The 4 greatest threats to the survival of humanity

503,273 views ・ 2022-07-19

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In January of 1995, Russia detected a nuclear missile headed its way.
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The alert went all the way to the president,
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who was deciding whether to strike back
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when another system contradicted the initial warning.
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What they thought was the first missile in a massive attack
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was actually a research rocket studying the Northern Lights.
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This incident happened after the end of the Cold War,
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but was nevertheless one of the closest calls we’ve had
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to igniting a global nuclear war.
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With the invention of the atomic bomb,
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humanity gained the power to destroy itself for the first time in our history.
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Since then, our existential risk—
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risk of either extinction
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or the unrecoverable collapse of human civilization—
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has steadily increased.
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It’s well within our power to reduce this risk,
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but in order to do so,
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we have to understand which of our activities
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pose existential threats now, and which might in the future.
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So far, our species has survived 2,000 centuries,
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each with some extinction risk from natural causes—
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asteroid impacts, supervolcanoes, and the like.
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Assessing existential risk is an inherently uncertain business
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because usually when we try to figure out how likely something is,
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we check how often it's happened before.
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But the complete destruction of humanity has never happened before.
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While there’s no perfect method to determine our risk from natural threats,
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experts estimate it’s about 1 in 10,000 per century.
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Nuclear weapons were our first addition to that baseline.
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While there are many risks associated with nuclear weapons,
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the existential risk comes from the possibility
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of a global nuclear war that leads to a nuclear winter,
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where soot from burning cities blocks out the sun for years,
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causing the crops that humanity depends on to fail.
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We haven't had a nuclear war yet,
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but our track record is too short to tell if they’re inherently unlikely
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or we’ve simply been lucky.
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We also can’t say for sure
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whether a global nuclear war would cause a nuclear winter so severe
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it would pose an existential threat to humanity.
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The next major addition to our existential risk was climate change.
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Like nuclear war, climate change could result
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in a lot of terrible scenarios that we should be working hard to avoid,
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but that would stop short of causing extinction or unrecoverable collapse.
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We expect a few degrees Celsius of warming,
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but can’t yet completely rule out 6 or even 10 degrees,
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which would cause a calamity of possibly unprecedented proportions.
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Even in this worst-case scenario,
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it’s not clear whether warming would pose a direct existential risk,
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but the disruption it would cause would likely make us more vulnerable
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to other existential risks.
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The greatest risks may come from technologies that are still emerging.
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Take engineered pandemics.
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The biggest catastrophes in human history have been from pandemics.
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And biotechnology is enabling us to modify and create germs
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that could be much more deadly than naturally occurring ones.
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Such germs could cause pandemics through biowarfare and research accidents.
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Decreased costs of genome sequencing and modification,
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along with increased availability of potentially dangerous information
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like the published genomes of deadly viruses,
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also increase the number of people and groups
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who could potentially create such pathogens.
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Another concern is unaligned AI.
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Most AI researchers think this will be the century
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where we develop artificial intelligence that surpasses human abilities
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across the board.
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If we cede this advantage, we place our future in the hands
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of the systems we create.
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Even if created solely with humanity’s best interests in mind,
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superintelligent AI could pose an existential risk
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if it isn’t perfectly aligned with human values—
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a task scientists are finding extremely difficult.
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Based on what we know at this point,
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some experts estimate the anthropogenic existential risk
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is more than 100 times higher than the background rate of natural risk.
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But these odds depend heavily on human choices.
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Because most of the risk is from human action, and it’s within human control.
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If we treat safeguarding humanity's future as the defining issue of our time,
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we can reduce this risk.
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Whether humanity fulfils its potential—
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or not—
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is in our hands.
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