But once you get chemicals arranged in self-replicating bundles, you've entered an entirely new regime: evolution by natural selection. Suddenly there's a process of cumulative change. Suddenly there's LEARNING.
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Assuming agriculture was a prerequisite for industry, an analogy might be made with the relationship between agricultural and nomadic societies in history.
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I just bought James C. Scott's "Against the Grain," so be prepared for those analogies to flow soon :)https://www.amazon.com/Against-Grain-History-Earliest-States/dp/0300182910 …
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Following the idea that greatest evolutions are indeed learning steps, I’d go for information technology and internet as the germinal change before the knowledge society and AI. It’s undoubtedly the Internet the next on the list. AI will change everything again, but it goes after
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I have compiled content & formulated thoughts about this. Happy to have deeper 1:1 discussion. There are a few core techs that are paving the way for reconfiguration of economic order & trajactory for the next several decades.
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What if it already happened with...: - The printing press, which triggered a switch from oral to written word as the primary way of transmitting information and culture across time? - The Internet, which allows anyone to access and participate in global information and culture?
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My point is: why does the “next phase” depend on something non-human like AI?
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Basically are machines curious?
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