The Mind of James Donahue Oracle |
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Creating An Artificial
Replica Of Human Collective Library By James Donahue June 2005 Without admitting that
such a natural database of knowledge exists, a team of computer scientists at The computer will be
appropriately called the “oracle” because it will be designed to instantly answer questions about any subject
on demand. Such a processor will
consist almost entirely of vast numbers of question-and-answer pairs, said Chris Dwyer, assistant professor of electrical
and computer engineering. It will eliminate the current practice of running programs, inputting data and performing computations. To assist in making such
a computer possible, the team is looking at using DNA molecules to assemble vast numbers of electronic circuits simultaneously.
“DNA self-assembly holds the promise of automatically producing trillions of electronic devices,” Dwyer said.
“That’s why we can think about computing every solution to some kinds of problems.” He said that as the
computer is being assembled, the answers will be built right in. All of this is still
just theory, but the Dwyer said the problems
would include plotting efficient shipping routes and even solving general problems, storing and retrieving data in the shortest
possible time. They also would involve coaxing strands of DNA into building practical electronic circuits. The team is hoping to
eventually replace the silicon chip with the DNA molecule, which is believed to offer a wider range of flexibility and speed
in future computer technology, according to a paper published in Computer Magazine by Dwyer, Alvin Lebeck, and Daniel Sorin,
associate professors with Dwyer at Duke. Lebeck said the silicon
chip lacks the capacity to store as much information as would be needed to create an oracle computer. The DNA concept, still
in its infancy, is laden with unresolved challenges but offers exciting new possibilities, he said. Strangely, utilizing
the DNA is suggestive of imitating the human brain in electronic computer technology. That, in itself, means that humans are
rushing closer and closer to either building an electronic brain that may even advance the capacity of a human, or putting
the human into the machine. While wildly suggestive
of a science fiction horror story, the concept of thinking self-replicating machines that take over the world may be closer
to reality than anybody might have thought. That our planet is overheating
and quickly running out of the natural resources necessary to sustain human life in its present form, may force science to
turn to putting human brains into machines as a way of sustaining life in the future. The idea might work if
we are given enough time, but Psychic Aaron C. Donahue foresees a partly developed computer in the future because time runs
out. Consequently, he said he is getting visions of people trapped in incomplete machines that continue to run indefinitely,
with nobody left to turn them off. The people trapped in
such machines are living in a hellish world of projected visions of a world that once was. They cannot escape. They cannot
use the machine to move about. They cannot die. They are like broken records that continue to play the old recordings over
and over again. Donahue warns us not
to chose this path when it is offered. Death is the better choice, even though our fate will be agonizing to say the least.
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