In the history of technology, emerging technologies are
contemporary advances and innovation in various fields of technology. Various
converging technologies have emerged in the technological convergence of
different systems evolving towards similar goals. Convergence can refer to
previously separate technologies such as voice (and telephony features), data
(and productivity applications) and video that now share resources and interact
with each other, creating new efficiencies. Emerging technologies are those
technical innovations which represent progressive developments within a field
for competitive advantage; converging technologies represent previously
distinct fields which are in some way moving towards stronger inter-connection
and similar goals. However, the opinion on the degree of impact, status and
economic viability of several emerging and converging technologies vary. Over centuries, innovative methods and new technologies are
developed and opened up. Some of these technologies are due to theoretical
research, others commercial research and development. Technological growth
includes incremental developments and disruptive technologies. An example of
the former was the gradual roll-out of DVD as a development intended to follow
on from the previous optical technology Compact Disc. By contrast, disruptive
technologies are those where a new method replaces the previous technology and
make it redundant, for example the replacement of horse drawn carriages by
automobiles. Emerging technologies in general denote significant technology
developments that broach new territory in some significant way in their field.
Examples of currently emerging technologies include information technology,
nanotechnology, biotechnology, cognitive science, robotics, and artificial
intelligence. Many writers, including computer scientist Bill Joy, have
identified clusters of technologies that they consider critical to humanity's
future. Joy warns that the technology could be used by elites for good or evil.
They could use it as "good shepherds" for the rest of humanity, or
decide everyone else is superfluous and push for mass extinction of those made
unnecessary by technology. Advocates of the benefits of technological change
typically see emerging and converging technologies as offering hope for the
betterment of the human condition. However, critics of the risks of
technological change, and even some advocates such as trans humanist philosopher
Nick Bostrom, warn that some of these technologies could pose dangers, perhaps
even contribute to the extinction of humanity itself; i.e., some of them could
involve existential risks. Much ethical debate centers on issues of
distributive justice in allocating access to beneficial forms of technology.
Some thinkers, such as environmental ethicist Bill McKibben, oppose the
continuing development of advanced technology partly out of fear that its benefits
will be distributed unequally in ways that could worsen the plight of the poor.
By contrast, inventor Ray Kurzweil is among techno-utopians who believe that
emerging and converging technologies could and will eliminate poverty and
abolish suffering. Some analysts such as Martin Ford, author of The Lights in
the Tunnel: Automation, Accelerating Technology and the Economy of the Future, argue
that as information technology advances, robots and other forms of automation
will ultimately result in significant unemployment as machines and software
begin to match and exceed the capability of workers to perform most routine
jobs. As robotics and artificial intelligence develop further, even many
skilled jobs may be threatened. Technologies such as machine learning may
ultimately allow computers to do many knowledge-based jobs that require
significant education. This may result in substantial unemployment at all skill
levels, stagnant or falling wages for most workers, and increased concentration
of income and wealth as the owners of capital capture an ever larger fraction
of the economy. This in turn could lead to depressed consumer spending and
economic growth as the bulk of the population lacks sufficient discretionary
income to purchase the products and services produced by the economy.
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