Listen "Hanson on the Technological Singularity"
Episode Synopsis
Robin Hanson of GMU talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the idea of a technological singularity--a sudden, large increase in the rate of growth due to technological change. Hanson argues that it is plausible that a change in technology could lead to world output doubling every two weeks rather than every 15 years, as it does currently. Hanson suggests a likely route to such a change is to port the human brain into a computer-based emulation. Such a breakthrough in artificial intelligence would lead to an extraordinary increase in productivity creating enormous wealth and radically changing the returns to capital and labor. The conversation looks at the feasibility of the process and the intuition behind the conclusions. Hanson argues for the virtues of such a world.
More episodes of the podcast EconTalk Archives, 2011
Tabarrok on Innovation
26/12/2011
Klein on Knowledge and Coordination
19/12/2011
Cowen on the European Crisis
05/12/2011
Simon Johnson on the Financial Crisis
28/11/2011
Baumeister on Gender Differences and Culture
14/11/2011
Kaplan on the Inequality and the Top 1%
07/11/2011
Ramey on Stimulus and Multipliers
24/10/2011
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.