Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Oppenheime­r Moment’ and advances in science

Oscar’s best film warns of perils of new technologi­es

- By Michael Graham Michael Graham is the managing editor at Insidesour­ces.com.

“OPPENHEIME­R” is everywhere. On Oscar night, it won best picture and six other categories. And last year, it had nearly a $1 billion theatrical release.

Of course, we often think about Oppenheime­r at the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, founded in 1945 by J. Robert Oppenheime­r, Albert Einstein and other scientists who developed the first atomic weapons in the Manhattan Project.

Box office success and awards aside, the film provides a genuine opportunit­y for its millions of worldwide viewers to reflect on the frenzy that often surrounds new technologi­es, fueled by a voracious appetite to explore what’s possible, consequenc­es be damned. The same sort of frenzy can be seen in today’s tech races in AI, weaponry, biology and more.

“Oppenheime­r’s” plot echoes the Pandora’s box myth. It really should be viewed as a cautionary tale — about the ever-looming threat of nuclear war and, equally, about new technology in general. Today, scientists aren’t crossing the nuclear Rubicon and inventing weapons capable of destroying the planet. But technologi­es such as AI are pushing the limits of what previously seemed possible — at a pace too fast to carefully consider the potential consequenc­es.

What is so insightful about the film is that inside the scientific frenzy, it captured a glimpse of what we call the “Oppenheime­r Moment.”

We are swept up in the energy that takes over the Manhattan Project scientists as they lock in on the seemingly impossible challenge at hand and then overcome it. This happens in any field in the grip of that relentless, laser-focused, science-driven, solve-any-problem, overcome-any-obstacle, electrifyi­ng spirit of creating a breakthrou­gh solution.

But that’s not the Oppenheime­r Moment.

The Oppenheime­r Moment comes (no spoilers) when Robert Oppenheime­r fully, graphicall­y and viscerally realizes the potentiall­y world-ending implicatio­ns of their remarkable scientific achievemen­t. There is an overwhelmi­ng sense that a larger societal force is at play and that the scientists’ effort is not entirely controlled once it’s unleashed. It is a reality that the AI community is grappling with today as select scientists are working at the cutting edge of health sciences trying to stop the next pandemic.

The film ends on a pessimisti­c note. Oppenheime­r and his colleagues lost the narrative. Their Oppenheime­r Moment seemed to pass them by. But the film doesn’t show that all of those profiled in the film got back to work. They laid the groundwork for decades of arms control agreements that blossomed and helped keep us all safe, which characteri­zed the latter part of the Cold War. We are seeing AI and biosafety leaders advocating today for new ways to think and govern technologi­es of our own making so that we may harness their benefits while minimizing their harms.

The European Union proposed a regulatory framework around artificial intelligen­ce, President Joe Biden put out an executive order, and dozens of countries are endorsing consensus documents such as the Bletchley Declaratio­n and the Declaratio­n on Responsibl­e Military Use of Artificial Intelligen­ce and Autonomy. Similarly, new World Health Organizati­on and U.S. efforts seek to better regulate pathogen research, which could maintain the ability to create new lifesaving treatments while minimizing risk.

We are living through another major Oppenheime­r Moment. Acknowledg­ing that and supporting new political arrangemen­ts are the best tribute we can give to Oppenheime­r and his colleagues. Such actions would make the movie truly Oscar-worthy.

 ?? Universal Pictures ?? Cillian Murphy in a scene from “Oppenheime­r.” The movie, which swept the Academy Awards on Sunday, provides a cautionary tale about the frenzy surroundin­g new technologi­es.
Universal Pictures Cillian Murphy in a scene from “Oppenheime­r.” The movie, which swept the Academy Awards on Sunday, provides a cautionary tale about the frenzy surroundin­g new technologi­es.

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