I think we still know so little about what
it means to be human that the confidence with
which we think we can upload ourselves to
silicon or recreate ourselves with algorithms
is shocking to me.
The only ones out there who think they know
what human consciousness is are computer engineers.
If you talk to actual brain researchers and
neuroscientists, they say, we're nowhere close.
We don't even know for sure what goes on in
a single square centimeter of soil.
We're still trying to teach agriculture companies
that the soil is alive, that it's not just
dirt that you can put chemicals on.
It's a living matrix.
If we don't even know what a single centimeter
of soil is, how do we know what the human
brain is?
We don't.
We don't know what the source of consciousness
is.
We don't know where we come from.
We don't even know if there's a meaning to
this universe or not.
Yet, we think that we can make a simulation
that's as valid as this?
Every simulation we make misses something.
Think about the difference between being in
a jazz club and listening to a great CD.
There's a difference, you know.
And some of those differences, we understand,
and some of them, we don't.
So when I see people rushing off to upload
consciousness to a chip, it feels more like
escape from humanity than it is a journey
forward.
And I get it.
Life is scary.
I mean, women, real-life women, are scary.
You know, the people are scary.
The moisture is scary.
Death is scary.
Babies are scary.
Other people who don't speak the same language
or have the same customs, they're scary.
All sorts of stuff is scary.
And I understand the idea of this kind of
having a Sim City perfected simulation that
I can go into and not have to worry about
all that stuff I don't know, where everything
is discrete, everything is a yes/no, this/that,
all the choices have been made.
There's a certain attractiveness to that,
but that's dead.
It's not alive.
There's no wonder.
There's no awe.
There's nothing strange and liminal and ambiguous
about it.
I was on a panel with a famous transhumanist,
and he was arguing that it's time that human
beings come to accept that we will have to
pass the torch of evolution to our digital
successors.
And that once computers have the singularity
and they're really thinking and better than
us, then we should really only stick around
as long as the computers need us, you know,
to keep the lights on and oil their little
circuits or whatever we have to do.
And then, after that, fade into oblivion.
And I said, hey, no, wait a minute.
Human beings are still special.
We're weird.
We're quirky.
We've got David Lynch movies and weird yoga
positions and stuff we don't understand, and
we're ambiguous and weird and quirky.
You know, we deserve a place in the digital
future.
And he said, oh, Rushkoff, you're just saying
that because you're human.
As if it's hubris, right?
Oh, I'm just defending my little team.
And that's where I got the idea, all right,
fine, I'm a human.
I'm on Team Human.
And it's not Team Human against the algorithms
or against anything other than those who want
to get rid of the humans.
I think humans deserve a place.
Certainly, until we understand what it is
we are, we shouldn't get rid of us.
And as far as I'm concerned, we're cool.
We're still weird and funny and wonderful.
And yeah, we destroyed the environment.
We did really nasty things.
But I would argue we do those things when
we're less than human.
We do those things when we can dehumanize
others.
You can't have slaves if you're thinking of
those as people.
You can only have slaves if you're thinking
of them as something other than people.
And this desire to transcend the human, I
feel like it's excusing a whole lot of behaviors.
It's excusing a whole lot of dehumanization.
It makes it easier to send kids into caves
to get rare earth metals for your phone.
It makes it easier to create toxic waste everywhere.
It makes it easier for you to think of the
human timeline as having a beginning, middle,
and an end, because we're going to transcend
it.
And that's a sick Western, neoliberal, growth-based,
apocalyptic myth that could very well end
our species.
But really, I would say to the detriment of
our little universe.
