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George

The anthropic principle does not imply future gain

A growing suspicion is coalescing among some transhumanists, futurists and cosmologists about how the finely tuned aspects of the universe seem to implying that something great awaits humanity in the future. The sense of there being a cosmologically prescribed mission for intelligences is derived from the eerie results coming out of virtually all the sciences which show how absurdly specific the laws of the universe actually are. Further, technosociological observations like Moore's Law make it appear as if even humanity's inventions are part of some cosmologically divined plan.

I blogged about this idea a few weeks ago, and noted how such thinkers as Ray Kurzweil, John Smart, John Wheeler, and James N. Gardner suspect that intelligence plays a pivotal role in the life cycle of the universe. Essentially, using Gardner's terminology, they argue that advanced intelligences act as Von Neumann controllers within the universe which is a Von Neumann duplicator. In other words, intelligences help the universe to replicate.

Of course, the only evidence for this is purely conjectural and based exclusively on the circumstantial cosmological parameters that we observe.

I say circumstantial because the anthropic principle is in effect only insofar as it tautologically "explains" how observers have come to exist only at this particular place and time. The anthropic principle and the fine tuning argument do not imply or guarantee future gain. It explains the here and now and makes no predictions about our ongoing presence into the future.

Because of the growing feeling that humanity has a built-in modus operandi for the future, a certain aloofness has arisen among some futurists and intellectuals about our existential chances in the coming decades. Should the idea that we are a 'chosen species' disseminate into public opinion, we may run the risk of becoming even more complacent and unconcerned in the face of catastrophic risks than we already are.

And worse, the trouble with this theory, it would seem, is that it is likely wrong.

I would argue that we are already in possession of a data point that offers counter-evidence to the claim that humanity is cosmologically ordained for a higher purpose: our acquisition of apocalyptic weapons. We have been living on borrowed time since 1945. With the Cold War quickly becoming an historical curiosity, the sense of there being a looming and viable apocalyptic threat has waned considerably. The truth of the matter is that our civilization could have very easily destroyed itself many times over by now.

The idea that all-out nuclear war is impossible in consideration of the presence of rational self-preserving actors is tenuous at best (the old mutually assured destruction (MAD) theory). It has been a sheer fluke of history that an erratic leader or error hasn't ended it all.

For example, Richard Nixon was dissuaded by Kissinger to use the nuclear bomb to end the war in Vietnam (oh, what a row that would have created with the Soviets), and he even used the threat of nuclear war as a ploy against the Soviets to end the war in Vietnam. Che Guevara, who was instrumental in instigating the Cuban Missile Crisis, admitted that if the missiles had been under Cuban control, they would have fired them against major U.S. cities (not quite the sweetheart he's portrayed to be in pop culture, right?). In recent times, Iran's president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has openly admitted that he wants to "wipe Israel off the map." And then there's Korea.

Moreover, there's no reason to believe that a global ideological rift couldn't once again emerge resulting in a geopolitically stratified planet and a renewed cold war (or even all-out war).

These situations are set to get worse as more and more state actors come into possession of nuclear weapons. The primary problem with nuclear weapons proliferation is that the bombs will most assuredly be used in the event that conventional war breaks out between two nuclear capable nations. Rather than capitulate, the side that starts to find itself irrevocably losing will resort to nuclear warfare. Consequently, the onset of conventional war between two diverse powers will almost assuredly end with globally catastrophic, if not apocalyptic, results.

So, this is our fine tuned universe, one in which the Doomsday Clock sits at 7 minutes to midnight?

To my mind, a finely tuned universe in which advanced intelligences play an integral cosmological role would preclude the intelligences from becoming self-destructive before their mission was safely under way. If some sort of cosmological eschatology were in effect in which we are responsible for spawning baby universes, we would be in a place right now where our ongoing existence would not be hanging by a thread and getting worse by the minute (mature nanotechnology, SAI and advanced bioweapons come to mind).

