HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016388.jpg

Extraction Summary

2
People
4
Organizations
2
Locations
2
Events
1
Relationships
5
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Scientific essay / congressional oversight document
File Size:
Summary

This document appears to be a page (168) from a scientific essay or book included in a House Oversight Committee investigation (indicated by the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016388). The text discusses transhumanist concepts, including genetic manipulation, cognitive enhancement, and 'brain organoids,' while comparing the energy efficiency of human brains against AI systems like IBM's Watson. It references major tech entities like Facebook, Microsoft, and the NSA in the context of data storage and bio-electronic hybrids.

People (2)

Name Role Context
Watson AI Computer
Referenced as the winner of Jeopardy! and compared to human brain energy consumption.
Einstein Physicist
Referenced regarding his 'annus mirabilis' papers of 1905 as an example of human transcendence.

Organizations (4)

Name Type Context
Facebook
Mentioned as constructing exabyte-scale storage facilities.
National Security Agency
Mentioned as constructing exabyte-scale storage facilities.
Microsoft
Mentioned as 'doubling down' on DNA storage technology.
Technicolor
Mentioned as 'doubling down' on DNA storage technology.

Timeline (2 events)

1905
Einstein's five annus mirabilis papers
N/A
2011 (Implied)
Watson winning Jeopardy!
N/A

Locations (2)

Location Context
Used as a comparison for energy consumption (700 W per person).
Used as a comparison for energy consumption (10,000 W per person).

Relationships (1)

Humans Comparison Computers (Watson)
The text extensively compares the energy efficiency and capabilities of human brains versus computers like Watson.

Key Quotes (5)

"Every bit of progress on cognitive decline is in play for off-label use."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016388.jpg
Quote #1
"Another frontier of the human use of humans is 'brain organoids.'"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016388.jpg
Quote #2
"The cost of manufacturing Watson-scale computing is similar. So why aren’t humans displacing computers?"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016388.jpg
Quote #3
"The organoid brain-in-a-bottle could get closer to the 20 W limit."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016388.jpg
Quote #4
"The main reason for the 6 trillion joules of energy required to get a productive human mind is the twenty years required for training."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016388.jpg
Quote #5

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,561 characters)

Even the bright red line for human manipulation of human beings shows many
signs of moving or breaking completely. More than 2,300 approved clinical trials for
gene therapy are in progress worldwide. A major medical goal is the treatment or
prevention of cognitive decline, especially in light of our rapidly aging global
demographic. Some treatments of cognitive decline will include cognitive enhancements
(drugs, genes, cells, transplants, implants, and so on). These will be used off-label. The
rules of athletic competition (e.g., banning augmentation with steroids or erythropoietin)
do not apply to intellectual competition in the real world. Every bit of progress on
cognitive decline is in play for off-label use.
Another frontier of the human use of humans is “brain organoids.” We can now
accelerate developmental biology. Processes that normally take months can happen in
four days in the lab using the right recipes of transcription factors. We can make brains
that, with increasing fidelity, recapitulate the differences between people born with
aberrant cognitive abilities (e.g., microcephaly). Proper vasculature (veins, arteries, and
capillaries) missing from earlier successes are now added, enabling brain organoids to
surpass the former sub-microliter limit to possibly exceed the 1.2-liter size of modern
human brains (or even the 5-liter elephant or 8-liter sperm whale brains).
Conventional Computers versus Bio-electronic Hybrids
As Moore’s Law miniaturization approaches its next speed bump (surely not a solid
wall), we see the limits of the stochastics of dopant atoms in silicon slabs and the limits
of beam-fabrication methods at around 10-nanometer feature size. Power (energy
consumption) issues are also apparent: The great Watson, winner of Jeopardy!, used
85,000 watts real time, while the human brains were using 20 watts each. To be fair, the
human body needs 100 watts to operate and twenty years to build, hence about 6 trillion
joules of energy to “manufacture” a mature human brain. The cost of manufacturing
Watson-scale computing is similar. So why aren’t humans displacing computers?
For one, the Jeopardy! contestants’ brains were doing far more than information
retrieval—much of which would be considered mere distractions by Watson (e.g.,
cerebellar control of smiling). Other parts allow leaping out of the box with
transcendence unfathomable by Watson, such as what we see in Einstein’s five annus
mirabilis papers of 1905. Also, humans consume more energy than the minimum (100
W) required for life and reproduction. People in India use an average of 700 W per
person; it’s 10,000 W in the U.S. Both are still less than the 85,000 watts Watson uses.
Computers can become more like us via neuromorphic computing, possibly a
thousandfold. But human brains could get more efficient, too. The organoid brain-in-a-
bottle could get closer to the 20 W limit. The idiosyncratic advantages of computers for
math, storage, and search, faculties of limited use to our ancestors, could be designed and
evolved anew in labs.
Facebook, the National Security Agency, and others are constructing exabyte-
scale storage facilities at more than a megawatt and four hectares, while DNA can store
that amount in a milligram. Clearly, DNA is not a mature storage technology, but with
Microsoft and Technicolor doubling down on it, we would be wise to pay attention. The
main reason for the 6 trillion joules of energy required to get a productive human mind is
the twenty years required for training.
168
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016388

Discussion 0

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein document