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Technoprogressive? BioConservative? Huh?
Quick overview of biopolitical points of view









Personhood Beyond the Human Conference whats new at ieet
Mixed News from Space

Woman who lost limbs to flesh-eating bacteria gets bionic hands

Present Shock- explained in 15 minutes

Here’s the Real Reason Why Virtual Reality Doesn’t Work Yet

Making Friends With Artificial Intelligence

Will the Catholic Bishops Decide How You Die?

Hidden Beauty: Diseases become art under a microscope

US scientists clone human stem cells

Shame, Stigma and Angelina Jolie’s Breasts

Open Source Democracy


ieet books

eGods: Faith versus Fantasy in Computer Gaming
Author
by William Sims Bainbridge

The Infinite Resource: The Power of Ideas on a Finite Planet
by Ramez Naam

The Transhumanist Reader: Classical and Contemporary Essays
by eds. Max More and Natasha Vita-More

Artificial Slaves: Androids and Intelligent Networks in Early Modern Literature and Culture
by Kevin LaGrandeur


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Jønathan Lyons on 'The Puzzle of Personhood' (Jun 4, 2012)

Valkyrie Ice on 'A Modest Proposal: to solve health spending crisis, Tax Cats' (Jun 4, 2012)

Linda MacDonald Glenn on 'The Puzzle of Personhood' (Jun 4, 2012)

André on 'Why Russians don't like the West' (Jun 4, 2012)

Intomorrow on 'Earth 2062: a brief look at how our Future could unfold in 50 years' (Jun 4, 2012)







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Also check out technoprogressive multimedia on Thoughtware.tv

Hottest Articles of the Last Month

Life in the 2040s: nanofactories, flying cars, household robots, more
by Dick Pelletier
Apr 30, 2013
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Ten Responses to the Technological Unemployment Problem
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Noam Chomsky on Libertarians
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Organ, tissue replacement could end aging by mid-2020s
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Radical life extension: living a 1,000 year lifespan
by Dick Pelletier
May 7, 2013
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Statement on the Recent TED/Psi/Consciousness Controversy
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Apr 20, 2013
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RSS feedETHICAL TECHNOLOGY

Jamais Cascio

Wakefulness, Storms and Urban Agriculture

by Jamais Cascio

Vertical farms finally make the move from cybergreen fantasy to the pages of the New York Times. The logic is seductive: urban towers, filled not with more offices and apartments, but with food crops.

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Update from Doug Rushkoff

I just finished the first draft of my next book, now tentatively called “Life Incorporated” (and before that called “Corporatized.”)

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Milan Ćirković

Against the Empire

by Milan Ćirković

It is argued that the “generic” evolutionary pathway of advanced technological civilizations is more likely to be optimization-driven than expansion-driven, in contrast to the prevailing opinions and attitudes in both future studies on one side and astrobiology/SETI studies on the other. Two toy-models of postbiological evolution of advanced technological civilizations are considered and several arguments supporting the optimization-driven, spatially compact model are briefly discussed. In addition, it is pointed out that there is a subtle contradiction in most of the tech-optimist and transhumanist accounts of future human/alien civilizations’ motivations in its postbiological stages. This may have important ramifications for both practical SETI projects and the future (of humanity) studies.  Download the PDF

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Bostrom and H+ profiled in CNN

CNN’s piece on the upcoming conference on global catastrophic risks at Oxford, organized by IEET Chair Nick Bostrom and Milan Cirkovic, was extraordinarily warm.

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Russell Blackford

Pickering on transhumanism

by Russell Blackford

I’m nearing the end of my current blog project of commenting on each of the six articles in June’s edition of The Global Spiral  , which is devoted to a critique of transhumanism. This time, I will discuss Andrew Pickering’s, “Brains, Selves and Spirituality in the History of Cybernetics”, in some ways the strangest of the five articles that I have read so far. We’ll come to why, but let me step back for a moment to survey the overall terrain.

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Jamais Cascio

The Big Picture: Collapse, Transcendence, or Muddling Through

by Jamais Cascio

I’ll start this essay by leading with my conclusion: do we make it through this century? Yeah, but not all of us, and it’s neither as spectacular nor as horrific as many people imagine.

