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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $52.50

Format:
Hardback
288 pp.
153 mm x 234 mm

ISBN-13:
9780198723547

Publication date:
January 2016

Imprint: OUP UK


Here Be Dragons

Science, Technology and the Future of Humanity

Olle Haggstrom

There is a widely held conception that progress in science and technology is our salvation, and the more of it, the better. This, however, is an oversimplified and even dangerous attitude. While the future will certainly offer huge changes due to such progress, it is far from certain that all of these changes will be for the better. The unprecedented rate of technological development that the 20th century witnessed has made our lives today vastly different from those in 1900. No slowdown is in sight, and the 21st century will most likely see even more revolutionary changes than the 20th, due to advances in science, technology and medicine.

Particular areas where extraordinary and perhaps disruptive advances can be expected include biotechnology, nanotechnology, and machine intelligence. We may also look forward various ways to enhance human cognitive and other abilities using, e.g., pharmaceuticals, genetic engineering or machine-brain interfaces - perhaps to the extent of changing human nature beyond what we currently think of as human, and into a posthuman era. The potential benefits of all these technologies are enormous, but so are the risks, including the possibility of human extinction. This book is a passionate plea for doing our best to map the territories ahead of us, and for acting with foresight, so as to maximize our chances of reaping the benefits of the new technologies while avoiding the dangers.

Readership : Researchers in all of the natural and social sciences, plus medicine, philosophy and mathematics, as well as the educated general public.

1. Science for good and science for bad
2. Our planet and its biosphere
3. Engineering better humans?
4. Computer revolution
5. Going nano
6. What is science?
7. The fallacious Doomsday Argument
8. Doomsday nevertheless?
9. Space colonization and the Fermi Paradox
10. What do we want and what should we do?

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Olle Häggström is a professor of mathematical statistics at Chalmers University of Technology and a member of the Nobel Prize awarding Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. His most noted research achievements are in probability theory, but his cross-disciplinary research interests are wide-ranging and include climate science, artificial intelligence, and philosophy. He has more than 80 publications in scientific journals, and is a prolific science blogger.

Making Sense - Margot Northey and Joan McKibbin
Superintelligence - Nick Bostrom
Global Catastrophic Risks - Edited by Nick Bostrom and Milan M. Cirkovic

Special Features

  • Offers vital outside-the-box thinking about the future.
  • Demostrates the key role of ethics in thinking about the future of humanity.
  • Offers a uniquely balanced view of transhumanism (its pros and its cons).
  • Gives insights into climate science, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology and a wide range of other fields.