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Kurzweil Speculates on Solar Energy, Health and Other Topics


Doris Kilbane

March 17, 2010

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Solar energy may be meeting only 1% of world energy needs today, but wait just 16 years. Then it will meet 100% of global energy needs, predicts inventor Ray Kurzweil, who forecast the worldwide interpersonal communications we know now as the World Wide Web. Kurzweil bases this and many other predictions on exponential computations and the widespread use of information technology.

“We’ve been making predictions and expectations about the future using linear computations, but information technology is happening exponentially. It makes a profound difference,” he says. Kurzweil repeatedly told a Vero Beach, Fla. audience, “It’s really amazing how predictable this (exponential computation) is. You really can predict where these technologies will be in (future) years.”

Doubters need only go back to the start of the Internet, notes Kurzweil. When it was used by only 1% of the population, people dismissed it, not realizing how soon it would become ubiquitous.

People may react similarly to his solar use forecast, he notes. However, since information technology is doubling every two years, our knowledge about and capability to utilize solar energy is “only eight doublings away from meeting 100% of our energy needs,” explains Kurzweil. Not only the U.S., but also countries like Germany, China, and Israel are actively pursuing solar energy systems.

Last fall Kurzweil discussed solar energy plans with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israeli President Shimon Peres at the Israeli Presidential Conference. As a result, Israel set a goal to have practical, clean, efficient substitute solar energy systems operating even more quickly—in 10 years, he says. No need to worry about running out of energy, Kurzweil added, solar light is 10,000 times greater than our need.

Kurzweil is the holder of 18 honorary doctorates, developer of omni font optical character recognition, flatbed scanners and speech-recognition systems, inventor of the first music synthesizer and founder of several companies including Kurzweil Technologies. He holds the National Medal of Technology award and is recipient of the MIT-Lemelson prize for innovation. An author of many books, his latest is “Transcend, Nine steps to living well forever.”

But his Florida speech was given as a futurist. Using exponential computation and charts, Kurzweil made predictions about health and longevity, the Medicare and Social Security programs, eyeglasses, global warming and much more.

CHANGING HUMAN SOFTWARE

Disease eradication or control will occur within our lifetime, he said, because medical scientists now use information technology to research disease activity. He told the audience of largely senior citizens but much younger people as well, about respirocytes—nano-engineered blood cells that have already cured diabetes in rats. Diabetes researchers have turned off a gene in animals that then lived 20% longer, he said. Cancer researchers, using information technology, now understand why cancer comes back. Chemotherapy not only kills the cancer cells, but also creates good conditions for growing the stem cells responsible for cancer metastasizing, says Kurzweil, comparing it to killing the worker bees but not the queen.

Pea-sized technological devices in Parkinson’s patients replace disease-destroyed cells with new ones, he added. “That is today. Take what we have today, and in 25 years it will be a billion times more powerful. We will reprogram these diseases if we can understand the mechanisms. We have tools to do it. I am very confident that in a decade or decade and a half, we will overcome these diseases or make us able to live with them.”

He often compares the human body to a computer. “We have outdated software running in our bodies,” says Kurzweil, explaining that our “fat receptors” were developed because maybe tomorrow our food-hunting trip would not successfully capture a wild bird or boar. “We have the means to change our outdated (human) software. We now have technology that can turn off a gene. New gene therapy can add new genes.”

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  • sforth
    2 years ago
    May 27, 2010

    Kurzweil is wrong again. A few quick calculations can show that what he is claiming is not possible without extreme damage to the environment. Kurzweil was wrong about the automobile industry and he is wrong about solar energy.

    Mr. Kurzweil doesn't seem to have anything reasonable or even feasible to contribute to discussions of future technology. Electronic Design perhaps shouldn't continue to promote individuals who seek to further their book promotions.

  • sforth
    2 years ago
    May 27, 2010

    Kurzweil is wrong again. A few quick calculations can show that what he is claiming is not possible without extreme damage to the environment. Kurzweil was wrong about the automobile industry and he is wrong about solar energy.

    Mr. Kurzweil doesn't seem to have anything reasonable or even feasible to contribute to discussions of future technology. Electronic Design perhaps shouldn't continue to promote individuals who seek to further their book promotions.

