IEET Fellow David Brin Named 2015 NEH Visiting Fellow at Bard College (Sep 25, 2015)IEET Fellow David Brin has been named the first annual National Endowment for the Humanities/Hannah Arendt Center Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. David will be in residence at the Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College from Monday, October 5, to Sunday, October 25. As part of David’s fellowship, he will mentor selected Bard students on their fiction and nonfiction writing. Brin will also offer a number of lectures and discussions during his residency at Bard.
Mikey Siegel co-producing “Transformative Technology” conference (Sep 24, 2015)IEET Affiliate Scholar Mikey Siegel is co-producing an event in Palo Alto on October 2-3 at Sofia University, called the Transformative Technology conference.
IEET Becoming More International (Sep 21, 2015)
JET Going So Strong We Need to Pause on Submissions (Sep 17, 2015)
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Why Brave New World Is No Longer the Terrifying Dystopia it Used to Be
by George Dvorsky
Sep 28, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkBrave New World used to be one of the most terrifying stories about a false utopia. It gave us the concept of “test tube babies,” and its name became synonymous with technological progress run wild. But many of the things Aldous Huxley predicted are coming true, and it turns out they’re not so scary.
Cryonics and Kim Suozzi
by John G. Messerly
Sep 28, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkA recent New York Times article chronicled 23-year-old Kim Suozzi’s decision to cryonically preserve her brain. Kim, who died recently of cancer, raised the money for her cryonic preservation by soliciting donations with this post at the subreddit “atheism” at the online site reddit—yes atheists can be generous people. Here is the video that accompanied the post:
In Defense of Work
by Nicole Sallak Anderson
Sep 28, 2015 • (0) Comments • Permalink“When I retire from work, I will finally live the life I’ve always wanted.”
Employment. Earning a living. Our life’s work. Career. Vocation.
Retirement. Freedom. Doing what I really want. Finally free.
What’s the deal with our relationship to work? When I was young, I was told to get a good job, earn a living, then retire and live a life free of work. I would listen to the adults around me and wonder what it meant. As if the only work we do is for another in order to receive money. Where does this idea come from? For if it’s true, then the human being doesn’t do a lick of work before getting that good job, and then after sixty, doesn’t work again.
Dear Elon Musk: Are You Sure You Want to Nuke Mars?
by Tery Spataro
Sep 27, 2015 • (0) Comments • Permalink34.9 million miles away from Earth an epic explosion occurs. On Mars. All eyes on Earth glaze upward to watch as the atmosphere slowly peals back from the neighbor we hardly knew…
It all started with a simplistic comment made on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, by the genius Elon Musk.
Technological Unemployment and the Value of Work (Series Index)
by John Danaher
Sep 27, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkMachines have long been displacing human labour, from the wheelbarrow and plough to the smartphone and self-driving car. In the past, this has had dramatic effects on how society is organised and how people spend their days, but it has never really led to long-term structural unemployment. Humans have always found other economically productive ways to spend their time.
Anti-Abortion Group Touts Virtue of Suffering
by Valerie Tarico
Sep 27, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkCatholic Pro-life organization wants you to just put up with suffering—and actually says so!
The American Life League [ALL] mobilizes devout Catholics against medical options that, to their way of thinking, violate God’s will. If you should drive past a Planned Parenthood and see elderly women fingering rosary beads next to pictures of the Virgin Mary, or young men holding Bibles and praying, American Life League probably had a hand in their presence there. Ironically, ALL also spreads misinformation about birth control, for example via a Pill Kills campaign—which means they feed the line-up of Catholic women waiting for abortion services.
The Tyranny of Mathematics
by Tsvi Bisk
Sep 26, 2015 • (1) Comments • Permalink”…mathematics…ought only to give definiteness to natural philosophy, not to generate or give it birth.” [1] Francis Bacon
“So far as the laws of Mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain. And so far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality.”- -Albert Einstein, Geometry and Experience
While the postmodernist social scientist often uses the language of words to obfuscate, the postmodern ‘hard sciences’ scientist sometimes appears to use the language of mathematics to obfuscate. Mathematics is a language not a science. It is the language of science and of the known physical world. The inorganic reality of our known world can be described mathematically with eerie precision. This we know is an absolute fact. I stress ‘known world’ because we cannot know empirically that mathematics pertains for all of nature. To know this empirically, one would have to be outside of nature, to be a supernatural being, to be a supernatural God.
Victims of Our Age
by Franco Cortese
Sep 26, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkAging is truly the travesty of our age. It constitutes the largest source of in-principle-preventable death in existence today – a toll of 100,000 real, feeling, hoping and daring human beings lost irreversibly for all time, per day. That’s a million human lives lost every one and a half weeks. A loss equal to the entire population of Canada every year, and to the entire U.S. population every decade. It accounts for three quarters of all deaths globally and for nine-tenths of all deaths in most developed countries.
