Interesting thoughts ITT.
I hadn't considered the christian parallels --
The Dark Ages : Doomsday ::
Information Age : Singularity ?
Or that both Christians and the Transhumanist camp are trying to escape Original Sin (in some sense).
As for the speed of the singularity --
but as far as I know, current guess as to what the Singularity is going to be is "Seed AI" (that is AI able to fix and improve itself, so it would quickly surpass human intelligence). it is my strong opinion that this guess is most probably going to be entirely wrong because of Fooled by Randomness and Black Swans and our total inability to predict fuck all espeically if it's going to be based on technology that is based on other technology (etc) that won't exist for a few decades or so.
but even then, if it's going to be Seed AI, Science Fiction (like the Matrix, and such) tells me it might just as well go horribly wrong as right.
if anything, the Black Swan should stand as a lesson that the Singularity is going to be hard to classify as "good" or "bad".
If Science Fiction makes us expect the worst, then the Black Swan would hint that change is coming on an unexpected angle. We're culturally primed for a fight against the robots, some archetypal discord still humming from the Industrial Revolution... but I don't think we're in any way prepared for the technology of 2020.
i see the Singularity (if it's going to happen and even if it's not) more as something that's a sign of the Strange Times, i mean, it does seem that technology and information is moving at a faster and faster pace, right? if it's going to coalesce into something .. singular, i don't know, but things do seem to be getting more strange, faster. or do you think that ideas like this are more of a kind of relativism / narrative fallacy thing, that in fact things aren't really moving faster, but they seem to be moving faster and have always seemed to be moving faster?
I think things
are moving faster, and as those changes become broader, we'll need a word to describe the disorienting pace at which technology is changing our day-to-day lives. Singularity is that word, but I don't think we'll ever really reach the singularity. It'll remain something we're on the cusp of. Like the Age of Aquarius, dig?
The rate of technological advancement will hit a ceiling because it takes time for humans to adapt to new technology. People weren't plugged into their ipods and wireless internet the day it was invented - it took years for society to weave these things into the collective tapestry.
Likewise until machines start inventing new tech, technology will only advance as fast as the humans (and bureaucracy) involved with those creations.