An Interview with Alan Kay by Martin Wasserman
From Viewpoints Intelligent Archive
I'm
not talking to alan kay he is one of the leading
pioneers in the development of the modern
computer in the graphic user interface that
was so familiar with today he's also the president of
viewpoints research which
is a company in Los Angeles nonprofit nonprofit
company in Los Angeles so Alan we're
talking about collective intelligence today what
you see as the future of collective intelligence where
is this going well I think yeah
anthropologists think that
humans have been on the earth for a hundred thousand years and
we're social creatures and so we've had a form
of collective intelligence throughout this
time and the results have not been very pretty and
so 400
years ago a better way of dealing
with magnifying
collective intelligence called science was invented and
it had the aspect
of sharing knowledge which people been doing for a long time
but it also had something that people hadn't
thought of before and that is how to be really
critical about
the open
ideas that I really become up
didn't science go back thousands of years no science
science as you
know when it meant knowledge sian chea means
knowledge and so the gathering of knowledge and certainly
Aristotle was
interested in biology and with people have
been interested in explanations but generally
speaking you could say that human beings have been interested
explanations but they've been willing to be
satisfied with really weak ones over
the years and the big difference between the
last 400 years and the time before that is
that people for the first time wanted to have strong explanations
they wanted to have these explanations be
terms of mechanisms of various clients to explain
well you can explain natural phenomena chiral
phenomena which includes us since we're part
of this to explain systems of all kinds too Blaine
cause-and-effect relationships so we won't
have a clear understanding of the world we live in that's the
basic idea and by saying it that way I
think we agree that human beings were 100,000
years haven't had a clear idea of it we've made
up stories and we've been satisfied with those stories
as explanations and what science wanted to do
was to come up with something stronger than a story
even given the fact that our brains
turn everything into stories so the idea
is can you factor what's wrong with the way we think
into the process and try
and deal with our errors in various ways and
so the successful invention of science
partly involved a social structure
in which the people
who did the criticism were usually not the
with the theories so the idea is that even when
you're trying to be a good scientist you also like your
own theories let's say we acquired a huge
amount of knowledge we learned to explain everything in the world
does that mean that we would necessarily be better
off well I think that if you had cancer
and you went to a person who understood
cancer and could do something about it you would feel better off so
one of the ways of looking at this is that
there's kind of an interaction between philosophy and
pragmatics
and there's
a problem with people being way too pragmatic often
at the expense of other things
but generally speaking most people would like to live
as long as they can would like to be as happy as long
as they can I would like to be able to take care of their children
whole bunch of these things are facilitated
very strongly not just by understanding the physical
world but the social world well you think
it's necessary to have a coherent worldview a
framework of looking at the world in which you can fit
everything and it all makes sense no in fact I don't think
anybody can do that science doesn't take that view
so science went
through several stages and there is the 19th
century stage where they
sort of second stage Newton and they thought they
were nailing everything down and then we had the 20th century
with quantum mechanics and relativity and people then realized
oh now we know what's going on science
is a way of taking views on stuff
that we can't get to directly and like the Mariners
in the 15th century who are the precursors of science
wanting can make maps that were accurate
rather than ones that were the way the world was supposed to
be like the Garden of Eden was on the medieval
mass but instead of what they wanted was where maps that were as
accurate as they could be and they wanted annotations on them as to
where the errors where and
who had seen this and if you look at it among
you know a map for the age of exploration
then the UC
cyan't the you know the first scientific writings
in the world done by
observation and not a coherent
worldview but a patchwork quilt that's supported by
observations and so science now realizes
oh you have to open up to everything and
you just have to be very careful about when you claiming
something is good knowledge or not now when I talk about a
worldview I'm talking about a set of governing principles
that I apply in all situations does
it is it necessary to have that kind of
worldview where you perceive the world is you know
somehow governed according to some set of principles
that can be defined well I think that one
of the things you could do is you could take a stance
about outlook so for example suppose
suppose one night you go to a
theater
beautiful people on the stage beautiful
music great words you're thrilled beyond measure
the next night you go to the very same building even
same people on this stage you also hear great words first
night you're going to shakespeare in the second night you're going to
a political rally and if you're in the same frame of mind
and both of those you're in trouble
because
the what we basically in
the modern world we're in a situation where we need to be able to
choose what mode
going to be or what mood were going to be in when we're dealing with
things are we going to be in a mood that is full
of feeling and effect where are we going to be
a mood in which we're like this and just letting things through
very very carefully and
I think that that's a huge
difference in the modern world versus the
middle age as for example you know we're talking about intelligence
and one of the hardest things to study is
human mind yeah very little is known about it I don't
even think there's a working definition of normalcy
so is the process of applying collective
intelligence could that be applied to unravel
the workings of the mind because the world is largely driven by
human desires I want what I want and
the price I'm willing to pay to get it and here's the price I'm willing to
make other people pay to get it yeah well you
could certainly make a very simplistic argument
but not a bad one that most
of the trappings of civilization are
mechanisms and principles that are designed
to oppose the genetic structure that
our brains were shaped with other anthropologists
have found about 300 universals
across all cultures including the
desire for revenge and including the desire for status
and language and stories and and so
forth and things that are non universals
our ideas like equal rights
technology has been changing very rapidly in
recent years we are becoming dependent
on this technology at a rate that some people think
is actually alarming
Israel have we really thought through the consequences
is so quickly becoming dependent on
all of this technology well I think the you
know Thoreau said we become
the tools of our tools and
when he was at when the
transatlantic cable went in in 1865
was an old and they asked him what he thought of
it and he said he was rather afraid that
he would find out that it European princess
had just gotten a new hat so
I believe that nails it and so
this is not new it's just that most people are not
thinkers like Thoreau was throw could
understood that he lived in a construct
and he lived in a technological age
as technological in its own way as ours because
any especially anything that is posed printing press
could hardly be more technological as
a set of media that shaped things the big problem
is not whether we're dependent on this technology
but whether we understand it or not and the thing
that lags is getting any new idea through the educational
system so the people who are not intrinsically interested
in it which is most people can actually
be exposed to these ideas anyway