The Electronic Frontier of Longevity and Control
by Brian Hanley
Sep 26, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkI have been pursuing gene therapies for aging, so my decision to discuss this goes against my current direction. We really don’t know what the limits are of what we might be able to do by playing the autonomic nervous system, but here are some thoughts to chew on.
The human brain is large, but 90% of your nervous system is outside your head. Researchers have found that interrupting vagus nerve signals to the brain can treat rheumatoid arthritis, as well as septic shock symptoms, however, some body subsystems may, or may not be responsive to this manipulation. We know that nerves signaling the spleen is critical for interruption of sepsis.
Stalinism as Transhumanism
by Rick Searle
Sep 25, 2015 • (10) Comments • PermalinkThe ever controversial Steve Fuller has recently published a number of jolting essays at the IEET,(there has been a good discussion on David Roden’s blog on the topic), yet whatever one thinks about the prospect of zombie vs transhumanist apocalypse he has managed to raise serious questions for anyone who identifies themselves with the causes of transhumanism and techno-progressivism; namely, what is the proper role, if any, of the revolutionary, modernizing state in such movements and to what degree should the movement be open to violence as a means to achieve its ends? Both questions, I will argue, can best be answered by looking at the system constructed in the Soviet Union between 1929 and 1953 under the reign of Joseph Stalin.
DeepDream: Today Psychedelic Images, Tomorrow Unemployed Artists
by Kaj Sotala
Sep 25, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkOne interesting thing that I noticed about Google’s DeepDream algorithm (which you might also know as “that thing making all pictures look like psychedelic trips“) is that it seems to increase the image quality. For instance, my current Facebook profile picture was ran through DD and looks sharper than the original, which was relatively fuzzy and grainy.
Book Review: The Transhumanist Wager by Zoltan Istvan
by Nicole Sallak Anderson
Sep 25, 2015 • (3) Comments • PermalinkI’ve found time to review another author’s work, “The Transhumanist Wager” by Zoltan Istvan. I had the pleasure of first meeting Zoltan at a Transhumanism conference near Berkeley, CA. In general, he’s a staunch advocate of the Transhuman movement - Zoltan is passionate about his work and he doesn’t mind stepping on a few toes to get his message out there.
The price of the Internet of Things will be a vague dread of a malicious world
by Marcelo Rinesi
Sep 25, 2015 • (1) Comments • PermalinkVolkswagen didn’t make a faulty car: they programmed it to cheat intelligently. The difference isn’t semantics, it’s game-theoretical (and it borders on applied demonology).
The Culturally Purposeful Robot
by Daniel Faggella
Sep 24, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkEarth is a colorful and diversely populated planet. Evolution just happened to be a genius beyond reckoning, but one that many of us take for granted much of the time - perhaps not on a conscious level, but in more of a conditioned and familiar sense. Continents of Homo sapiens developed into different races, created various cultures based on environment (and most likely genes), and the rest is history. Using this as a lens through which to frame humans’ development of robots, is there any reason to doubt that we will one day have any less of a diverse population of robots?
Digital, Physical, and Religious Immortality - is there Common Ground?
by Agbolade Omowole
Sep 24, 2015 • (2) Comments • PermalinkI grew up with the mindset to make a difference because life is short. It is said that life is not a measure of your duration on earth, but a measure of your donation to humanity. I have stopped believing that.
There are two ways to live one’s life: by default or by design. By default, humans grow and become very energetic between ages 18 to 40, after that his/her strength begin to fade. At old age, s/he becomes weak and age related disease make him/her die. His average healthspan is 80 years (in developed countries) and nothing can be done to live beyond a century. That’s the status quo.
New Transhuman Policy Center Seeks Papers
by Steven Umbrello
Sep 24, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkThe Transhumanism movement and philosophy have been growing a quite a rapid pace, and because of that its sometimes hard to keep up with all the newest technologies, subsidiary philosophical positions and current events.
That being said, some of you may have missed one of the latest initiatives with regards to pushing transhumanist ideals in the political realm, the Transhuman Policy Center. The TPC’s goals are best summed up by its mission statement:
“My Life With Bipolar Disorder: Non-Pharma Treatments” - interview with Gareth John (Part 2)
by Hank Pellissier
Sep 24, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkGareth John is an IEET reader and supporter who lives in Mid Wales; he’s an ex-Buddhist priest with a MA in Buddhist Studies at the University of Bristol, and a PhD focusing on non-monastic traditions of Tibetan tantric Buddhism. He has Bipolar disorder. In this Q & A, he generously shares his experience. This is Part 2 of two parts.
In this Digital Age, your Privacy is Continuously Invaded
by Richard van Hooijdonk
Sep 23, 2015 • (0) Comments • PermalinkNothing that you thought only you could see is safe anymore. Digital privacy cannot be trusted. I say this because something happened recently which prompted me to write this post. Spotify, the popular music application, revamped its privacy policy which contained shocking revelations regarding its use of personal user data. Spotify’s new policy declares that the company can access the photos, contacts and other personal data of its users.
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