Leave your feedback Share Copy URL https://www.pbs.org/newshour/economy/ray-kurzweil-on-bringing-back Email Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Tumblr Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Ray Kurzweil on Bringing Back the Dead and a Viewer Question: When Is Paul Solman Going to Retire? Economy Jul 12, 2012 12:32 PM EDT We round out “Ray Kurzweil Online” with the third and final installment of our miniseries. Thursday’s outtake with Mr. Immortality: Does Kurzweil believe that an avatar of his dead father — created with artificial intelligence and a lifetime’s worth of data and mementos — is, well, his actual father, the guy who died when Ray was 22? This is a step beyond Kurzweil’s stated objective — to stave off death ad infinitum. This is bringing the dead back to life. But what form of life? What if a stranger administers the Turing Test and can’t tell if the avatar is human or pure software? Does that make the avatar a person? Would it in any sense be conscious? Would it be a man, a machine, or something else entirely? The documentary “Transcendent Man” explores Kurzweil’s quest to reincarnate his dad. We asked him how that quest influenced his goal of “immortality today.” Part one: Futurist Ray Kurzweil on Melding of Man and Machine Part two: Ray Kurzweil’s Immortality Cocktail Enough Ray Kurzweil for awhile, at least on this page. For those who crave more, you might check out his webpage. Name: John Weyrich Question: Why are you still working and at what age do you hope to retire? Paul Solman: Because I cherish my work and consider it a genuine privilege — both at the NewsHour and at Yale, where I teach. To quote two of my colleagues at school, both older than I: “I’ll keep stumbling in till I no longer can” and “I’ll die in the saddle.” Like them, I hope never to retire and won’t, so long as others continue to signal that I’m useful to them by continuing to pay me — or otherwise convince me I’m not wasting their time. By continuing to post questions to Making Sen$e, for example. This entry is cross-posted on the Rundown– NewsHour’s blog of news and insight. Follow @paulsolman We're not going anywhere. Stand up for truly independent, trusted news that you can count on! Donate now
We round out “Ray Kurzweil Online” with the third and final installment of our miniseries. Thursday’s outtake with Mr. Immortality: Does Kurzweil believe that an avatar of his dead father — created with artificial intelligence and a lifetime’s worth of data and mementos — is, well, his actual father, the guy who died when Ray was 22? This is a step beyond Kurzweil’s stated objective — to stave off death ad infinitum. This is bringing the dead back to life. But what form of life? What if a stranger administers the Turing Test and can’t tell if the avatar is human or pure software? Does that make the avatar a person? Would it in any sense be conscious? Would it be a man, a machine, or something else entirely? The documentary “Transcendent Man” explores Kurzweil’s quest to reincarnate his dad. We asked him how that quest influenced his goal of “immortality today.” Part one: Futurist Ray Kurzweil on Melding of Man and Machine Part two: Ray Kurzweil’s Immortality Cocktail Enough Ray Kurzweil for awhile, at least on this page. For those who crave more, you might check out his webpage. Name: John Weyrich Question: Why are you still working and at what age do you hope to retire? Paul Solman: Because I cherish my work and consider it a genuine privilege — both at the NewsHour and at Yale, where I teach. To quote two of my colleagues at school, both older than I: “I’ll keep stumbling in till I no longer can” and “I’ll die in the saddle.” Like them, I hope never to retire and won’t, so long as others continue to signal that I’m useful to them by continuing to pay me — or otherwise convince me I’m not wasting their time. By continuing to post questions to Making Sen$e, for example. This entry is cross-posted on the Rundown– NewsHour’s blog of news and insight. Follow @paulsolman We're not going anywhere. Stand up for truly independent, trusted news that you can count on! Donate now