Humans
in sentence
2119 examples of Humans in a sentence
Ten thousand years ago, the
humans
and livestock and pets were not even one tenth of one percent and wouldn't even have been visible on such a curve.
Suddenly, we humans, a recently arrived species, no longer subject to the checks and balances inherent in nature, have grown in population, technology and intelligence to a position of terrible power.
And it's that choice that I want to focus on, because as we migrate lethal decision-making from
humans
to software, we risk not only taking the humanity out of war, but also changing our social landscape entirely, far from the battlefield.
That's because the way
humans
resolve conflict shapes our social landscape.
Now, I think, knowing this, we can take decisive steps to preserve our democratic institutions, to do what
humans
do best, which is adapt.
That's because once you've deployed remotely-piloted drones, there are three powerful factors pushing decision-making away from
humans
and on to the weapon platform itself.
And that means very soon drones will tell
humans
what to look at, not the other way around.
But there's a second powerful incentive pushing decision-making away from
humans
and onto machines, and that's electromagnetic jamming, severing the connection between the drone and its operator.
Which brings us to, really, the third and most powerful incentive pushing decision-making away from
humans
and onto weapons: plausible deniability.
And civic leaders should deploy sensors and civic drones to detect rogue drones, and instead of sending killer drones of their own up to shoot them down, they should notify
humans
to their presence.
So
humans
are turning more towards animal consumption.
With the erosion of the green belt separating animals from humans, we live in each other's viral environment.
We think that's probably what got this frog, and
humans
are spreading this fungus.
So we went back to these specimens and we started digging around, and particularly, we looked into the teeth of skulls, hard parts where
humans
had not been able to get their fingers, and we found much better quality DNA.
And it's a journey that you and I have been on for many years now, and it began some 50 years ago, when
humans
first stepped off our planet.
So the journey back to Saturn is really part of and is also a metaphor for a much larger human voyage to understand the interconnectedness of everything around us, and also how
humans
fit into that picture.
And, in this case, it was a massive undertaking to explore a planet, and to come to understand a planetary system that, for all of human history, had been unreachable, and now
humans
had actually touched it.
As humans, where do we find it?
So, we
humans
get it from the things we eat: plants, vegetables, fruits, and also from eggs, meat and milk.
It’s true that some
humans
eat better than others.
Speaking of humans, there are currently 7 billion of us on Earth.
I think of us
humans
as "Life 2.0" because we can learn, which we in nerdy, geek speak, might think of as installing new software into our brains, like languages and job skills.
As an example, the Apollo 11 moon mission was both successful and inspiring, showing that when we
humans
use technology wisely, we can accomplish things that our ancestors could only dream of.
By this definition, people who say, "Ah, there will always be jobs that
humans
can do better than machines," are simply saying that we'll never get AGI.
Sure, we might still choose to have some human jobs or to give
humans
income and purpose with our jobs, but AGI will in any case transform life as we know it with
humans
no longer being the most intelligent.
Now, if the water level does reach AGI, then further AI progress will be driven mainly not by
humans
but by AI, which means that there's a possibility that further AI progress could be way faster than the typical human research and development timescale of years, raising the controversial possibility of an intelligence explosion where recursively self-improving AI rapidly leaves human intelligence far behind, creating what's known as superintelligence.
What do we want the role of
humans
to be if machines can do everything better and cheaper than us?
Come on, if we build technology that makes all
humans
obsolete, what could possibly go wrong?"
For example, when we
humans
drove the West African black rhino extinct, we didn't do it because we were a bunch of evil rhinoceros haters, did we?
And there was total disagreement about what the role of
humans
should be, even at the most basic level, so let's take a closer look at possible futures that we might choose to steer toward, alright?
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