Submitted by Outdoorhans t3_10sk9ob in singularity
In evolution, no species has benefited from its successor in the long term, quite the opposite! If we assume that AI/robots are the next stage of evolution, why should humanity benefit from it in the long term?
In a brief period of interbreeding, Neanderthals were displaced by Homo sapiens. Another example are technological S-curves. There is a short period in which two technologies co-exist until the new technology prevails. The old technology will then gradually decline until it becomes a niche and/or disappears completely.
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Using the example of Hong Kong, it can be seen that the annual change in added years of life expectancy is decreasing. This chart looks the same for almost all countries.
https://www.macrotrends.net/countries/ranking/life-expectancy
Any thoughts?
Thatingles t1_j71yxxp wrote
'In evolution, no species has benefited from its successor in the long term' This is a fundamental misunderstanding of how evolution works, but that doesn't really matter because the creation of AGI etc isn't evolution. We are stepping outside of that.
In the good outcome, AI massively increases global wealth and allows humanity to populate the solar system. There are enough resources for not billions, but trillions of us, and if we end scarcity lots of people will have kids and they will live a lot longer. Population will rise.
In the bad scenario, we all die and this discussion is meaningless.