I completely agree. (And I say this as someone who does believe that machine intelligence will reach a point of self-perpetuation!)MediumTex wrote: To extend upon the "Rapture for Nerds" idea, much of this Singularity talk sounds like the same sort of folklore and mythology that you find in all cultures. We don't see it as mythology because it is perfectly aligned with our values and expectations of life (or at least the values and expectations of those who share Kurzweil's vision), but the woman above might just laugh when we explained to her what we were talking about before informing us that we were deeply mistaken. She might then begin explaining to us how her tribe's deity actually does do some of the same stuff that Kurzweil is talking about.
Witness, too, the ritualistic nature of Kurzweil's daily vitamin regimen (which is down to "only" 150 supplements per day.) As a big "hedger of bets" by nature, I don't fault him for a moment. This is just where a very smart man's search for meaning led him.
The thing that's interesting about the Singularity is that it would (by definition) answer questions that currently puzzle us. Until we know the answers to these questions, we don't even know what it will look like. There's the horrifying possibility that these supra-intelligent mammoth computers will simply spit out: "Error. Problem still too hard. Beep." You have to reach the Singularity in order to know for sure how viable ideas like mind uploading will be. (How complex is the human brain's behavior really?)
On the other side of things, we have real contention for real resources today and many hills to climb before we reach the promised land of virtual eternities playing simulated reality games with long-lost loved ones. Fortunately, we're smart, flexible, and damn resilient. It's hardly a lock for Malthus either.
Either way, the future is going to be fascinating. My prediction: singularity, yes... but, sadly, experienced by somebody else!