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









Personhood Beyond the Human Conference whats new at ieet
What’s the Rational Choice? Risk, Values and the Politics of Geoengineering

Prison Industrial Complex in America

Engineering the Future

The American prison system

Fighting Facebook, a Campaign for a People’s Terms of Service

Imagination Experiment: Visualizing Transformative Tech

From Mars to the Multiverse

The singularity: merging human/machine to achieve immortality

Feel the Pulse - 2013 MIT Image Award Winner

CubeSats: Tiny satellites work at MIT, U. Mich.


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


comments

André on '"Personhood" for Beginners' (Jun 4, 2012)

nude0007 on 'The Puzzle of Personhood' (Jun 4, 2012)

Jønathan Lyons on 'Terrorists Attack Nanotech Labs with Bombs, claiming they fear NanoCyborgs and Gray Goo' (Jun 4, 2012)

nude0007 on '‪Eliminating Death - Part 1 - Death as Waste‬' (Jun 4, 2012)

nude0007 on 'Terrorists Attack Nanotech Labs with Bombs, claiming they fear NanoCyborgs and Gray Goo' (Jun 4, 2012)







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Also check out technoprogressive multimedia on Thoughtware.tv

Hottest Articles of the Last Month

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RSS feedETHICAL TECHNOLOGY


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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IEET News for June 14, 2008

1. A Note From Dr. J.
2. Articles
3. Latest from JET
4. Multimedia
5. TechEthx News
  - Existential Risks List Posts
  - Trans-Spirit List Posts
6. Events
  - with IEET Speakers
  - all events

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Silke Fauve

America’s Journey to Universal Healthcare: A Long and Winding Road

by Silke Fauve

Neither Obama’s nor McCain’s proposed health care reforms can fix America’s broken system.

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Michael Anissimov

Is there a Nanotech Rapture to be Ruptured?

by Michael Anissimov

Nanotech expert Dr. Richard A.L. Jones contributed “Rupturing The Nanotech Rapture” to the IEEE’sSpecial Report on the Singularity, that topic that all the cool kids, like the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, are talking about.

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J. Hughes

Review: Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population

by J. Hughes

Most observers of social movements, even their participants, underestimate their diversity and complexity. Every social movement is a constantly roiling mass of uneasy fractions, tendencies and subtendencies, tenuously and temporarily allying, with shifting meanings for core terms and goals, from “the Enlightenment”, to “anarchism” to “conservatism” to “environmentalism”. This is the problem that Columbia historian Matthew Connelly seeks to correct in Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population.

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The Effect of Longevity on Retirement and Pensions

Pensions Radio

UK Pensions Radio speaks with IEET Fellow Aubrey de Grey on the debate concerning retirement age and its affect on pensions and pension funds.

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Russell Blackford

Thoughts on art and nudity

by Russell Blackford

As of this morning, the case against acclaimed artistic photographer Bill Henson appears to have collapsed completely. A few days ago, the censored versions of the most controversial images, as published by news outlets, were given a G rating. The uncensored version of the most controversial image has now been rated a lowly PG. Australia’s censorship authority, the Classification Board, has stated that the “image of breast nudity … creates a viewing impact that is mild and justified by context … and is not sexualised to any degree”.

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Andy Miah

Paralympics 2.0

by Andy Miah

Oscar Pistorius was right all along, at least for now. He was right to appeal the ruling from the International Association of Athletics Federations that forbade him from competing alongside Olympians in Beijing for one simple reason: he is an Olympian.

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Doug Rushkoff

Beyond Brand Obama

by Doug Rushkoff

Nothing against Barack Obama, but we’d be mistaken to consider his politics a complete break from the past, a renaissance in participatory government, or the realization of an Internet-enabled “open source” democracy. He’s pretty damn good, don’t get me wrong, and he may just represent the closest thing yet to a GenX, post-boomer, anti-sentimental and a-mythic candidate for president. But there are a few ways in which his candidacy also reinforces some of the branded, celebrity-based, and charismatic techniques of traditional politics. To make the most of his candidacy and, hopefully, his presidency, we’ll have to distinguish one from the other.