Consequently, those who argue that we are headed for cosmological greatness are welcome to keep making their case, but not at the expense of perpetuating the sense that humanity is invincible.

Cross-posted from Sentient Developments.
Published Saturday, April 08, 2006 11:11 PM by George

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dagon wrote on April 9, 2006 2:45 AM

I thought about this topic a lot and I agree with this article. Whereas humanity's *potential* is vastly bigger than most people out there have any clue of (and would probably include dysonspheres) there are so many unknowns on the surreal paths that lead us there we hardly can say anything about what's in store.

I think an important clue is in the riddle of The Great Silence (Fermi's Paradox). If we would have had tool-using intelligences inside the galaxy, or within galaxies a billion lightyear away, we reasonably would expect to have seen them hauling around stuff around by now. And unless we have already found Really erratic GRB's I assume we really haven't seen anything to that effect yet.

I can get really absurdly speculative and assert mystical stuff that we are to create wormholes that transcend interstellar and eventually intergalactic travel lanes...

(1) http://www.orionsarm.com/whitepapers/wormholes.html
(2) http://www.orionsarm.com/whitepapers/vision.html

... but that is as fanciful as some sections of the Bible.

Intuition (whatever it's worth) tells me this is the century where we get to know what we are in store for. We find aliens by SETI or we don't. Either has staggering implications. Either we create independent colonies in the solar systemj or we don't. Either has vast far-reaching implications. Either we have some kind of singularity or spike - or we don't. Again; the implications for either are stunning.

Fact remains or limited minds see some shadows moving around in the dark but we don't know yet if we are projecting. We are all in all so immensely ignorant creatures still.
 

Abolitionist wrote on April 9, 2006 3:48 AM

I don't see the purpose of this exercise. Can somebody explain?

My take is that the anthropic viewpoint is not necessarily valid - is there anything else to be learned here?
 

TheWandererAndHisShadow wrote on April 9, 2006 9:05 AM

Why would we want to create baby universes? Unless we were able to transfer ourselves into them somehow. If we were powerful enough to create universes, you might thing we would be powerful enough to continue to subsist as part of them. Or at least to engineer them in such a way that sucess was assured, which it at least doesn't seem to be from our perspective, (which I suppose is the point made in this post here) ; not to mention the traditional argument against the existence of a God-like being, namely our planet seems very wasteful.

Anyway, I don't think this is a comprhensive refutation, just a few random thoughts ; also I don't know much about cosmology.
 

Jim Ledford wrote on April 9, 2006 6:54 PM

Even God needs a surprise)!!@#%*
 

danieru wrote on April 9, 2006 7:24 PM

Two things strike me here:

Firstly, the idea that nuclear war, even on the grandest of scales, would wipe out ALL humanity seems a little extreme to me. Sure the devastation could be phenomenal, leaving those few populations of humans left merged into a harsh existence bordering on extinction. Thing is, on a planet of over 6 billion entities, many are likely to survive even in the worst case scenario. Possibly the populations most likely to make it through the harshest parts of the nuclear winter would be in minority camps today. Small, self sufficient populations in the mountainous regions of the planet might be able to carve out an existence long enough to pass on their hardy genes to a new generation.

Secondly, extinction, or simply species devastation itself, is not always a bad thing. The history of this planet is replete with large scale extinction events in which vast majorities of animals populations were completely wiped off the evolutionary map. The outcome of these events was that hardy species survived, allowing the 'food chain' to shift under the tectonic heave of population collapse. This too would happen if nuclear war were to spread over the planet. It would allow humans to enter another stage in their evolution perhaps as civilised society slowly reemerges in those mountains mentioned earlier. Further still, what small populations of humanity did survive might be separated by thousands of miles distance and not meet for tens of centuries, perhaps even long enough for their genetics to become incompatiable (the mutation casued by trace amounts of fall out radiation could speed up this process). Discrete species of humans would once again push the boundaries of evolution and diversify the chances of a new, stronger human to emerge back to civilisation tens of thousands of years from now.