  • sforth
    2 years ago
    May 27, 2010

    Kurzweil is wrong again. A few quick calculations can show that what he is claiming is not possible without extreme damage to the environment. Kurzweil was wrong about the automobile industry and he is wrong about solar energy.

    Mr. Kurzweil doesn't seem to have anything reasonable or even feasible to contribute to discussions of future technology. Electronic Design perhaps shouldn't continue to promote individuals who seek to further their book promotions.

  • sforth
    2 years ago
    May 27, 2010

    Kurzweil is wrong again. A few quick calculations can show that what he is claiming is not possible without extreme damage to the environment. Kurzweil was wrong about the automobile industry and he is wrong about solar energy.

    Mr. Kurzweil doesn't seem to have anything reasonable or even feasible to contribute to discussions of future technology. Electronic Design perhaps shouldn't continue to promote individuals who seek to further their book promotions.

  • sforth
    2 years ago
    May 27, 2010

    Kurzweil is wrong again. A few quick calculations can show that what he is claiming is not possible without extreme damage to the environment. Kurzweil was wrong about the automobile industry and he is wrong about solar energy.

    Mr. Kurzweil doesn't seem to have anything reasonable or even feasible to contribute to discussions of future technology. Electronic Design perhaps shouldn't continue to promote individuals who seek to further their book promotions.

  • dtuite
    2 years ago
    Mar 22, 2010

    For visions of the future, I prefer Brand (Whole Earth Disciplline) to Kurzweil. But WRT solar bulk power in particular, my expectation is for distributed generation, mostly on factory roofs, rather than massive instalations. (For contrra: see: http://electronicdesign.com/article/power/solar_energy_goes_beyond_photovoltaics.aspx . (OTOH, my rooftop is on its way to delivering its fourth year of no electric bills -- thanks to time-od-day metering.) Don Tuite, Electronic Design analog and power editor.

  • dtuite
    2 years ago
    Mar 22, 2010

    For visions of the future, I prefer Brand (Whole Earth Disciplline) to Kurzweil. But WRT solar bulk power in particular, my expectation is for distributed generation, mostly on factory roofs, rather than massive instalations. (For contrra: see: http://electronicdesign.com/article/power/solar_energy_goes_beyond_photovoltaics.aspx . (OTOH, my rooftop is on its way to delivering its fourth year of no electric bills -- thanks to time-od-day metering.) Don Tuite, Electronic Design analog and power editor.

  • dtuite
    2 years ago
    Mar 22, 2010

    For visions of the future, I prefer Brand (Whole Earth Disciplline) to Kurzweil. But WRT solar bulk power in particular, my expectation is for distributed generation, mostly on factory roofs, rather than massive instalations. (For contrra: see: http://electronicdesign.com/article/power/solar_energy_goes_beyond_photovoltaics.aspx . (OTOH, my rooftop is on its way to delivering its fourth year of no electric bills -- thanks to time-od-day metering.) Don Tuite, Electronic Design analog and power editor.

  • dtuite
    2 years ago
    Mar 22, 2010

    For visions of the future, I prefer Brand (Whole Earth Disciplline) to Kurzweil. But WRT solar bulk power in particular, my expectation is for distributed generation, mostly on factory roofs, rather than massive instalations. (For contrra: see: http://electronicdesign.com/article/power/solar_energy_goes_beyond_photovoltaics.aspx . (OTOH, my rooftop is on its way to delivering its fourth year of no electric bills -- thanks to time-od-day metering.) Don Tuite, Electronic Design analog and power editor.

  • dtuite
    2 years ago
    Mar 22, 2010

    For visions of the future, I prefer Brand (Whole Earth Disciplline) to Kurzweil. But WRT solar bulk power in particular, my expectation is for distributed generation, mostly on factory roofs, rather than massive instalations. (For contrra: see: http://electronicdesign.com/article/power/solar_energy_goes_beyond_photovoltaics.aspx . (OTOH, my rooftop is on its way to delivering its fourth year of no electric bills -- thanks to time-od-day metering.) Don Tuite, Electronic Design analog and power editor.

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