![]() By displacing God, and placing human will (and our elemental dissatisfaction) at the centre of existence, we have until now successfully bent science and technology to our ends. Increasingly, says Harari, the algorithm will rule humans – and our humanism, ironically, is to blame. ![]() But these algorithms are indifferent to the “substrate” that enables their operations – be it organic or inorganic, carbon or silicon. (“Organisms are algorithms” is Harari’s pithy and challenging slogan.) Whether it’s made from DNA or digital bytes, an algorithm is a program, a set of instructions, that incessantly makes effective choices. ![]() He gathers together extensive research to show that there is now “scientific orthodoxy” about the continuity between the rules of natural selection in evolution and the rules computing information in our devices. “Increasingly the algorithm will rule humans – and our humanism, ironically, is to blame“ In his zeal for algorithms as the “master science” of the future, Harari draws on this world view. ![]() Much Buddhist practice aims at the dissolution of the ego into a world of flowing and connecting processes. Harari’s first hobby horse is Buddhism: he is an ardent student of its Vipassana version, and his late teacher takes prime position in acknowledgements. ![]()
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