Gregg, Benjamin2020-03-102020-03-102018http://digicults.org/files/2019/11/dcs-2018-0110.pdfhttps://mediarep.org/handle/doc/14456Intelligence is the human being’s most striking feature. There is no consensually held scientific understanding of intelligence. The term is no less indeterminate in the sphere of artificial intelligence. Definitions are fluid in both cases. But technical applications and biotechnical developments do not wait for scientific clarity and definitional precision. The near future will bring significant advances in technical and biotechnical areas, including the genetic enhancement of human intelligence (HI) as well as artificial intelligence (AI). I show how developments in both areas will challenge human communities in various ways and that the danger of AI is distinctly political. The argument develops in six steps. (1) I compare and contrast artificial with human intelligence in general and (2) AI with HI genetically modified. Then I correlate and differentiate (3) emergent properties and distributed intelligence, both natural and artificial, as well as (4) neural function, both natural and artificial. (5) Finally, I identify the specifically political capabilities I see in HI and (6) political dangers that AI poses to them.engartificial intelligenceAIhuman intelligenceintelligenceethicspoliticsKünstliche IntelligenzKIMenschliche IntelligenzIntelligenzEthikPolitik006100The Coming Political: Challenges of Artificial Intelligence10.25969/mediarep/135302364-2114