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Saturday, April 8th, 2006


A Rapture for the Rest of Us

via TCS Daily

Essay by Glenn Harlan Reynolds on a recent Singularity backlash, including the “reappearance of Ken MacLeod’s dismissal of the Singularity as ‘the Rapture for nerds.’”

Yes, it’s possible to draw parallels between the Christian idea of The Rapture — and, even more generally, between religious ideas of transcendence generally — and the notion that, once human technology passes a certain threshold, roughly that described by Vinge and other Singularity enthusiasts, human beings will potentially enjoy the kind of powers and pleasures traditionally assigned to gods or beings in heaven: Limitless lifespans, if not immortality, superhuman powers, virtually limitless wealth, fleshly pleasures on demand, etc.

In fact, rather than serving as a dismissal of the Singularity, it seems to me that the Singularity-as-religion argument cuts the other way. How do we know that people want the kinds of things that advanced technology is supposed to offer? Because they’ve been trying to get them through non-technological means for all of recorded history…