Physicist Warns Humans About A.I.
September 1, 2001

Berlin - People get ready: the machines are coming. 

That's the word from famed British physicist Stephen Hawking, who says if
humans hope to compete with the rising tide of artificial intelligence,
they'll have to improve through genetic engineering.  

In an interview released Saturday with the newsmagazine Focus, Hawking said
science could increase the complexity of DNA and "improve" human beings.  

He conceded that it would be a long process, "but we should follow this road
if we want biological systems to remain superior to electronic ones." 

"In contrast with our intellect, computers double their performance every 18
months," he added. "So the danger is real that they could develop
intelligence and take over the world.'' 

"We must develop as quickly as possible technologies that make possible a
direct connection between brain and computer, so that artificial brains
contribute to human intelligence rather than opposing it," Hawking said.  

Hawking, the author of the best-selling "A Brief History of Time," holds a
prestigious Cambridge University chair once held by Sir Isaac Newton.  

The 59-year-old lives with Lou Gehrig's disease and uses a motorized
wheelchair and computer voice synthesizer.  

Submitted by Bruce Fleming

http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20010901/sc/a_i__humans_1.html
