Like the universe, technology, an extension of the self, is expanding fast.
The infinite machine is the idea that we’re becoming machine-like through the use of human-like machines. It is a phenomenon at the intersection of automation, labor, gratification, and human desire.
In this expansion of technology, I argue that we compromise aspects of our humanity in ways that are hard to see for some, and harder to associate meaning to for others. So the further we ‘progress’, the less we intrinsically understand why we choose to expand.
AI is still evolving (broadly completing narrow tasks) and has done a decent job mimicking human attributes: neural computation, analytical decision-making, and natural language processing to name a few. But despite the rudimentary functionality of AI today, the idea of an AI singularity sparks both fear and allure amongst the world’s top physicists and inventors.
This series explores contending identity attributes between the computer science of AI and spirit of humanity, through a few critical lenses:
- Growing emotional and psychological dissonance of laborers involved in the delivery of AI technologies.
- Unrealized tension that laborers experience in the process, which range from microaggressions to economic exploitation.
- Evolving perceptions of power and free will as AI technologies become more anthropomorphic.
A recurring challenge across these areas, which I’ll examine, is detangling the inherent value from its value proposition: Let’s connect you to the world in ways that you never imagined. For example, last week, I booked a taxi, confirmed a tinder date, and discovered a new music genre – all in three minutes. As the third minute passed, I realized I hadn’t pushed any buttons in the elevator which I was standing in.
I was doing ‘things,’ but going nowhere. This, of course, is a metaphor for the collective human identity.