GENERATIVE AI IS ABOUT TO CAUSE HUMANITY TO FORK

The following article “Humanity is About to Fork” is by Peter Diamandis. Named by Fortune as one of the World’s 50 Greatest Leaders, Peter H. Diamandis, MD is a pioneer in innovation, longevity, and exponential technologies.

He is the Founder and Executive Chairman of XPRIZE Foundation, which has launched over $600 million in competitions driving more than $10 billion in research and development across space, health, robotics, climate, quantum and AI. Peter also co-founded Singularity University, Link-Exponential Ventures, BOLD Capital Partners, and multiple companies focused on extending human health span and accelerating technological progress.

His YouTube Moonshots and Metatrends have huge followings. Let us look at his recent Metatrends article, realising that up front he reveals he is an evolutionist who believes this world is billions of years old. Hence, he does not believe in the Christian God who created the Cosmos just 6,000 years ago, as I do. God has given Peter a brilliant mind and his article makes perfect sense based on his worldview. Tragedy is that he does not know the God who gave him his mind and talents. The God that made Peter in His image and who loves him.

Humanity is About to Fork

The choices you make in the next five years will determine which branch of the human story you inhabit. Here’s what’s coming, and how to position yourself on the right side of every fork. The last time humanity had a major “fork” (speciation) was roughly 500,000 to 800,000 years ago when the human lineage diverged between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals. That was a slow process driven by geographic isolation, climate swings, dietary shifts, and sexual selection. This time, over the next few decades, speciation is going to be driven by exponential tech and human selection. Humanity has always had mini-forks. The printing press created a fork between the literate and the illiterate. The Industrial Revolution created a fork between those who owned machines and those who worked them. The internet created a fork between those who understood networked information and those who didn’t. But these are minor compared to what is coming. We’re about to face five major splits that will cleave humanity into groups with dramatically different futures, capabilities, and lifespans. Let’s dive in…

FORK 1: Creators vs. Consumers

The first and most immediate fork is already happening right now, today, as you read this.

AI has handed every human being on the planet an extraordinary set of tools: the ability to build software, design products, generate content, start companies, and pursue ambitions that previously required teams of specialists and millions in capital. Some people will pick those tools up and build. They’ll become creators, entrepreneurs, and innovators. They’ll use AI to amplify their vision and bring it into the world. They will be the architects of the next economy. Others will watch. They’ll consume: watch Netflix, play video games, scroll social media… be passively entertained. The tools will be available to them. They simply won’t pick them up. I’m not making a moral judgment here. I’m making an economic and existential one. In an AI-native world, the gap between a creator and a consumer is not the gap between rich and poor. It’s the gap between someone with exponential leverage over reality and someone without it.

The question is not whether AI will transform everything. It will. The question is whether you’re the one doing the transforming… or the one being transformed.

This is the most urgent fork because it’s already open. The divergence started the day large language models became publicly available, and it’s widening every month. The longer you wait to get on the creator side of this fork, the further behind you’ll fall.

FORK 2: Longevity Escape Velocity

Ray Kurzweil has been right about his predictions at a rate of roughly 84% (you can check out the analysis on Wikipedia). Perhaps his most audacious prediction states that humanity will reach Longevity Escape Velocity (LEV) by 2033. LEV is the point at which, for every year you’re alive, advances in medicine extend your life expectancy by more than a year. Once you cross that threshold, aging becomes a solvable engineering problem rather than an inevitable biological sentence. When this arrives, humanity will split into two groups.

One group will embrace the therapies: epigenetic cellular reprogramming, senolytics, gene editing, organ replacement. They’ll view it as a natural continuation of what humans have always done: use science to extend healthy life. After all, the fact that any of us live past 50 is already an extraordinary feat of modern medicine. Our great-great-grandparents had average lifespans in the 40s. The other group will reject it. They’ll argue that the human lifespan has natural limits that shouldn’t be violated – that there’s something sacred about mortality, about the cycle of generations.

I respect that view. But I want to be clear about what it means in practice. If you have access to life extension therapies and decline them, you’re making a deliberate choice to age and die on an old biological timeline. That’s a valid choice. But it is a choice, and it will determine whether you’re present for the most extraordinary chapters of human history, or whether you watch them from the sidelines of your lifespan.

I intend to be in the room for what comes next. After all, this IS the most exciting time EVER to be alive! (It is Peter, but not for the reasons you expound. God’s Word reveals that the time for Jesus return to Earth to restore righteousness and take control of the world from the angelic being, Satan, is soon. Satan has been ruling this world for almost 6000 years since he deceived Adam and Eve and they rebelled against God. What is next on God’s agenda for planet Earth is Jesus Millennial Kingdom. To prepare for it, go to http://www.millennialkingdom.net.

FORK 3: Brain-Computer Interface (BCI)

By the mid-2030s, Kurzweil expects we’ll have high-bandwidth brain-computer interfaces: direct connections between the human neocortex and the cloud.

Think about what that means practically. Perfect memory. Instant access to any information ever recorded. The ability to understand quantum physics not by years of study but by direct neural integration. Expanded cognitive bandwidth that makes our current intellectual ceiling look quaint. Some people will eagerly adopt this. They’ll argue, correctly, that we’ve always been cyborgs: glasses extend our vision, smartphones extend our memory, language itself is a technology that extends our ability to coordinate with other minds. A neural interface is just the next step on a continuum. Others will say this is where they draw the line. That there’s something about “unaugmented” biological cognition that defines what it means to be human, and that crossing this threshold means becoming something else.

