Sleeping our lives away

Last month, I wrote a blog entry about the TV show Battlestar Galactica. To update, I rapidly fell out of love with the show for many reasons and am struggling to just finish the first season.

The last thought-provoking episode I watched was entitled “33,” in which the hodgepodge human space fleet finds itself mercilessly pursued by the machine Cylon fleet, with no more than 33 minutes between attempted Cylon attacks. At the start of the episode, it is made clear that the pattern of furious engagement has been going on for five day straight, and the human crewmembers are fraying from lack of sleep, whereas the Cylons are completely unfazed.

Not needing to sleep is a real, crucial advantage that intelligent machines will have over humans in the future. For example, autonomous warplanes could fly missions around the clock, only stopping to reload their weapons, refuel, or get repaired. As a result, a fleet of autonomous warplanes could, at any given moment, put a greater fraction of its planes in the air than an identically sized fleet of human-piloted warplanes, since at any given moment, some fraction of the human pilots need to be sleeping. The readiness gap would become a chasm over the course of a sustained air campaign like the Battle of Britain as the effects of poor sleep and overwork added up on the human side.

Recently, two American warships–the USS Fitzgerald and the USS McCain–collided with merchant ships during patrols with fatal results, and while the investigations of both incidents are ongoing, it’s likely that overwork and lack of sleep were causal factors. Automated warships wouldn’t have had such problems.

Outside of the military context, not having to sleep will enormously advantage intelligent machines since it will let them get more work done each day, and hence to earn more money. Consider a future scenario where intelligent robots exist, but are no smarter than average humans. Even with that important aspect of the playing field leveled, the robots would be vastly superior workers and would take over most or all of the economy.  Without the need to sleep, eat or do recreational stuff, they could just stay at work 24/7. That’s equivalent to 168 hours of work per week, which means one robot of average intelligence could replace four humans who work 40 hours per week.

And actually, it’s even worse than that once you factor in all the time a typical human worker spends at lunch, taking smoke breaks, resting, or doing nonsense during a 40 hour “work” week. A conservative estimate is that 50% of time is wasted in a typical American workplace. So one robot that stayed on-task could actually replace EIGHT humans.

And if the robot just stays at work all the time, that means it doesn’t need an apartment, house, or car, which means a massive cut in its personal expenses and way more disposable income. Aging, illness, and disability wouldn’t be things it would have to worry about, so it wouldn’t spend any money on health or dental insurance, nor would it lock up any of its pay in long-term retirement plans. The robot’s disposable income would be massive compared to a human making the same salary.

As a result, jobs and money would become concentrated in the hands of machines and business owners, and human workers would get shafted. And remember, I’m not even assuming that the robots will be smarter than humans–I’m pointing out that they could quickly muscle humans out of the job market by banking on their other inherent advantages, notably their ability to function without sleep. Even robots that are only as smart as dumb humans will be a major threat.

Links

  1. http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/the-us-navys-greatest-enemy-might-be-exhaustion-21997
  2. http://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2015/06/20/navy-experts-call-for-more-sleep-for-ship-crews/

Welcome!

Why I’m starting this blog

I’m starting this blog to create a public venue for my ideas about futurism, military affairs, technology, and science. I’ve had a lifelong passion for those subjects and a talent for writing, which make me hopeful that this blog will let me contribute something valuable to the world.

Aside from presenting my own ideas and observations, this blog will serve as a “news feed” for events and developments relating to futurism, military affairs, technology, and science. I’m also a news junkie and have honed my critical thinking skills over the years, leaving me well-suited to serve as a sort of information filter. By finding and passing along reliable information about those subjects, I hope to do my part to combat the worsening problem of bias, misinformation and hype in the media.

The sort of content that I’ll post here I already post on my social media accounts, but here I’ll be able to pull it together, organize it better, and reach a much larger audience. Friends who read my posts on social media have encouraged me to start a blog like this for a while, and I’ve slowly come to agree that it will be a worthwhile experiment.

I’m also hoping to learn something and invite readers to share their thoughts with me.

What’s with the name?

I choose “Militant Futurist” as this blog’s name for a few reasons. First, it combines two of the main foci of the blog: military affairs and futurism. Yes, I know “militant” isn’t a good synonym for “military,” but they sound similar enough.

Second, it’s a play on the title “militant atheist,” which at least half describes me. I am an atheist, though my attitude towards religion and religious people is “live and let live,” which puts me at odds with atheists who are truly militant about the subject of religion.

Finally, I am “militant” in the sense that I strongly believe that science and technology improve our lives and our world. And the very basis of science, the Scientific Method, is a rigorously logical and evidence-based process that colors my own thinking about all manner of things. I am militant in my belief that futurists should apply something like the scientific method to their predictions to ensure they are valuable and useful. This means doing things like putting forth evidence and trends that support the plausibility of the future prediction, including enough detail in the prediction to make it falsifiable (“There will be flying cars someday” vs. “By the year 2090, there will be millions of mass-produced flying cars in use”), observing whether or not the prediction came true, analyzing the reasons for success or failure, and then using the resulting lessons to improve subsequent future predictions. My efforts to do those things will appear here.

What is not allowed on this blog

  1. Obscenity (i.e. – foul language, nudity, grotesque images). This will be a family-friendly blog whose contents readers will feel comfortable sharing with anyone.
  2. Politics/Partisanship. Yes, I have my own social values and political stances, but I don’t plan on discussing them (or allowing anyone else to discuss their own) here, as it would distract from the blog’s purpose and just provide another arena for bickering about topics that are already done to death across the internet. Again, my goal is to use this blog to add something creative and valuable to the world, and talking about politics and the Culture War is usually the opposite of that. There might be exceptions to this rule in the form of discussions of and news articles about government policies on technology and science.
  3. Bigotry (i.e. – racism, sexism). I don’t plan on running afoul of this rule myself, so let me be clear that any comments of this nature will be banned. I’m also going to classify what could be termed “hyper-nationalism” as a form of bigotry and will not allow content that derides nationalities or unfairly insults countries (i.e. – “America is a criminal nation”).
  4. Conspiracy theories (i.e. – Illuminati, free energy, fake Moon landings). I will only mention these in order to debunk them.

About me

My name is Eddie. I am male, 33 years old, and have college degrees in the sciences and public policy. I live in the Washington, DC area.

A basic personality trait of mine is a passion for learning new things, which drives my interest in the subjects I’ll write about in this blog, and which also impels me to travel frequently.