For Toby Ord, humanity is still in its adolescence 鈥 and a crucial research goal must be to ensure it reaches maturity and realises its full potential.
Now senior research fellow at the University of Oxford鈥檚 聽Dr Ord studied both philosophy and computer science at the University of Melbourne before moving to Oxford to focus on philosophy. In 2009, while working on global health and poverty, he set up the society聽聽This, he told聽糖心Vlog,聽enables members to pledge to 鈥済ive at least a 10th of their income to where they think it can do the most good. To date, just over 4,500 people have donated almost 拢100 million.鈥 His own contribution has gone to 鈥減eople in the poorest countries suffering from easily preventable diseases鈥. He has also been consulted on such issues by the World Health Organisation, the聽UK鈥檚 Department for International Development and No 10.
Yet, although he continues to work in this area, Dr Ord has now turned most of his attention to the even larger topic explored in his forthcoming book,聽The Precipice: Existential Risk and the Future of Humanity.
We can trace its origins back to his PhD. His supervisor and mentor, the philosopher Derek Parfit, ended his celebrated 1984 book聽Reasons and Persons聽by reflecting on a devastating nuclear war. If it killed 99 per cent of the human race, this would obviously be an unimaginable tragedy, yet we might eventually be able to rebuild some sort of civilisation. But if it destroyed all humanity, it would have an utterly different significance.
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鈥淲ith that last 1 per cent,鈥 Dr Ord explained, 鈥渨e would lose not only [many millions of] people but the entire future of humanity and all the trillions who could come to exist鈥umanity has survived for 2,000 centuries so far. There鈥檚 nothing stopping us, other than [a number of 鈥榚xistential risks鈥橾, surviving for thousands more鈥e need to be proactive about [that] and avoid developing the kind of things which take us close to the brink.鈥 聽
That is the 鈥減recipice鈥 we have to get past, and Dr Ord鈥檚 book assesses the level of existential threat posed by everything from asteroids to 鈥渦naligned artificial intelligence鈥. Yet he felt the topic had been largely neglected by researchers. 聽
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鈥淲hen it comes to something like climate change,鈥 he explained, 鈥渁 huge amount of work is being done, but only a fraction of it looks at the worst outcomes. How bad could they be? Could they realistically pose a threat to the collapse of civilisation or even human extinction? Is there any realistic chance that the warming will be a very extreme 10 degrees?...For each particular risk, people don鈥檛 pay special attention to [the small chance of something occurring] that could destroy not only all the lives of the people today but all the people to come and the entire future of humanity.鈥
Our lack of forward planning is vividly illustrated in聽The Precipice.聽On the significant risk of 鈥渆ngineered pandemics鈥, it points out, 鈥渢he international body responsible for the continued prohibition of bioweapons (the Biological Weapons Convention) has an annual budget of just $1.4 million [拢1.1 million] 鈥 less than the average McDonald鈥檚 restaurant鈥. Furthermore, 鈥渨e can state with confidence that humanity spends more on ice cream every year than on ensuring that the technologies we develop do not destroy us鈥.
In the case of his own fellowship, Dr Ord writes, money from the European Research Council and a philanthropist has 鈥渁llowed [him] years of uninterrupted work on a topic I consider so important鈥.
This had provided him with 鈥渁 safety net鈥, he admitted, to 鈥渨ork on topics which are less academically fashionable鈥 and might be seen as 鈥渢oo big for the profession. It is hard to place journal articles about them, compared to something thousands of people have already written about where there are clear technical questions.鈥
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There were also issues around the culture of science. Although Dr Ord said that he understood 鈥渢he case for openness and transparency鈥, we also had to take greater account of 鈥渋nformation hazards鈥.
鈥淚n nuclear physics,鈥 he went on, 鈥渢here is an awareness that we have to be careful about publishing ideas which could cause nuclear proliferation. With the increasing power of bioengineering, it could be that subfield needs [similar safeguards]. We should be open to different ways of doing things. It鈥檚 not just an inherent right of academic freedom that we can publish whatever we want.鈥
matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com
- The Precipice: Existential Risk and the Future of Humanity聽is published by Bloomsbury on 5 March.
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