelligence firms. His multi-decade career in national security includes serving as Director at the White House National Security Council.
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