书评

IF 0.3 Q3 AREA STUDIES
Patty A. Kelly
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In 1968, the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey showed characters using tablet computers in everyday life. I remember computer watches and computer books from Inspector Gadget and other fiction in my childhood; the GPS watch and tablet computer I got in grad school felt like the realization of those tropes. Sometimes the science fiction even spurs the technical invention; Martin Cooper’s work on mobile telephones at Bell Labs was driven, in part, by the desire to bring about the communicators from the television franchise Star Trek. Even harder to predict than the specific technological advances is how those advances will impact society. Star Trek envisioned a future where automation and replicator technology would eliminate material need. However, an episode in its first season still revolved around a group of women going off into space to meet unknown men so they could become wives; the writers failed entirely to realize that there would be no reason for women to subject themselves to such treatment—as many women actually did in historical settings such as the American West in the late 1800s, seeking better economic opportunities—in a post-scarcity society. It’s easy to project unchallenged assumptions about society into a future where those assumptions would be completely unfounded. How, then, can one make any sort of reasonable predictions about the future? One path, taken by Zach and Kelly Weinersmith in their new book Soonish, is to focus on relatively near-term technology and its ramifications. Near-term, because it’s much more likely that we can predict technical changes 20 years from now than 200; technology, because it’s easier (though still difficult) to see what technologies might become possible, and what effects these specific technologies could have, than to predict other large-scale societal changes. In this book, the authors lay out ten emerging technologies that have the possibility of huge ramifications in a time frame ranging from a decade or so (if things progress rapidly) to a century (if the technology actually works, but it takes us, as a species, a while to figure it out). They present the current state of each particular technology, with citations to the literature and interviews with domain experts. They point out what seem to be the biggest technological barriers, and explore experts’ current thoughts on surpassing those barriers. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

丹麦有句谚语,有时被认为是尼尔斯·玻尔说的,“预测是非常困难的,尤其是对未来的预测。”预测未来是一个具有挑战性的问题,特别是在处理开放系统时。这似乎并没有阻止我们继续尝试。科幻小说的预言历史悠久。有些例子古怪得可笑;随着我们在机器人技术和人工智能方面取得进步,20世纪50年代科幻小说中的主要内容——机器人女仆和机器人管家似乎越来越不可信——现实世界的人工智能似乎更有可能是特定任务的,而不是通才,至少在目前是这样。其他一些想象中的技术被证明是相当有先见之明的。h.g.威尔斯在1899年出版的《当沉睡者醒来》中描述了一种自动滑动门;第一个安装于1960年。1968年,电影《2001太空漫游》展示了角色在日常生活中使用平板电脑。我还记得童年时的电脑手表和《神探格杰特》和其他小说中的电脑书籍;我在研究生院买的GPS手表和平板电脑就像是这些比喻的实现。有时,科幻小说甚至刺激了技术发明;马丁·库珀(Martin Cooper)在贝尔实验室(Bell Labs)研究移动电话的部分原因是,他想要制造出电视剧《星际迷航》(Star Trek)中的通信设备。比具体的技术进步更难预测的是这些进步将如何影响社会。《星际迷航》设想了一个自动化和复制技术将消除物质需求的未来。然而,第一季的一集仍然围绕着一群女人进入太空去见不认识的男人,这样他们就可以成为妻子;作家们完全没有意识到,在一个后物质匮乏的社会里,女性没有理由屈从于这样的待遇——就像许多女性在19世纪后期的美国西部这样的历史背景下,为了寻求更好的经济机会而做的那样。人们很容易把对社会毫无疑问的假设投射到一个完全没有根据的未来。那么,人们怎样才能对未来做出合理的预测呢?扎克·韦纳史密斯和凯利·韦纳史密斯在他们的新书《Soonish》中提出的一条路径是关注相对近期的技术及其影响。短期,因为我们更有可能预测20年后的技术变化而不是200年;技术,因为比起预测其他大规模的社会变化,更容易(尽管仍然困难)看到哪些技术可能成为可能,以及这些特定技术可能产生的影响。在这本书中,作者列出了十项新兴技术,这些技术有可能在十年左右(如果事情进展迅速)到一个世纪(如果技术确实有效,但作为一个物种,我们需要一段时间才能弄清楚)的时间框架内产生巨大的影响。他们展示了每种特定技术的当前状态,并引用了文献和对领域专家的采访。他们指出了似乎最大的技术障碍,并探讨了专家们目前对超越这些障碍的看法。最后,作者提出了这项技术的一系列可能性,既有有益的,也有有害的;毕竟,这本书的副标题是“将改善和/或毁掉一切的十大新兴技术”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Book review
A Danish proverb, sometimes attributed to Neils Bohr, states “Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future.” Predicting the future is a challenging problem, particularly when dealing with an open system. That doesn’t seem to stop us from trying. Science fiction has a long history of making predictions. Some examples are laughably quaint; robot maids and butlers, a staple of 1950s era science fiction, seem less and less plausible as we make advances in robotics and artificial intelligence—real-world AIs seem much more likely to be task-specific, rather than generalists, at least in current lifetimes. Other imagined technologies turn out to have been quite prescient. H. G. Wells described an automatic sliding door in When the Sleeper Wakes, published in 1899; the first one was installed in 1960. In 1968, the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey showed characters using tablet computers in everyday life. I remember computer watches and computer books from Inspector Gadget and other fiction in my childhood; the GPS watch and tablet computer I got in grad school felt like the realization of those tropes. Sometimes the science fiction even spurs the technical invention; Martin Cooper’s work on mobile telephones at Bell Labs was driven, in part, by the desire to bring about the communicators from the television franchise Star Trek. Even harder to predict than the specific technological advances is how those advances will impact society. Star Trek envisioned a future where automation and replicator technology would eliminate material need. However, an episode in its first season still revolved around a group of women going off into space to meet unknown men so they could become wives; the writers failed entirely to realize that there would be no reason for women to subject themselves to such treatment—as many women actually did in historical settings such as the American West in the late 1800s, seeking better economic opportunities—in a post-scarcity society. It’s easy to project unchallenged assumptions about society into a future where those assumptions would be completely unfounded. How, then, can one make any sort of reasonable predictions about the future? One path, taken by Zach and Kelly Weinersmith in their new book Soonish, is to focus on relatively near-term technology and its ramifications. Near-term, because it’s much more likely that we can predict technical changes 20 years from now than 200; technology, because it’s easier (though still difficult) to see what technologies might become possible, and what effects these specific technologies could have, than to predict other large-scale societal changes. In this book, the authors lay out ten emerging technologies that have the possibility of huge ramifications in a time frame ranging from a decade or so (if things progress rapidly) to a century (if the technology actually works, but it takes us, as a species, a while to figure it out). They present the current state of each particular technology, with citations to the literature and interviews with domain experts. They point out what seem to be the biggest technological barriers, and explore experts’ current thoughts on surpassing those barriers. Finally, the authors present an array of possibilities for this technology, both beneficial and harmful; after all, the subtitle of the book is “Ten Emerging Technologies That’ll Improve and/ or Ruin Everything.”
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来源期刊
Arab Studies Quarterly
Arab Studies Quarterly AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
33.30%
发文量
7
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