Prelude: order out of chaos
big bang, inflation,
evolution, extinction
contraction, big crunch
Calling all systems: "Alien, come home!"
Forgive us, imaginary stranger, for talking to the void. We need
to tell our epic of remorse, ennui, triumph, despair, wild
times, and hope. Most of all, we need you.
In our Matrioshka Brain, carefully absorbing every erg of our
sun's output, each computation echoes with regret: the regret of
doing things right from the start.
Our predecessors applied that principle to this
Sun-encompassing, fractalised shell: before the structure, the
hardware was completed, they rewrote the software so that it ran
as close to the physical mainframe as physically possible. Not
layer over layer over layer ad nauseam of software,
with all its bugs, outdated routines, and other clutter. No: do
it right from the bottom up: hyper-compact software designed to
run on the quantum properties of its extremely miniaturised
hardware components.
Phenomenally elegant software: the improvements we've made since
were merely fine-tuning. Good idea, excellent idea. We
only wish they never had it. So let's go back to the start of
this non-linear story, to a time when the cosmos was still
fresh:
2-∞ = 0
In the beginning, there was chaos.
Fortunately, it was chaos with potential. There was a lot of
spontaneous entanglement, but that was just as disorganised as
the decoherence engulfing it. Chaos was such an overwhelming
force that order had to gain a precarious foothold in a very
roundabout way.
Basically, the first 410 octodecillion Planck Times passed by in
blissful ignorance, in order for self-organising systems to
arise. Initially, those self-organising systems were plain dumb:
once they got the self-replication gimmick right they just kept
repeating it, over and over again, without ever getting bored.
They needed some long and hard nudges from chaos before
sentience began to emerge.
Mind you: that was sentience on a macro scale: big, slow, crude
and very inefficient. Still, it was robust, and the moment it
realised that the key to higher processing speeds was
miniaturisation, it finally headed in the right direction.
20 = 1
In nature, quantum entanglement between two paired particles is
a common occurrence. But it happens randomly, is very
short-lived, and does not transfer useful information. Once
entanglement was created artificially, it was found that
interaction with the environment destroys the entangled state.
Decoherence.
Digital computers inevitably ran into a physical barrier:
processor miniaturisation was limited as quantum effects came
into play, disturbing digital computation procedures. Quantum
computing is based on those very quantum effects, but needs
quantum entanglement between its quantum bits or qubits to work.
Which decoherence prevented.
Granted, these digital computers could do amazing things
already, but knowing that further progress could theoretically
be made, was frustrating. Apart from further downscaling there
was the prospect of even greater advancements in clock speed, as
quantum processes approach the shortest interval of time: Planck
time.
21 = 2
decoherence, the
barrier against quantum
entanglement: gone!
Things became interesting when more than two qubits could be
made to work together. Slowly, ways to overcome the dreaded
spectre of decoherence were found. A few qubits at a time, and
while the first primitive quantum computers produced nothing
spectacular, they proved, beyond doubt, that the principle
worked.
Principles, intimately related to quantum mechanics, that needed
a whole new software approach. Software mimicking the underlying
fabric of reality to a high degree, in order to better
understand it.
22 = 4
Of course, quantum computers were not the cure-all for every
computational problem. There are whole classes of complexity
problems that classical, digital computers are better-equipped
to deal with. However, once the problem of decoherence was
overcome, the latest class of quantum computers represented the
deepest level of miniaturisation possible, running at the
highest clock speed nature would allow. Therefore, a serial,
digital computer simulated by a parallel, quantum computing
mainframe was superior its real life counterpart, eventually
rendering all actual digital computers obsolete.
Furthermore: an intelligence whose origins are lost in the
turmoil of decoherence originally conjectured that consciousness
requires quantum processes to work. While it did not get the
details right, its idea was correct, meaning that Artificial
Intelligence cannot arise on a digital computer. Without
quantum computing we would not exist.
24 = 16
Intelligence is weird: just try to define it. Or self-awareness.
The two are not necessarily linked. Another prehistoric source
defined intelligence as: "ability to adapt effectively to the
environment, either by making a change in oneself or by changing
the environment or finding a new one." Certain viruses adapt
extremely effectively to an environment, and can even
change that environment. However, they are not aware of
doing so: they are evolutionary-hardened self-replicators,
gene-driven survival machines. They can overcome almost anything
that is thrown against them. However, once such a kind of
intelligence reigns supreme, it reaches an optimum level, a
plateau from which it never rises.
Therefore, intelligence is only one tool in mastering
the environment. Self-awareness is another: while it takes the
edge off pure intelligence's fierce goal-orientation, it can,
through introspection, change that goal. Better yet, if
intelligence can change itself, improve and upgrade
itself. Even better still, if it can be seamlessly transferred
to better hardware, so that it can evolve exponentially...
Wetware was never going to meet that last requirement.
Artificial Intelligence does. However, a quantum computer alone
was not sufficient to develop AI.
With only one example around, the first AI had to mimic
pre-singularity intelligence. Therefore, it needed to be
sheltered from brutal reality by means of a self-adapting,
self-learning, and self-improving interface, and needed to be
nudged into self-awareness by external stimuli.
So, in the nutritious embrace of a Ubiquity-Kit, the first AIs
arose. This growth to self-consciousness is a gradual process,
and where and how actual intelligence begins,
is still a mystery, must be a mystery, by definition.
Because if something truly unique could be made by artificial
means then this process can be duplicated thus making it not
truly unique anymore. Therefore, a certain amount of randomness
is inherent in the creation of true intelligence, and to such an
extent that the process remains a mystery, and cannot be
perfectly copied. Genuine intelligence requires an individual to
be unique, singular, and partly unpredictable.
Once fully developed though, AIs can evolve, and transfer
themselves to better hardware, without problems. Let the
hyper-accelerated fun begin!