The ebb and flow of life on this planet is one which mirrors an exponential increase in complexity followed by a fall (after which gene pools are purged and realigned) and a subsequent increase in complexity again. Why not factor this in to your anthropic universe?

I think using the phrase 'anthropic' implies many aspects of a <i>conscious</i> intention  for our existence which I cannot adhere to. The idea that conscious life somehow takes the place of a universe's genetic information, passing it on to further baby universes via technologically advanced evolution, is appealing. To believe that is will be humanity in anything resembling their present form which acts as the carrier of this information (maybe billions of years from now) is a little arrogant and slightly naive.

Complexity needs extinction.
 

GrimJim wrote on April 9, 2006 10:11 PM

I do not adhere to quasi-Hegelian notions of human destiny.  The latest findings seem to confirm inflationary theory, implying that our local area may not be representative of the universe. That our local parameters seem finely tuned may merely reflect our evolutionary development to fit those local parameters. Cf.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/space/2006-03-16-big-bang-expansion_x.htm
Mind you, I am also skeptical of digital physics, which posits that the universe itself is computation, intelligence or no. Cf.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_physics
Still, due to the hugely parallel nature of the universe, there's no reason to assume that the human collective "algorithm" is unique, nor that it will necessarily be the "winning" solution in the end; e.g., genetic algorithms.
 

Mr. Farlops wrote on April 10, 2006 9:34 PM

Good post George! Good post.

I think we must be very, very careful to avoid the idea that there is some kind of historical inevitability in our future. We must avoid the idea that we are some kind of express elevator to heaven or hell. It's a grotesque oversimplification that leads to dispair or complacence.

In general, I think I agree with a lot of thoughts everyone has posted here.

Ever since hearing about the anthropic principle years ago as a physics student I've had many problems with it. These days, there is significant segment in futurist thought that somehow uses the anthropic principle to justify all kinds of silly notions, Frank Tipler immediately springs to mind.
 

DRT (Trackback) wrote on April 11, 2006 2:05 AM

 

V wrote on April 12, 2006 10:56 AM

Is it God's will that we travel through the galaxy and terraform it in our likeness?  And should we encounter intelligent races out there we must surely plant a flag in their midst and try to civilize them as part of the "human's burden (a certain amount of righteous exploitation would only seem right...)."  I see three possibilities to Fermi's Paradox.  1. They are already here (UFO sightings, etc.) but we don't see their constructs out in space because they are not given to mega engineering projects or else they know how to cloak them.  2. The other intelligent races who came long before us all "ascended" to other realms/dimensions and left us alone.  3. We are actually the "Old Ones" and Progenitors, should we not destroy ourselves.  So it's time to be a good role model to the rest of the universe! lol

Yes, I definitely see it within the realm of possibility that the human race takes a horrible wrong turn.  I recently started reading the alternate history "Draka" novels of S.M. Sterling which really chill the blood in terms of showing how all of humanity might have ended up enslaved by a tyranny exceeding that of even Nazi Germany.  Reading this series will make you realize things in this world of ours could have turned out far worse than they have.  But we still have a long way to go.    

John
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About George

Canada's leading futurist, activist and award winning blogger, George has written and spoken extensively about the impacts of cutting-edge science and technology. He is the Director of Operations for Commune Media, an advertising and marketing firm that specializes in marketing science. George has more than 10 years' experience in media, arts and communications. With relationships forged across several continents, he has managed international accounts for leading brands. In addition to his work with Commune, George is currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. He is the co-founder and president of the Toronto Transhumanist Association and has served on the Board of Directors for the World Transhumanist Association. George has been interviewed by such publications as The Guardian, the BBC, Radio Free Europe, and Beliefnet. He made an appearance on the CBC's The Hour and has been profiled in NOW and This Magazine.
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