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    Written by Kevin Arthur in San Jose, CA. Contents copyright 2005-2009.

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    « Graphing the debates (live!) | Main | The New Nuclear Danger »

    Wednesday, October 01, 2008

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    Eliezer Kurzweil

    I just got this book recently and am on about page 70. I am probably not going to finish it. This book is EXTREMELY disappointing for anyone interested in ideas about coming technology. I definitely made a mistake in buying this book.

    The only reason I write this comment is to warn anyone interested in learning something new about technology, artificial intelligence, philosophy, the singularity, or just man's place in the universe as we acquire new technologies.

    If you are actually interested in any of the ideas presented in this book you will learn way more by simply reading the Wikipedia entries about them. Don't worry if you think you might be missing out on the humor--this is intellectual vapidity masquerading as humor.

    As soon as an issue becomes at all intellectually complex he evades it with a poor attempt of humor.

    He begins by talking about truth. Interesting, I thought, I might learn something. Hah! What a fool I was to think that. In the book we see him adopt views about the nature of consciousness because he likes the name of them. OK, maybe chalk that up to irony. As for truth, he checks Wikipedia for the definition(s) of truth and adopts the definition of the philosophical genius Saul Kripke. Why? Because Kripke, like the author, is from Omaha. We never get an explanation of what Kripke's actual definition is--only that it solves the liar paradox, something Dooling finds congenial for reasons he jokes about. Of course, he's not actually interested in an idea other than for the purpose of making a joke. This would be OK!--if it were at all funny. This is like a Dave Barry book about technology that does not realize that it's not actually funny. In fact, I learn from Dave Barry books because he at least has a unique take on things instead of simply recycling ideas over and over again. I did not come across one idea that you couldn't find all over the place.

    I was hesitant to buy this book because I wondered if it would say anything new about subjects like AI and the singularity, stuff I am really interested in, although I am by no means an expert. I should have realized.

    I wish I could have read this review before I bought the book--it would have saved me some time and money. Read Wikipedia. Even if you are a totally newbie, don't read this. Definitely don't read this crap if you haven't read Ray Kurzweil's books. Read Radical Evolution. Read the blogs Overcoming Bias or Accelerating Future. I swear I'm not a hater, but man, I hate this book. I'm not joking when I say this: I think I now understand what it means to call a writer a hack; Rapture of the Geeks is the work of the hack. From the title on down.

    Kevin Arthur

    Eliezer -- thanks for your review. I just picked up the book from the library so I'll probably post more about the book once I've read it.

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