The impact of human-level intelligence has been fairly dramatic - looking at the current mass extinction.
You mean the one that started roughly 15,000 years ago? Yes, a truly dramatic change!
The biggest transformation seems likely when machines surpass humans in most areas of the job marketplace.
True. And at that point, humans will begin to derive more than half of their income from their ownership of capital and land. And those humans without capital or land may not be able survive, let alone to reproduce. Mankind has been in this position before, though.
The impact of human-level intelligence has been fairly dramatic - looking at the current mass extinction.
You mean the one that started roughly 15,000 years ago? Yes, a truly dramatic change!
You have different tastes in drama from me. For me, a mass extinction is a big deal. Especially so, if the species to which I belong looks as though it may be one of those that goes up against the wall in it.
Mankind has been in this position before, though.
Well, not exactly this position: we haven't come across critters that are much stronger, faster and smarter than us before.
http://michaelnielsen.org/blog/what-should-a-reasonable-person-believe-about-the-singularity/
Michael Nielsen, a pioneer in the field of quantum computation (from his website: Together with Ike Chuang of MIT, he wrote the standard text on quantum computation. This is the most highly cited physics publication of the last 25 years, and one of the ten most highly cited physics books of all time (Source: Google Scholar, December 2007). He is the author of more than fifty scientific papers, including invited contributions to Nature and Scientific American) has a pretty good essay about the probability of the Singularity. He starts off from Vinge's definition of the Singularity, and says that it's essentially the proposition that the three following assumptions are true:
Then he goes on to define the probability of the Singularity within the next 100 years as the probability p(C|B)p(B|A)p(A), and gives what he thinks are reasonable ranges for the values p(A), p(B) and p(C)
In the end, he finds that the Singularity should be considered a serious probability:
Hat tip to Risto Saarelma.