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Nathan Cravens

Mutually Assured Production for Universal Well Being: A Brief Introductory Discussion

by Nathan Cravens

Just as technology has the capacity to create, it can also destroy. It is crucial lived concepts like scarcity is identified so a life of abundance can fill destructive voids left behind. With enough collaborative expertise drawn to conclude that “giving gives more giving” and that “taking takes more taking,” the capacity to harmonize between these spheres can ensure that all of us have greater potential to live more preferred lives while limiting the causes of harm to oneself and others.

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Existential Threats and Risks: We Can’t Escape Impermanence!

Buddhist Geeks

“At any moment the Yellowstone caldera could blow up, wipe out 99% of the life on the surface of the planet, and probably all humans, and in our last minutes the degree of equanimity with which we face that prospect is the test of our dharmic fortitude and wisdom.” - James Hughes

In our final episode with professor James Hughes we tackle the less rosy side of Transhumanism, which has to do with massive existential threats and risks. Though there are many natural risks that could threaten humanity as a whole, including large asteriod collisions, gamma bursts, and super volcanoes, the Transhumanist recognize a whole host of other ways that we could threaten ourselves with advanced technologies.

In addition to discussing these threats and all of the possible side traps on the way toward a more techno-utopian future, James ties these together with our understanding of the dharma. He argues that even in a techno-utopian future (assuming we make it), we will still have to deal with annica—the ever changing flow of reality. 

(MP3)

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News of the Future: X-Risks

Changesurfer Radio

Why we avoid thinking about catastrophic risks, asteroid impacts, and tech politics in the Presidential race.

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News of the Future: Brain Science

Changesurfer Radio

The roots of empathy and political participation in the brain, the benefits of psilocybin, gene therapy for mental illness, and brain machines.  (MP3)

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Cyborg Buddhas & Techno-Utopian Pure Lands

Buddhist Geeks

Dr. J. chats with Vince Horn of Buddhist Geeks. With radical advances in science in technology would it be possible for us to turn our world into a so-called, “Buddha Realm” or would it be more likely that we create some sort of God Realm, where awakening is discouraged because the conditions are so radically pleasant? And how specifically could these advances help us develop spiritually, on the path toward Buddhahood? (MP3) Part 2 of 3. Part 1 is here.

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The New Renaissance

Personal Democracy Forum

In this keynote “invocation,” which opened the second day of Personal Democracy Forum on June 24, 2008, Doug argues that there is no such thing as “personal democracy” and genuine democratic discourse can only be participatory and collective. The power to write and publish, he notes, may finally be in the hands of everyone (after centuries of domination by religious and political elites), but real democracy isn’t just blogging and commenting, it’s treating the entire world as “open source” and remarkable by direct participation.

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Russell Blackford

Hayles shadowboxes with transhumanism

by Russell Blackford

The fourth of the six articles in the special anti-transhumanism issue of The Global Spiral (June 2008) is “Wrestling with Transhumanism” by well-known critic Katherine Hayles, Distinguished Professor of English and media studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.

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Jamais Cascio

Singular Sensations

by Jamais Cascio

The Singularity concept remains inescapable these days, although rarely well-understood.  Both are unfortunate developments, for essentially the same reason: the popularity of the term “Singularity” has undermined its narrative value. Its use in a discussion is almost guaranteed to become the focus of a debate, one that rarely changes minds. This is especially unfortunate because the underlying idea is, in my view, a useful tool for thinking about how we’ll face the challenges of the 21st century.

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The Chemistry of Love

Changesurfer Radio

Biological anthropologist Helen Fisher writes widely on the biological basis of love, sex and relationships. She is a consultant for the computer dating firm Chemistry.com. We talk about the potential therapeutic uses of the neurochemistry of love.

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Human-racism and biopolitics in SF

Big Ideas

On October 2, 2007, Robert Sawyer gave a talk at the University of Waterloo entitled “A Galaxy Far, Far Away” My Ass!, about science fiction’s relevance for the here and now.  TVOntario’s lecture series Big Ideas produced an MP3 of the talk.

Now Evan Steacy has now taken that soundtrack and put images to it, making a wonderful trio of YouTube videos out of the talk.
Episode 1: Planet of the Apes, Star Trek, and Frankenstein (6 minutes, 48 seconds)

Episode 2: H.G. Wells and Jules Verne (4 minutes, 0 seconds)

Episode 3: Star Wars (5 minutes, 17 seconds)

 

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Russell Blackford

Dupuy’s “anti-humanism”

by Russell Blackford

The third article in the June 2008 special anti-transhumanist issue of The Global Spiral is “Cybernetics Is An Antihumanism: Advanced Technologies and the Rebellion Against the Human Condition”, by Jean-Pierre Dupuy, director of the Centre de Recherche en Épistémologie Appliquée at the École Polytechnique, Paris.

