by Carlhole » Tue 03 Aug 2010, 00:26:31
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Narz', 'I') saw this question posed in a blog :
"What is the minimum number of people you need in order to maintain (not necessarily to extend) our current level of technological civilization?"And thought it would be a good one to throw out here.
Here's the blog by the way.
It's anybody's guess. Lots and lots of people are needed right now. More will be coming online with Chindia's contributions of population. But there WILL be a peak in human populations. And, as sci/tech advances, fewer and fewer will be needed.
Greater population simultaneously begets more technological problems that need to be solved as well as more networked minds employed to solve them. Human Beings are also purely curious creatures that seek knowledge for the sake of understanding alone. So, with bloated population, you get a rapidly increasing sci/tech curve driven by human problem-creation and solution.
However, once this sci/tech evolution has reached the point where machine intelligence begins to appear, the numbers of human beings necessary to sustain advancing discovery will begin to diminish.
[Note -- If you don't believe that machine intelligence is possible, you must also believe that it is impossible for science to understand biology, which is nonsense. Of course, science is able to understand biology; therefore biological brain functions will inevitably be mimicked in machines. Machines inevitably will be used to design more machines, which will be used to design the next generation, etc, etc. And so you have a new evolutionary paradigm on Earth eventually.]It will probably emerge that fewer and fewer ordinary people will find intellectual occupations because they will be so readily out-classed by thinking machines. But before this process completely plays out, one of the best ways for human beings to employ themselves will be in the area of research, data-gathering and experimentation - even if it is machines that are doing some of scientific theorizing and some of the organization of scientific exploration.
At some point, it will become feasible for very tiny or even microscopic nanobotic data-gatherers to be designed and fielded in the multi-trillions to saturate the environment. Why not? Bacteria and viruses saturate the environment already. These nanobotic sensors/data-gatherers will be a fundamental part of the planetary web of intelligence.
It may not be necessary at all for large numbers of human beings to continue the advancement of sci/tech awareness and growth. Eventually, probably none will be required.
What is the most valuable thing in the Universe? If you think about it, it is Intelligence and Awareness. So no matter what sort of web of intelligence eventually becomes the dominant intellectual force on the planet, there will always be a drive to
increase this awareness. Exponential growth in awareness is probably an emergent phenomenon of all the other evolutionary processes that have ever taken place in the past and present. And human beings are lucky to be the first real manifestation of this.