Elon Musk

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Elon Musk in 2015

Elon Musk is a entrepreneur known for many projects including co-founding Paypal with Peter Thiel. He is also known for his current projects; Tesla Motors, SolarCity, OpenAI,SpaceX and Neuralink.

According to David Pearce, in 2015 Musk was ambivalent towards the idea of transhumanism. [1] When however in June 2016 he started advocating neural enhancement, it's fair to describe him as a de facto transhumanist. [2] He's also a transhumanist presentist. [3]

“By far you have more power, more capability, than the President of the United States had 30 years ago. If you have an Internet link you have an article of wisdom, you can communicate to millions of people, you can communicate to the rest of Earth instantly. I mean, these are magical powers that didn’t exist, not that long ago. So everyone is already superhuman, and a cyborg,” says Musk [at 33:56].

In 2016 he was invited to join Trump's economic advisory team. [4]

Philosophy[править]

Musk's transhumanist tendencies appear to stem from a mixture of pragmatism and existential fear. Most of his post-PayPal ventures have focused on reducing the risks humans pose to themselves and the planet(s) we live on. Tesla and SolarCity became Musk projects out of his desire to reduce human reliance on polluting fossil fuels, SpaceX came out of a desire to have a "Plan B" in case Earth could no longer sustain humans by pushing humanity out into the solar system, and OpenAI came out of Musk's fears that the first creators of an Artificial General Intelligence might not use it in a way that benefits humanity. Neuralink doesn't fully fit this pattern, but it's probably Musk sees this as levelling the playing field with a future AI, or allowing eventual full consciousness transferrence onto digital media, effectively making the human species significantly more resilient.

Techno conservatism[править]

Controversially, at the end of 2015, Musk was nominated "Luddite of the year" by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation for advocacy around AI risk. [5]

Asked what he thought of Larry Page's trying to cure death also in 2015, he responded with scepticism: [6]

"I'm not actually a huge proponent of longevity," Musk replied. "I do think that having a good life for longer is better — we want to address things that can happen to you when you're old, like dementia, that's important — but I don't know, I definitely don't want to live forever."

"How many years do you want to live?" Sorkin pressed. "About 100 good ones," Musk replied. "100 good ones, or 100 more good ones? You're 44."

"100 good ones total," Musk said. "Well, maybe a little bit longer."

See also[править]

Not to be confused with parody Twitter account Bored Elon Musk

External links[править]

References[править]