The rise of AI creating "superhuman" people is a major topic of concern in "Genesis," published Tuesday by Little, Brown and Company. It's the "last book" from Kissinger, according to the publisher's parent company Hachette. Kissinger was a longtime U.S. diplomat and strategist who died last year at age 100.
Kissinger's co-authors, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and longtime Microsoft senior executive Craig Mundie, finished the combined work after Kissinger's death, and The Washington Times has obtained an advance copy. Mr. Schmidt and Mr. Mundie wrote they were among the last people to speak with Kissinger and sought to honor his dying request to finish the manuscript.
The authors also raise the prospect of a society that chooses to create a hereditary genetic line of people specifically designed to work better with forthcoming AI tools. The authors describe such redesigning as undesirable, with the potential to cause "the human race to split into multiple lines, some infinitely more powerful than others."
"Altering the genetic code of some humans to become superhuman carries with it other moral and evolutionary risks," the authors write. "If AI is responsible for the augmentation of human mental capacity, it could create in humanity a simultaneous biological and psychological reliance on 'foreign' intelligence."
Such a physical and intellectual dependence may create new challenges to separate man from the machines, the authors warn. As a result, designers and engineers should try to make the machines more human, rather than make humans more like machines.
But that raises a new problem: choosing which humans to make the machines follow in a diverse and divided world.
"No single culture should expect to dictate to another the morality of the intellects on which it would be relying," the authors wrote. "So, for each country, machines would have to learn different rules, formal and informal, moral, legal, and religious, as well as, ideally, different rules for each user and, within baseline constraints, for every conceivable inquiry, task, situation, and context."
The authors say society can expect technical difficulties, but those difficulties will pale in comparison with designing machines to follow a moral code, as the authors said they do not believe good and evil are self-evident concepts.
Kissinger, Mr. Schmidt and Mr. Mundie urged greater attention to aligning machines with human values. The trio said they would prefer that no artificial general intelligence surpassing humanity's intellect is allowed to emerge unless it is properly aligned with the human species.
The authors said they are rooting for humanity's survival and hope people will figure it out, but that the task will not be easy.
"We wish success to our species' gigantic project, but just as we cannot count on tactical human control in the longer-term project of coevolution, we also cannot rely solely on the supposition that machines will tame themselves," the authors wrote. "Training an AI to understand us and then sitting back and hoping that it respects us is not a strategy that seems either safe or likely to succeed."
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