Space cyborgs for Musk Martians?
Humans will only be able to realize Elon Musk’s dream of colonizing Mars by becoming “a race of cyborgs,” according to Britain’s top astronomer.
Martin Rees, who holds the title of royal astronomer, told the Telegraph that it could take a couple of generations to create a new race that is capable of withstanding the rigors of the Red Planet.
“Let’s imagine by the end of the century there are little communities away from the Earth,” Rees said. “By that time, genetic modification and cyber techniques will be far more advanced than today. One hopes they will be regulated here on Earth, but these intrepid explorers on Mars will have every incentive to modify themselves.”
Rees continued: “They will use all these techniques to adapt themselves, and within a generation or two they may become a different species, a mix of flesh and blood and robot. So a scenario for the next millennium could be that some of the progeny of the pioneer Martian explorers will become cyborgs.”
Musk has stated in the past that he believes artificial intelligence will overtake human intelligence, and that the only hope for the human species to survive and compete with AI is to become cyborgs.
“Generally, people underestimate the capability of AI,” Musk said at a conference in Shanghai in 2019. “They sort of think it’s like a smart human, but it’s going to be much more than that. It’ll be much smarter than the smartest human.”
Musk added: “If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.”
Musk is doing his part. His company Neuralink aims to implant chips into human brains so as to make humans hyper-intelligent and let paralyzed people walk again. He is also CEO of SpaceX, which is building spacecraft that is designed to conduct interplanetary travel and delivery of cargo.
Rees told the Telegraph that the idea of humans evolving into a post-human race is not far-fetched.
“Most of us, unless we live in Kentucky or somewhere, know we are the outcome of 4 billion years of evolution,” he said.
But Rees said Musk’s vision of humans emigrating en masse to Mars was a “dangerous delusion.”