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Jamais Cascio

Singularities Enough, and Time

by Jamais Cascio

A few people have asked me what I thought of Karl Schroeder’s recent article at Worldchanging, “No Time for the Singularity.”

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Aging: the disease, the cure, the implications

Aging 2008

Seven minutes of classic Aubrey from Aging 2008.

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Buddhism, H+ and the Myth of the Authentic Self

Buddhist Geeks

“The longer our lives, the more we’ll have a chance to see that there’s no self living them.” - James Hughes. What is Transhumanism and how is it related to Buddhist practice? Will technology enable us to radically extend our lifespans, help us control our thoughts and emotions, and bring about the potential to upload our consciousness into virtual reality spaces? And if so, what are the deeper implications for our contemplative traditions. Will these advances actually support the deepening of wisdom? According to professor James Hughes, a Buddhist practitioner and leading voice in the Transhumanist movement, these advances will enable us to deconstruct the notion and experience we have of an “authentic self” and will support the development of happiness, and the cessation of suffering.  (MP3)

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Aubrey’s anti-aging work profiled in Wired

In a remarkably upbeat article, Wired magazine profiles IEET Fellow Aubrey de Grey and his pro-healthy longevity organization, the Methuselah Foundation.

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Russell Blackford

Are transhumanists idol worshippers?

by Russell Blackford

In my continuing program of reading, and commenting on, the six articles about transhumanism in June’s edition of The Global Spiral, I now come to “Of Which Human Are We Post?” by Don Idhe, who approaches the issues from a perspective in philosophy of technology.

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Jamais Cascio

The Griefer Future

by Jamais Cascio

Nice little future you got there. Hate to see something bad happen to it.

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Russell Blackford

On the Templeton Foundation’s “Engaging Transhumanism”

by Russell Blackford

I am examining the articles on transhumanism in the current issue of The Global Spiral , an online magazine published by the Metanexus Institute. The articles in the issue were presented at a research conference on transhumanism in April 2008, at Arizona State University (ASU), funded by the Templeton Foundation. The Templeton Foundation also supports Metanexus Institute.

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Kristi Scott

Wall-E takes over my Two-Year Old and what it can do for the environment

by Kristi Scott

So, there’s a new robot movie coming out for kids, and humorous enough for adults: Wall-E. Looks like R.O.B from Nintendo and Number 5 from Short Circut? Cute? Inescapably addictive to young children? That’s the one!

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The Future of Education

Moodle Moot
Jamais says: Here’s the talk I gave at Moodle Moot San Francisco last week. It runs about 70 minutes—yeah, I spoke for over an hour—and the slides aren’t visible. Fortunately, I really only use slides for illustrations, and you shouldn’t have a problem understanding what I’m talking about.

 

While the talk ostensibly focuses on the future of education and educational technologies, it wanders across a much broader landscape. It’s more of a “what’s shaping the next decade?” kind of talk, with an education spin.

As always, I’m eager to get your reactions.

 

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What I Would Do If I Could Live To Be 150 Years Old

Methuselah Foundation

What would you do if you lived to be 150 years old? What about 300? The Methuselah Foundation is dedicated to curing age-related disease and extending the healthy human lifespan. And we’re closer than you think. Tell us what you would do with an extra 50 or 100 years of healthy life. You can submit your entries as a comment, photo, or video below. 10 winners will receive VIP admission and dinner seating to the upcoming Aging 2008 at Royce Hall, UCLA on June 27: http://www.mfoundation.org/Aging2008/ 1 grand prize winner will receive a rejuvenating spa package valued at more than $500.

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Mike Treder

Will $45 trillion save us?

by Mike Treder

Investing one percent of the world’s wealth in carbon-neutral energy over the coming decades could avert disaster.

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Ben Goertzel reports from Xiamen China

Ben reports on his recent trip to visit with Hugo de Garis’ AI lab in China:

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Introduction to Transhumanism

Centre for Inquiry Ontario

Hosted by Centre for Inquiry Ontario.

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