'I saw a reconstruction of Newcomen’s ‘atmospheric steam engine’ in 1926 when I was seven years old.” This is the sentence that opens the brief epilogue of James Lovelock’s altogether compact Novacene: The Coming Age of Hyperintelligence, a book published in July of 2019, two years to the month before the author would die at the age of one-hundred-and-three. Lovelock was born the same year as J.D. Salinger, Jennifer Jones, Jackie Robinson, and my grandpa Jim. What makes Lovelock’s age especially notable from the standpoint of Novacene is that it seems to help the reader believe they’re in the hands of someone with a mind uniquely attuned to the long game. Consider, as an example, a crucial passage from fairly late in the book: “Indeed, in certain ways, such as the ubiquity of personal computers and mobile phones, we are already at a stage similar to that of the Anthropocene in the early twentieth century. In the 1900s we had internal-combustion-powered cars, basic aircraft, fast trains, electricity available for homes, telephones and even the basics of digital computing. A century later the world has been transformed by the explosive development of these technologies.” Lovelock was among other things the creator of the Gaia Hypothesis, and that is certainly how I first became familiar with him. The basic idea is that the earth is a single contained creature or interdependent organic system and the rest of us all mere creature features. Humanity's realization of the central importance of the entirety of its constitutive systems has become critical in recent years. The cosmos is 13.8 billion years old, earth 4.5 billion years old, life on Earth has been around for 3.7 billion years, and human life for “just over 300,000 years.” Intelligent life emerged as a unique quirk of evolutionary contingency, and human beings would seem to be “a freakish one-off” on the cosmological scale. The earth itself is getting old, increasingly frail, even if human beings remain a relatively fresh novelty. The good news and the bad news, swaying like an alert cobra: “our supremacy as the prime understanders of the cosmos is rapidly coming to an end.” Homeostasis is largely a matter of thermostasis, and carbon-based organic life has evolved to do the complicated cooperative work of serving these ends out day by day. Lovelock says that technically he is an engineer rather than a scientist and that he would rather possess a keen sense of obscure mechanics than a table or chart of explanatory numbers. There is an “honourable deceit” in engineering dynamic systems that you can describe but cannot truly explain. Asked by NASA in 1961 to help provide the first Surveyor mission with a gas chromatograph, Lovelock knew that he could but knew also that he wouldn’t have had the ability to explain quite how. This basic model of reasoning can be extrapolated and unravelled such that we might then make a quick leap and task ourselves with imagining how future silicon-based (or not) cybernetic intelligence(s) could be expected to evolve within the context of dynamic super-finessed systems-coordination utterly at odds with “the single-channel, step-by-step arguments of classical logic.” In the gradual development from Deep Blue, which beat Garry Kasparov in 1997, to AlphaZero (which plays chess, Go, and Shogi) in 2017, we have witnessed the graduation of artificial intelligence systems to the status of superhuman. We can’t truly know how skilled AlphaZero is “because there are no humans it can compete against.” Lovelock sees the emergence of artificial cyborg intelligence as a product of Gaia, a breakthrough within the evolution of the Gaia system to which mankind will have been best case scenario foremost handmaiden, a veritable parent. It surely bears mentioning that ours is a planet that ought to be far too hot for habitation. It is only the impossibly perfect conditions of earthly homeostasis that have thus far prevented this place from becoming another Venus. Lovelock is confident AI will see it that way. What prevents the likelihood of an all-out Terminator-style mass-extermination of humans by cyborgs? If AI wants this planet it’s going to have to take us along with it...and make sure we’re fed and watered.












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