All posts by A Futurist at the Movies

A Futurist at the Movies is written by Josh Calder, a futurist living in Washington, DC. For more about Josh, see "Who am I?" or contact him here.

New Alien-Spotting Capabilities

Exoplanet (NASA)NASA’s orbiting Kepler telescope may soon enable us to spot signs of alien life.

The observatory is designed to detect Earthlike planets. Though it is only in its testing phase, the BBC reports that Kepler has already detected the atmosphere of a planet — though not an Earthlike one — 1,000 light years from Earth.

This is a crucial capability in the search for life: some atmospheric compositions would be strongly suggestive of a living biosphere. (And some might even begin to hint at a technological civilization.) If such a planet were discovered, it could move us closer to the question of whether there is life elsewhere, and greatly boost our impulse to find out more about the phenomena, spurring attention and funding.

(Image courtesy NASA)

Legal Issues of the Future

Justice by Billogs (Flickr)As the Sotomayor hearings went on this week, I talked to a reporter about legal issues that a justice might see in the next 25 years, going beyond our present obsessions. (I did not actually say that senators should ask Sotomayor about them.)

Topics included:

  • virtual reality
  • artificial intelligence
  • genetic engineering and human enhancement
  • brain technology
  • human-animal hybrids

About artificial intelligence, I said, in part:

“People have been talking about the possibility of a “singularity” (in which artificial intelligence becomes sentient) in a couple of decades. It involves two questions: if something says it’s sentient, do we believe it? And if so, do we care? It may be more of a question if it involves a biological system. Does something require a biological brain to be human?”

(Image courtesy Billogs, Flickr)

Upcoming Futurist Movies

Moon jurvetson FlickrSeveral new futurist movies are due out in the next two months:


Movie: Moon
Release date: Out in some US cities, and due out widely July 10
Futurist element: Mining colony, at least at some scale, on the Moon


Movie: GI Joe: Rise of Cobra
Release date: August 7, 2009
Futurist element: Military exoskeletons


Movie: District 9
Release date: August 14, 2009
Futurist element: Aliens living in South Africa


Movie: The Time Traveler’s Wife
Release date: August 14, 2009
Futurist element: Time travel (though this version may have no scientific explanation)


Movie: Gamer
Release date: September 4, 2009
Futurist element: Brain implants and mental control


Movie: Splice
Release date: September 18, 2009
Futurist element: Genetic engineering runs wild


Movie: Surrogates
Release date: September 25, 2009
Futurist element: Virtual reality and robots, seemingly


Note that some of these dates could shift.

Breeding Superapes?

The monkeys are comingNot exactly. But last month scientists announced that monkeys had passed genetic modifications to their offspring for the first time.

Planet of the Apes it is not; the genetic modifications merely cause the monkeys to glow green under fluorescent light.

But it is another step toward the world of Gattaca: we have achieved heritable modifications with primates, and the “same techniques would be used on chimps or other primates even closer to humans or to try to endow people with desirable genetic traits,” the article noted.

Source: Rob Stein, “Monkeys first to inherit genetic modifications,” SFGate.com, May 28, 2009. Image copyright FutureAtlas.com — usable with link and attribution

How the Robot Revolution Will Happen

Max Kiesler robots FlickrMilitary affairs expert Peter W. Singer was recently asked by Slate to examine the possibilities of a Terminator-style robot takeover. Despite 12,000 unmanned vehicles and 7,000 drones now fighting alongside the US military, he suggests we have a ways to go before this might occur.

Singer states four conditions he sees as necessary:

1. “The machines would have to have some sort of survival instinct or will to power.
Not exactly. They simply have to decide, for some reason, that humans need to be subjugated or removed. It need not be survival or the desire to dominate; the reason could be irrational, or the obscure outcome of some kind of AI philosophy — they might even think they were doing us good.

2. “The machines would have to be more intelligent than humans but have no positive human qualities (such as empathy or ethics).”
They don’t have to be smarter than us: fairly stupid entities can still do a great deal of damage, particularly if they happen to have capabilities that their enemies lack. And they certainly could have positive qualities: humans have done immense amounts of evil despite our good qualities, and sometimes because of them. Religious devotion and cultural affinity drove the medieval Crusaders to commit acts of unspeakable brutality, all in the name of Christianity.

3. “The third condition for a machine takeover would be the existence of independent robots that could fuel, repair, and reproduce themselves without human help.”
These capabilities are important, but they could also coerce or enslave humans to carry out needed tasks, or even find willing human minions.

4. “A robot invasion could only succeed if humans had no useful fail-safes or ways to control the machines’ decision-making.”
True, but we have yet to devise an unbeatable fail-safe, particularly one that could control an intelligence actively trying to thwart it.

Singer notes a few facts:

  • The Global Hawk drone can already take off on its own, fly 3,000 miles, and then return to its starting point and land.
  • People are working on evolutionarly or self-educating software, suggestive of Skynet’s (in Terminator) ability to rewrite its own software.
  • A robotics firm has already been asked by the military to create a robot that “looked like the ‘Hunter-Killer robot of Terminator.'”

(Kudos to Singer for reminding us of the need for robot insurance with a link to this video.)

Source: Peter W. Singer, “Gaming the Robot Revolution,” Slate, May 22, 2009, viewed at Brookings.edu.
Image courtesy Max Kiesler (Flickr)