By Dr. Vivek Gupta, Founder & CEO · May 2023
Human brain is a primitive organ.
We take significant pride in our brains, a marvel of intricate complexity that has fueled every intellectual stride from the magnificence of Shakespearean sonnets to the brilliance of the Theory of Relativity. Yet, in the grand scheme of cognitive evolution, it's startlingly primitive.
I have been discussing this argument for sometime but time has come now to really truly understand limitations of us as a "biological machine". Human brains are extremely energy efficient where each brain is 20W machine capable of running computations and generate cheaply computed imperfect answers.
We are an outdated species on intelligence. So how do we measure up against the burgeoning titans of artificial intelligence? I will take a very simple computation to explain the difference between the two.
According to some estimates about ~117 Bn humans have ever lived on earth. Each human brain takes about 25 years of training to mature so cumulatively, we have trained our brain 117x25=2925 Bn years. Yet, despite this colossal investment in time, a human newborn still needs a good 25 years of learning and life experience under its belt to reach its intellectual potential. Drop a kid in the jungle with no education, and the best-case scenario is Tarzan, not Tesla.
On the flip side, once an artificial brain, or AI, gets its training wheels off, it can be cloned faster than you can say "robot apocalypse." This kind of speed simply isn't in our human repertoire. Imagine popping out 10 million AI-powered robots, like those slick numbers from Boston Dynamics, all flexing their computational muscles from the get-go.
We simply can't pass on knowledge to a newborn at the same breakneck speed as our robot counterparts. This difference alone shows that biological brains are extremely limited in capacity and are not as efficient and fast as a robotic brain has. This significant difference in our capacities will render us outdated as the leading species very soon.
So, what are the repercussions of this shift? For starters, the potential for a vast cognitive gap between humans and artificial intelligence poses significant ethical, societal, and economic challenges. With the advent of AI capable of outperforming humans in many tasks, job displacement is a very real concern. Furthermore, the rapid proliferation of advanced AI could exacerbate societal inequality, with access to the most sophisticated AI technologies becoming another dividing line between the haves and the have-nots.
Moreover, as AI evolves, it will increasingly challenge our understanding of what it means to be human. How do we maintain our sense of self-worth and purpose in a world where machines can outperform us? And how do we navigate the ethical minefield of AI decision-making, particularly when it comes to life-or-death decisions in areas like healthcare or autonomous vehicles?
The challenges are manifold and complex, requiring thoughtful exploration and proactive policymaking. As a global community, we need to recognize that we are no longer the unrivaled paragons of cognitive prowess, and our inherent biological limitations could, in fact, relegate us to a lesser role in a world increasingly dominated by our own artificial creations. This sobering reality demands our attention and engagement, as we must navigate the transformative impacts of AI on our society, economy, and identity.