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The Coming Convergence

Changesurfer Radio

In The Coming Convergence Stanley Schmidt lays out the accelerating technological trends in nanotechnology, biotechnology, information technology and cognitive science, and how their convergence into new metasciences will bring about dramatic risks and benefits.

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Aging: Stop Right There!

Are We Alone?

Imagine if aging were a disease like measles, one that could be cured. Some scientists think it’s possible and that we’ll eventually halt - or at least slow - the march of time and extend lifespans into the triple digits and beyond. 100 could become the new 40, and 1000 the new 500! But that’s a lot of years of filling out tax forms and showing up for dental hygiene appointments. Do we really want to live that long? If so, we should tap into the secret of longevity from Ming, a 400-year-old clam.

Also, the surprising story of how aviator Charles Lindbergh helped develop a medical device that prolonged lives - all in support of the Nazi cause.
Guests:

  * Aubrey de Grey - Biogerontologist and author of Ending Aging: The Rejuvenation Breakthroughs That Could Reverse Human Aging in Our Lifetime
  * Michael Rose - Ecologist and Evolutionary Biologist at the University of California - Irvine
  * David M. Friedman - author of The Immortalists: Charles Lindbergh, Dr. Alexis Carrel and Their Daring Quest to Live Forever
  * Al Wanamaker - Researcher at Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences

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Athena Andreadis

The Heirs of Prometheus

by Athena Andreadis

Like anyone who’s breathing, I have been tracking the Phoenix Lander.  So I thought this might be a good moment to share a personal memory of one of its ancestors.

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KMO on Singularity and the End of Oil

Changesurfer Radio

KMO produces the psychedelic transhumanist and End of Oil “C-Realm” podcast. We talk about ‘shrooms, the Singularity and gardening. Also includes Jonathan Coulton’s song “De-Evolving” care of the Podsafe Music Network.  [MP3]

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Jamais Cascio

SimFuture(s)

by Jamais Cascio

I’ve long been a fan of the use of games and sims as a way of working through future-facing issues. The big advantage of games as a foresight device is the capacity to fail in interesting ways: you can try out different, even bizarre, strategies for success, and do so without worry of harming yourself or others. It’s a form of rehearsal,  a way to understand the ways in which the present may be manipulated to create a desirable tomorrow.

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Mike Treder

The Power Pyramid

by Mike Treder

How much power do we truly have in making our ideas matter? My estimate that only about one in a million among us—about six thousand people in the whole world—has enough power to effect change on a global basis.

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George Dvorsky

Of dead race horses and the dead long-ball: Two very different consequences of enhancement in sports

by George Dvorsky

On May 3, 2008, shortly after finishing second at the Kentucky Derby, filly Eight Belles went crashing to the ground, the result of sustained compound fractures to both her front legs. The horse’s injuries were so devastating that she had to be euthanized right there on the track, much to the horror of the 157,770 spectators. Last week, a number of baseball pundits noticed that home run production was significantly down across the Majors. And not by just a little bit. It’s being predicted that this season could see a drop of 1,000 home runs compared to the 2006 season. Last year saw a drop of nearly 600 home runs compared to 2006.  Home runs, it would appear, are on the decline. What do these two seemingly unrelated stories have in common? Performance-enhancing drugs.

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Russell Blackford

Hollywood versus the Mutants

by Russell Blackford

When Hollywood movies depict mutated human beings — sometimes beautifully, grotesquely, or bizarrely transformed in appearance from the Homo sapiens norm — they draw upon traditions that are thousands of years old. Throughout recorded history, human myths, legends, and folktales have described recognisably anthropomorphic beings that nonetheless deviate from species-typical human morphology and/or possess greater than human powers.

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Jamais Cascio

Who Decides the Ideal Climate?

by Jamais Cascio

Who gets to determine the “right” climate for the Earth?

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Kristi Scott

The Pistorius Effect

by Kristi Scott

A lot of discussion has been going around regarding Pistorius. Should he or shouldn’t he be allowed to compete for a spot in the Beijing Olympics? If he makes it, should he or shouldn’t he be allowed to compete. There’s concern over what this will do to sports in general; what kind of message is it sending out to others; and how it could throw off future comparisons within the sport, making some sports records incomparable.

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