What will the world be like by 2035?

What will the world be like by 2035?A photo from open sources

Artificial intelligence research is underway on many areas involved in this neuroscientists and specialists by computers that study everything from stem cells to quantum physics.

Over the next 20 years, we will most likely become witnesses of outstanding discoveries in science and technology, computer hardware and software, as well as in the human brain, who will instantly change our worldview and direct research work on a fundamentally new trajectory.

Artificial intelligence revolution will have similar the consequences, like the industrial revolution, which at one time changed all aspects of society. According to the historian and futurologist Christopher Martinez, Industrial Revolution Changes Spheres production, and the artificial intelligence revolution will turn its look at the intellectual arena.

Martinez gives an example of the famous artificial intelligence Watson computer, which was created for the TV show as a competitor complex cognitive computing system and is now used in integrated cancer research. Instead of holding “Your Game” Watson-like computers will be used in areas medicine, marketing, education, service industry – almost all areas of the profession will use artificial intelligence.

IT professor Davenport believes that artificial intelligence will have a radical impact on our jobs by the end of 2035, but people are known to have huge ability to adapt to new conditions. Increasing the number of knowledge workers will shift most of their functions on artificial intelligence. In the future we may possibly solve any narrow problems much faster and better with the help of machines. But, despite the fact that a whole range of tasks will be performed robots will still remain and those that people perform better.

However, allowing the appearance of real artificial intelligence by 2035 – the advent of intelligent machines – will also appear and certain social consequences. Will the artificial intelligence citizenship? Will they have rights to the law?

Will they be able, as corporations, to guide funds for political companies? Will they be able to vote, and, most importantly, who will they vote for?

Jenny Davis, a sociology student specializing in the relationship of technology and social theories, believes that everything It will become much more difficult. Technical developments come from human creators and users, and thus reflect the hierarchy of power within which they were built.

The last thing we think about at the moment is that will be if such machines will have feelings. People can program emotional aspects but what really will feel the cars? And if they feel whether while they still remain machines, or become something more human?

Good question…

Artificial Intelligence Robots

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