First edition | |
| Author | James Barrat |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Thomas Dunne Books |
Publication date | October 1, 2013 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print (hardback) |
| Pages | 336 |
| ISBN | 978-0-312-62237-4 |
Our Final Invention: Artificial Intelligence and the End of the Human Era is a 2013 non-fiction book by the American authorJames Barrat. The book discusses the potential benefits and possible risks of human-level (AGI) or super-human (ASI)artificial intelligence.[1] Those supposed risks includeextermination of the human race.[2]
James Barrat weaves together explanations of AI concepts, AI history, and interviews with prominent AI researchers includingEliezer Yudkowsky andRay Kurzweil. The book starts with an account of how anartificial general intelligence could become an artificial super-intelligence through recursive self-improvement. In subsequent chapters, the book covers thehistory of AI, including an account of the work done byI. J. Good, up to the work and ideas of researchers in the field today.
Throughout the book, Barrat takes a cautionary tone, focusing on the threats artificial super-intelligence poses to human existence. Barrat emphasizes how difficult it would be to control or even to predict the actions of something that may become orders of magnitude more intelligent than the most intelligent humans.
On 13 December 2013, journalistMatt Miller interviewed Barrat for hispodcast, "This... is interesting". The interview and related matters to Barrat's book,Our Final Invention, were then captured in Miller's weekly opinion piece forThe Washington Post.[3]
Seth Baum, executive director of the Global Catastrophic Risk Institute and one of the people cited by Barrat in his book, reviewed the book favorably onScientific American's "invited guest" blog, calling it a welcome counterpoint to the vision articulated byRay Kurzweil in his bookThe Singularity is Near.[4]
Gary Marcus questions Barrat's argument "that tendencies toward self-preservation and resource acquisition are inherent in any sufficiently complex, goal-driven system", noting that present-day AI does not have such drives, but Marcus concedes "that the goals of machines could change as they get smarter", and he feels that "Barrat is right to ask" about these important issues.[5]
Our Final Invention was aHuffington Post Definitive Tech Book of 2013.[6]