If I Dare . . .
I say to you today, my friends, that even though we face the difficulties of
today and tomorrow, in this final moment, I will allow myself to dare to
hope . . .
I dare to hope for a post-hope world, where people are never treated
merely as means but always as ends, where no consciousness is sacrificed for
some greater religious aim, where no identity is harmed out of malice or
greed or negligence, where the ability to reason and act is held in the highest
regard by all, and where this is reflected not only in our hearts but also in our
social institutions and business models.
I dare to hope that people will stop suppressing either their Thinking
Brain or their Feeling Brain and marry the two in a holy matrimony of
emotional stability and psychological maturity; that people will become aware
of the pitfalls of their own desires, of the seduction of their comforts, of the
destruction behind their whims, and will instead seek out the discomfort that
will force them to grow.
I dare to hope that the fake freedom of variety will be rejected by people
in favor of the deeper, more meaningful freedom of commitment; that people
will opt in to self-limitation rather than the quixotic quest of self-indulgence;
that people will demand something better of themselves first before
demanding something better from the world.
That said, I dare to hope that one day the online advertising business
model will die in a fucking dumpster fire; that the news media will no longer
have incentives to optimize content for emotional impact but, rather, for
informational utility; that technology will seek not to exploit our
psychological fragility but, rather, to counterbalance it; that information will
be worth something again; that anything will be worth something again.
I dare to hope that search engines and social media algorithms will be
optimized for truth and social relevance rather than simply showing people
what they want to see; that there will be independent, third-party algorithms
that rate the veracity of headlines, websites, and news stories in real time,
allowing users to more quickly sift through the propaganda-laden garbage and
get closer to evidence-based truth; that there will be actual respect for
empirically tested data, because in an infinite sea of possible beliefs, evidence
is the only life preserver we’ve got.
I dare to hope that one day we will have AI that will listen to all the dumb
shit we write and say and will point out (just to us, maybe) our cognitive
biases, uninformed assumptions, and prejudices—like a little notification that
pops up on your phone letting you know that you just totally exaggerated the
unemployment rate when arguing with your uncle, or that you were talking
out of your ass the other night when you were doling out angry tweet after
angry tweet.
I dare to hope that there will be tools to help people understand statistics,
proportions, and probability in real time and realize that, no, a few people
getting shot in the far corners of the globe does not have any bearing on you,
no matter how scary it looks on TV; that most “crises” are statistically
insignificant and/or just noise; and that most real crises are too slow-moving
and unexciting to get the attention they deserve.
I dare to hope that education will get a much-needed facelift,
incorporating not only therapeutic practices to help children with their
emotional development, but also letting them run around and scrape their
knees and get into all sorts of trouble. Children are the kings and queens of
antifragility, the masters of pain. It is we who are afraid.
I dare to hope that the oncoming catastrophes of climate change and
automation are mitigated, if not outright prevented, by the inevitable
explosion of technology wrought by the impending AI revolution; that some
dumb fuck with a nuke doesn’t obliterate us all before that happens; and that a
new, radical human religion doesn’t emerge that convinces us to destroy our
own humanity, as so many have done before.
I dare to hope that AI hurries along and develops some new virtual reality
religion that is so enticing that none of us can tear ourselves away from it long
enough to get back to fucking and killing each other. It will be a church in the
cloud, except it will be experienced as one universal video game. There will
be offerings and rites and sacraments just as there will points and rewards and
progression systems for strict adherence. We will all log on, and stay on,
because it will be our only conduit for influencing the AI gods and, therefore,
the only wellspring that can quench our insatiable desire for meaning and
hope.
Groups of people will rebel against the new AI gods, of course. But this
will be by design, as humanity always needs factious groups of opposing
religions, for this is the only way for us to prove our own significance. Bands
of infidels and heretics will emerge in this virtual landscape, and we will
spend most of our time battling and railing against these various factions. We
will seek to destroy one another’s moral standing and diminish each other’s
accomplishments, all the while not realizing that this was intended. The AI,
realizing that the productive energies of humanity emerge only through
conflict, will generate endless series of artificial crises in a safe virtual realm,
where that productivity and ingenuity can then be cultivated and used for
some greater purpose we won’t ever know or understand. Human hope will be
harvested like a resource, a never-ending reservoir of creative energy.
We will worship at AI’s digitized altars. We will follow their arbitrary
rules and play their games not because we’re forced to, but because they will
be designed so well that we will want to.
We need our lives to mean something, and while the startling advance of
technology has made finding that meaning more difficult, the ultimate
innovation will be the day we can manufacture significance without strife or
conflict, find importance without the necessity of death.
And then, maybe one day, we will become integrated with the machines
themselves. Our individual consciousnesses will be subsumed. Our
independent hopes will vanish. We will meet and merge in the cloud, and our
digitized souls will swirl and eddy in the storms of data, a splay of bits and
functions harmoniously brought into some grand, unseen alignment.
We will have evolved into a great unknowable entity. We will transcend
the limitations of our own value-laden minds. We will live beyond means and
ends, for we will always be both, one and the same. We will have crossed the
evolutionary bridge into “something greater” and ceased to be human any
longer.
Perhaps then, we will not only realize but finally embrace the
Uncomfortable Truth: that we imagined our own importance, we invented our
purpose, and we were, and still are, nothing.
All along, we were nothing.
And maybe then, only then, will the eternal cycle of hope and destruction
come to an end.
Or—?
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