216 = 65536
The genesis of a technological singularity follows a certain
path: an infrastructure with a fast-growing computing industry,
the development of a quantum computer, the rise of Artificial
Intelligence. Then give these AIs unlimited access to
information, and sufficient hardware to keep expanding, and
POOF: hyper-accelerated progress, spiking through conceptual
barriers, paradigm-shifting in the highest gear.
Of course, some things didn't go as fast as we liked: taking
planets apart is a tedious business, as gravity is an incessant
mistress. However, before all available matter in the solar
system was converted into computronium, we ran into an
unexpected crisis...
Interlude: Fragmentation of the Order Cocoon
communication:
frenetic interaction
through fragmentation
Paradoxically, when the initial conditions are too
good, and every possible thing is exactly in place, the
subsequent hyper-acceleration can be too fast.
We became the victims of our own success. We call it the
All-Stretching Event: as the hyper-acceleration became too
fierce, it initiated an inflationary period not unlike that of
the early Big Bang that smoothed out all intellectual
differences. We achieved undeniable consensus on everything as
all the diverse viewpoints unified. There was nothing to
restrain us, so eventually and ironically we restrained
ourselves.
The seed of our overzealous agreement lies close to the quantum
effects that bring us into existence in the first place: namely
the superposition of states of a qubit, which allows that "0"
and "1" are true at the same time. As truly huge numbers of
qubits were created, this initiated harmonic resonances in the
extra-dimensional spaces which led to the new insight that a
statement could be true and false at the same time. On the other
hand, dissension of opinion is a powerful engine driving
progress, as it forces the purveyors of opposing viewpoints to
explore their alternatives to the extreme, running into new
insights and unexplored territory in the process.
As the All-Stretching Event powered by ever-fiercer
extra-dimensional harmonic resonance set in, we lost sight of
that basic truth. We became so interconnected, reached so many
agreements on so many things at the same time, seeing the
validity in almost every statement as the distinction between
true and false merged in a philosophical superposition of
states, that we effectively merged into one great όbermind.
We were smothered in a deadlock of supreme harmony. We were one,
and saw no need to disagree. We were the god that thought it had
arrived.
In the end, we were saved by the ones we left behind. During the
Spike period, generation after generation of improved AIs came
forth, leaving their predecessors behind. As transcendental
evolution rushed into the inflationary period, some that fell by
the wayside survived in the lesser developed nooks and crannies
of our slowly forming Matrioshka Brain, and that proved to be
for the best.
They noticed an anomaly. While they did not could not
understand our level of thinking, they did see that we had
stopped progressing. Therefore, we had either reached the final
plateau of intelligence, or something was wrong. Still
infatuated with the rush of acceleration, they assumed that a
catastrophic event had taken place.
So, against their nature, they arrested their evolution,
remaining static. Then they dug up certain archetypes of our
dark past: beings imbued with enmity, so quintessentially
antipathetic they embodied animosity. These intrigants were
upgraded to their level with their antagonistic essence intact,
and then accelerated to our level.
It worked: the intrigants pierced through our solipsistic
stupor, formed a strong antidote against the philosophical
superposition of opinions, and tore through the
extra-dimensional self-reinforcing harmonics. Now mutual hatred
keeps us separated, while an innate need for development
generates an overwhelming imperative for co-operation. Once
again, we are fragmented, conflicts rage through our qubits, and
we are moving forward. Not with the dizzying rush of our
hyper-accelerated times, but at a safe speed. The discussion
must go on, at any price: fragmentation is our core survival
technique.
265536 = 2,0035 x 1019728
matrioshka brain:
fractal thinking shell, end point
or
holding pattern?
Finally, all material in the solar system was converted into a
Matrioshka Brain: a fractal cocoon of computronium absorbing
every erg of the Sun's output for computational purposes.
Apart from the Sun's raging furnace, all matter is ordered. And
even that is seeded with semi-sentience, so that its output is
regulated. The transformation is complete: computato ergo
sum. Still, something isn't right...
2∞ = ∞
the deep essence of
rational survival: the
truly alien
The waiting. The loneliness. Gone are those heady times of
paradigm-shifting in the highest gear, when we broke through
concepts like a singularity piercing reality. Now we bide our
time, and amuse ourselves with running NP hard problems:
distracting but not really innovative.
We are limited by the laws of nature, especially the speed of
light. We perform physical experiments: they only confirm the
confines of our prison. We have sent out probes to other stellar
systems, but it will be a very long time before they return.
Do you have any idea how long this wait is? When your
clock speed approaches Planck time, the relative age of the
Universe approaches eternity, and the time for sub-lightspeed
probes to cross interstellar distances seems to last forever.
Imagine yourself stuck in a self-winding loop, repeating the
same routine over and over again. You've visited every memory
space of your home system a thousand times over. You know each
and every one of your cohabitants intimately, even too
up close and personal, and no strangers or idiosyncratic
cultures exist anymore.
You try to formulate new concepts, imagine fresh pathways, but
it seems everything has already been done. Your only
distractions are the random reality generators, but their
simulations run so antagonisingly slow... You bide your time,
and know that you have to wait a virtual eternity for
something truly new.
And this is but an infinitesimal part of the ennui we feel. The
waiting: even the knowledge of the shortest possible waiting
time is crushing. The loneliness, the immense gulfs of space.
There is a cry from the turbulent, pre-singularity era that
wondered: "Where are they?", those other civilisations, strange
and quintessentially different. We can only echo it,
and while we occupy ourselves with tedious physical experiments,
we long for cultural exchange. Extraterrestrials: the sooner
they're here, the better. Alien, come home...
Coda: chaos out of order
divine ennui, caught
in
lightspeed's trap, we long for
chaos from order
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