Tools have been of
tremendous benefit to humans. From the early use of stone tools
(dating back millions of years... even before humans arrived on the
scene) to the latest artificial intelligence (AI) machines, tools
have enabled us to extend our senses and multiply our physical
capabilities far beyond what nature gave us. Those first stone tools
brought our ancestors powerful new ways to smash nuts to get at their
interior, to cut up meat, to clean animal hides for clothing, and
even to fashion other tools.
When those ancestors
subsequently learned how to make metal tools, their capabilities
dramatically expanded. The later invention of telescopes and
microscopes extended our visual capacity out to the stars and into
the interior of biological cells. The list is limitless. It extends
all the way to today's computers that bring us almost unimaginably
powerful capabilities—possibly the most impressive of which is AI.
Human culture would
likely have remained on a par with chimpanzees, had we not been able
to create this increasingly complex and powerful lineage of tools. A
fascinating question that is often posed is how our big brain and our
fantastic tools are causally connected. Can we attribute the
evolution of our wonderful tools to our capacious cranium, or did our
increasingly sophisticated tools demand a bigger brain to use them?
It's sort of a chicken-and-egg conundrum. Whatever the answer, modern
humans certainly depend on and benefit from our many kinds of tools.
Tools are a form of
technology. The definition of a tool is traditionally considered to
be a hand-held device, used for a specific type of occupation. In
contrast, our modern tools are usually thought of as a form of
technology—a word that generally describes machinery or equipment
developed from or for scientific purposes. With these definitions, we
can see that those primitive hand-held tools gradually morphed into
various forms of technology. (Interestingly, the root of the word
technology is the Greek word tekhnologle, which means “the
systematic creation from art and/or craft.” This craft process
seems to me to be exactly how the early stone tools came about.)
Unfortunately, tools and
technology have also had a dark side—from the first stone hammer to
the latest AI machine. Tools seem to have invited mistreatment from
their very beginnings. The same rock that was used to crack a nut
also soon got used to crack a human skull. Sharp flaked stone tools
that allowed our ancestors to cut up a gazelle also got used as a
weapon to cut up other humans. Those primitive metal knives cut meat
better than stone, but soon saw use in warfare. And so it went,
throughout our evolution.
A current mistreatment of
a high-tech tool that billions of people have enjoyed
using—Facebook—is causing all kinds of trouble for many people.
Facebook is valued for its ability to keep people in instant and
handy touch with each other, but there's a dark side to its use that
is emerging. Commercial interests use big data algorithms to
determine intimate behaviors of Facebook users and then entice them
to buy billions of dollars worth of stuff they otherwise would not
have bought—without those targeted ads.
Multinational actors use
the same intimate data to manipulate people's behaviors through the
use of fake news and other biased misinformation. Facebook, Google,
Amazon, and other online businesses all exploit the power of
AI—ostensibly to offer us convenience, but also to amass huge
amounts of money by swaying our choices. And of course, many
technologists today worry about the future dangers of AI robots—which
some fear will either eliminate many current forms of employment or
even enslave their creators, us humans.
I am not equipped to
explain why it is that Homo sapiens is such a brilliant
creator of so many wonderful tools that make our lives so pleasant,
but then also get used as one form of weapon or another—weapons
which make so many lives miserable, or even terminate them.
Philosophers and pious people have pondered and debated that issue
for millennia. They have offered many diverse explanations—and most
of those explanations clash with each other.
Whatever the cause of
human behavior that leads us to mistreat our tools, there certainly
are countless examples of how we've perpetually done it. One factor
is that we seem to be suckers for the latest technology. Show me a
new, convenient and efficacious tool, and I'll want one. Tell me
about an attractive technology that's about to be offered, I'll want
one. Our initial intentions are rarely wicked; we simply focus on the
advantages, and thus we enthusiastically pursue the new tool.
But sooner—rather than
later—it seems that someone will find a way to mistreat the new
tool; even if they don't deliberately do so. Is it greed? Laziness?
Merciless competition? Seeking power over others? Or is it largely
due to the fact that we just move too fast, and can't seem to pause
and exercise a little precaution? I suppose it's all of these and
more.
Yes,
tool mistreatment is an ancient bad habit of humans. It's caused
untold suffering. And it doesn't appear that we are in the process of
reining ourselves in. The scary part is the fact that our tools have
become so powerful that their misuse can do damage beyond our
control.
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