We’ve always adopted technology at first with shock, then with use, then with dependence, then with complete forgetting that it was ever shocking. The neural interface will follow the same arc.

I think the people who opt out of brain-computer interfaces will, over time, find themselves in a similar position to someone who declined the printing press in 1500. Not wrong, exactly… but increasingly operating in a world that functions on entirely different terms than the one they’re equipped for.

FORK 4: Earth vs. The Stars

This next fork is one I’ve dreamed about since my childhood.

Starship is opening up not just the Moon and Mars, it’s opening up the entire solar system. Within our lifetimes, a significant portion of humanity will begin to move beyond Earth into the Earth-Moon-Mars-Asteroid system. In one sense this will represent the means by which humanity incrementally creates a backup, or a “budding”, of the Earth ecosystem. Some people will go. They’ll be driven by the same impulse that sent humans across oceans, over mountain ranges, into uncharted territories. The need to explore, to be present at the frontier, to build something from nothing in a new environment. Others will stay. And there’s nothing wrong with that: Earth will remain the most beautiful and resource-rich world we know for quite some time.

But the humans who go to space (especially those who go early) will develop in directions that those who stay on Earth will not. Different environments, different challenges, different social structures, different relationships with survival and community. Over generations, these branches of humanity will become increasingly distinct.

FORK 5: Digital Consciousness (i.e., Uploads)

The last fork is perhaps the one that sounds most like science fiction, and is therefore the one people are least prepared to think about seriously. Within the coming decades, it may be possible to upload the full contents of a human mind (100 billion neurons, 100 trillion synaptic connections) into a digital substrate. What many people are calling digital immortality.

I want to be careful here. This is not something I’m predicting will happen on a specific timeline. Though we have done this with the brain of a fruit fly, and efforts are underway to do with a mouse. The philosophy here is genuinely hard: is a digital copy of you actually you? These are real questions worth serious engagement. But here’s what I am confident about: some humans will choose this path. And the humans who do will exist in a radically different relationship with time, mortality, and experience than those who don’t.

A biological human with a 120-year lifespan and a digital human with no inherent lifespan limit are not just quantitatively different. They’re qualitatively different kinds of entities. This fork does more than change how long you live, it changes what kind of being you are.

ZOOM OUT AND SEE THE BIGGER PICTURE

This Is What Civilizational Change Actually Looks Like

Here’s what I want you to understand about all five of these forks: they don’t require the world to end. They don’t require a catastrophe. They don’t require government permission or institutional approval. They are simply the inevitable consequence of exponential technologies arriving at their logical destinations. To be clear, choosing not to engage with these technologies is not the absence of a choice. It is a choice. And like every fork, it closes off other destinations.

The fork isn’t between the future and the past. It’s between which future you want to inhabit.

WHERE I STAND…

My Choices at the Forks

I’ll be transparent about where I’m placing my bets.

I’m choosing the creator side of Fork 1: using every AI tool available to build, write, teach, and contribute. I’ve never worked harder in my life than I am right now, and I’ve never had more fun doing it. I’m pursuing every longevity intervention I can access at Fork 2. Not because I’m afraid of death, but because I want to be present for what comes next. I want to “speed run Star Trek,” explore all the wonderous futures we will uncover.

I’m watching Fork 3 closely and intend to be an early adopter of brain-computer interfaces when they’re proven safe and effective. I have no interest in putting an arbitrary ceiling on my cognitive capacity.

Regarding Fork 4, I’ve been a space-cadet since I witnessed Apollo 11 at age 8. I’ve built space companies, helped launch the commercial space revolution, and dreamed of this future for 50+ years. As soon as I get a chance to put my boots on the Moon or help build an O’Neill Colony, I’m all-in!

Finally, on Fork 5, I’m staying genuinely open. I’m not sure yet how I’ll feel about leaving my physical existence behind. I still have a lot to learn about upload technology and the implications that follow. I’ve learned to reserve judgment on the things I can’t yet fully see.

But above all, I’m choosing to engage. To stay curious. To keep the mindset of someone for whom the future is not a threat to be defended against, but a territory to be explored.

Sixty-six million years ago, an asteroid hit the Earth and the environment changed rapidly, dramatically. As a result, the slow, lumbering dinosaurs could not adapt and went extinct. It was the small, furry mammals (our ancestors) who survived, because of their agility and adaptability, that allowed them to take advantage of a transformed world. (Sorry, Peter but what you believe is pure speculation. To put a time of sixty-six million on the time an asteroid hit the earth and destroyed the dinosaurs is nonsense and hence deception. God created the Cosmos just 6,000 years ago and destroyed not only the dinosaurs but all of mankind except for eight individuals and the animals on Noah’s ark about 4,400 years ago. I would like to introduce you to PhD scientists, Dr Stephen Myer, Dr Robert Carter and Dr John Sanford, who are just three of hundreds, able to explain why the Biblical timeline for history fits the scientific facts. Go to http://www.creation.com and http://www.answersingenesis.org).

The asteroid we call Exponential Technologies has already hit. And now the question is which kind of creature you’re going to be. What choices will you make?

Welcome to the most exciting time ever to be alive!

Peter

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