Back in the 18th century, Benjamin Franklin had a hard time
convincing his friends that the mild electrical currents produced in his
lab were identical in their essence to the thundering lightning that
struck in the wild. The difference in scale between his artificially
produced microsparks and the sky-splitting, tree-shattering, monstrous
bolts generated in the heavens was only part of the problem. Primarily,
observers found it unnatural that Franklin could re-create nature, as he
claimed.
Today, Tom Ray has trouble convincing his colleagues that the evolution
he has synthesized in his lab is identical in essence to the evolution
shaping the animals and plants in nature. The difference in time scale
between the few hours his world has evolved and the billions of years
wild nature has evolved is only part of the problem. Primarily, skeptics
find it unnatural that Ray can re-create such an intangible and natural
process as he claims.
Two hundred years after Franklin, artificially generated
lightning -- tamed, measured, and piped through wires into buildings and
tools -- is the primary organizing force in our society, particularly our
digital society. Two hundred years from now, artificial
adaptation -- tamed, measured and piped into every type of mechanical
apparatus we have -- will become the central organizing force in our
society.
No computer scientist has yet synthesized an artificial intelligence -- as
desirable and immensely powerful and life-changing as that would be. Nor
has any biochemist created an artificial life. But evolution captured,
as Ray and others have done, and re-created on demand, is now seen by
many technicians as the subtle spark that can create both our dreams of
artificial life and artificial intelligence, unleashing their awesome
potential. We can grow rather than make them.
We have built machines as complicated as is possible with unassisted
engineering. The kind of projects we now have on the drawing
boards -- software programs reckoned in tens of millions of lines of code,
communication systems spanning the planet, factories that must adapt to
rapidly shifting global buying habits and retool in days, cheap Robbie
the Robots -- all demand a degree of complexity that only evolution can
coordinate.
Because it is slow, invisible, and diffuse, evolution has the air of a
hardly believable ghost in this fast-paced, in-your-face world of
humanmade machines. But I prefer to think of evolution as a natural
technology that is easily moved into computer code. It is this
supercompatibility between evolution and computers that will propel
artificial evolution into our digital lives.
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