Is Artificial Intelligence the end of jobs or a new beginning?
A valid concern is that dependence on AI may cause us to forfeit human creativity
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is advancing so rapidly that even its
developers are being caught off guard. Google co-founder Sergey Brin
said in Davos, Switzerland, in January that it “touches every single one
of our main projects, ranging from search to photos to ads … everything
we do … it definitely surprised me, even though I was sitting right
there.”
The long-promised AI, the stuff we’ve seen in science
fiction, is coming and we need to be prepared. Today, AI is powering
voice assistants such as Google Home, Amazon Alexa and Apple Siri,
allowing them to have increasingly natural conversations with us and
manage our lights, order food and schedule meetings. Businesses are
infusing AI into their products to analyse the vast amounts of data and
improve decision-making. In a decade or two, we will have robotic
assistants that remind us of Rosie from “The Jetsons” and R2-D2 of “Star
Wars.”
This has profound implications for how we live and work,
for better and worse. AI is going to become our guide and companion —
and take millions of jobs away from people. We can deny this is
happening, be angry or simply ignore it. But if we do, we will be the
losers. As I discussed in my new book, “Driver in the Driverless Car,”
technology is now advancing on an exponential curve and making science
fiction a reality. We can’t stop it. All we can do is to understand it
and use it to better ourselves — and humanity.
Rosie and R2-D2 may
be on their way but AI is still very limited in its capability, and
will be for a long time. The voice assistants are examples of what
technologists call narrow AI: systems that are useful, can interact with
humans and bear some of the hallmarks of intelligence — but would never
be mistaken for a human. They can, however, do a better job on a very
specific range of tasks than humans can. I couldn’t, for example, recall
the winning and losing pitcher in every baseball game of the major
leagues from the previous night.
Narrow-AI systems are much better
than humans at accessing information stored in complex databases, but
their capabilities exclude creative thought. If you asked Siri to find
the perfect gift for your mother for Valentine’s Day, she might make a
snarky comment but couldn’t venture an educated guess. If you asked her
to write your term paper on the Napoleonic Wars, she couldn’t help. That
is where the human element comes in and where the opportunities are for
us to benefit from AI — and stay employed.
In his book “Deep
Thinking: Where Machine Intelligence Ends and Human Creativity Begins,”
chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov tells of his shock and anger at being
defeated by IBM’s Deep Blue supercomputer in 1997. He acknowledges that
he is a sore loser but was clearly traumatised by having a machine
outsmart him. He was aware of the evolution of the technology but never
believed it would beat him at his own game. After coming to grips with
his defeat, 20 years later, he says fail-safes are required … but so is
courage.
Kasparov wrote: “When I sat across from Deep Blue twenty
years ago I sensed something new, something unsettling. Perhaps you will
experience a similar feeling the first time you ride in a driverless
car, or the first time your new computer boss issues an order at work.
We must face these fears in order to get the most out of our technology
and to get the most out of ourselves. Intelligent machines will continue
that process, taking over the more menial aspects of cognition and
elevating our mental lives toward creativity, curiosity, beauty, and
joy. These are what truly make us human, not any particular activity or
skill like swinging a hammer — or even playing chess.”
In other words, we better get used to it and ride the wave.
Human
superiority over animals is based on our ability to create and use
tools. The mental capacity to make things that improved our chances of
survival led to a natural selection of better toolmakers and tool users.
Nearly everything a human does involve technology. For adding numbers,
we used abacuses and mechanical calculators and now spreadsheets. To
improve our memory, we wrote on stones, parchment and paper, and now
have disk drives and cloud storage.
AI is the next step in improving our cognitive functions and decision-making.
Think
about it: When was the last time you tried memorizing your calendar or
Rolodex or used a printed map? Just as we instinctively do everything on
our smartphones, we will rely on AI. We may have forfeited skills such
as the ability to add up the price of our groceries but we are smarter
and more productive. With the help of Google and Wikipedia, we can be
experts on any topic, and these don’t make us any dumber than
encyclopedias, phone books and librarians did.
A valid concern is
that dependence on AI may cause us to forfeit human creativity. As
Kasparov observes, the chess games on our smartphones are many times
more powerful than the supercomputers that defeated him, yet this didn’t
cause human chess players to become less capable — the opposite
happened. There are now stronger chess players all over the world, and
the game is played in a better way.
As Kasparov explains: “It used
to be that young players might acquire the style of their early
coaches. If you worked with a coach who preferred sharp openings and
speculative attacking play himself, it would influence his pupils to
play similarly. … What happens when the early influential coach is a
computer? The machine doesn’t care about style or patterns or hundreds
of years of established theory. It counts up the values of the chess
pieces, analyses a few billion moves, and counts them up again. It is
entirely free of prejudice and doctrine. … The heavy use of computers
for practice and analysis has contributed to the development of a
generation of players who are almost as free of dogma as the machines
with which they train.”
Perhaps this is the greatest benefit that
AI will bring — humanity can be free of dogma and historical bias; it
can do more intelligent decision-making. And instead of doing repetitive
data analysis and number crunching, human workers can focus on
enhancing their knowledge and being more creative.
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