This is an article published by thestar.com (The Toronto Star) Aug. 31, 2002. 01:00 AM. A reponse was made by Simon Smith posted below... It's nice to see our Canadian Transhumanist Friends holding up the good fight.
Computer hype a load of tripe
Our artistic senses have been dulled by digital advances
By Philip Marchand
BILL GATES recently came out and admitted the obvious. We're not going to see a computer as smart as a human being in our lifetime.
For decades we've been threatened with gloating predictions from nerds who love computers better than they love their fellow humans. One of the more recent is the prediction in Ray Kurzweil's 1999 book, The Age Of Spiritual Machines, that we'll see a computer that we can recognize as our peer in intelligence by the year 2019. That's only 18 years after HAL 9000 was supposed to be able to chat with the two astronauts in Stanley Kubrick's movie, 2001: A Space Odyssey — a minor delay in the grand scheme of things, to be sure.
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Reply made by:
Simon Smith
President
Toronto Transhumanist Association
http://toronto.transhumanism.com
Editor-in-Chief
Betterhumans
http://www.betterhumans.com
Computer Hype a Misdirected Gripe
I am writing in response to a recent column by Philip Marchand titled "Computer hype a load of tripe."
While I share some of Marchand's concerns, I would like to point out some of his factual errors, address some of his misleading statements and point out a new target for his criticism.
I'll begin where he did, with artificial intelligence. Bill Gates aside -- he also predicted that the Internet wouldn't affect Microsoft, and the company had lots of catching up to do when it realized how wrong he was -- there have been many other artificial intelligence naysayers. There have also, as he pointed out, been many believers and promoters.
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