The protagonist in this tale, Siri Keeton, a man who loses half his brain as a child due to epilepsy that changes his characteristics, begins to show even less emotions with less thought and spontaneity relates to the …show more content…
In the article he argues about how technology’s acceleration is the central feature, where you denote to human advancement such as “Computers that are “awake” and superhumanly may be developed.” With such vast changes in technology that we never thought would come, it’d only be ethical that we’d have some new rules breaking out. “This change will be a throwing-away of all human rules perhaps in the blink of an eye – an exponential runaway beyond any hope of control. Developments that were thought might only happen in “a million years” (if ever) will likely happen in the next century.” Developments that were thought might only happen in a million years are seen in the book BlindSight with the insinuated equivalence of uncertainty by questioning humanity. This abstract idea shows how implacable the technological singularity is by not being able to exactly know what it