Tech Pace Fast, Opposition Uncertain: IEET Readers (Mar 19, 2010)By an overwhelming majority, respondents to a recently concluded poll said they expect the pace of development in emerging technologies to remain swift over the next two decades, but they are divided over how strong the opposition will be to human enhancements.
A Note About Our Comments Policy (Mar 11, 2010)
No Consensus on Future of Nation-State (Mar 8, 2010)
IEET Readers See China as Future Power (Feb 23, 2010)
Autism And Vaccines: Why People Still Believe The Hype
by Andrea Kuszewski
Mar 19, 2010 • (4) Comments • PermalinkEarly last month, the now-famous paper by Dr Andrew Wakefield that supposedly linked vaccines to the onset of autism, was formally retracted by the Lancet, the journal that published it back in 1998. This was a monumental decision, considering it was the conclusions drawn from this paper that launched the firestorm of debate around the safety of vaccines, and likely the cause of the current vaccine crisis.
Online Games, Super Empowerment, and a Better World
by John Robb
Mar 18, 2010 • (1) Comments • PermalinkFor active online gamers, real life is broken. It doesn’t make any sense. Effort isn’t connected to reward. The path forward is confused, convoluted, and contradictory. Worse, there’s a growing sense that the entire game is being corrupted to ensure failure. So why play it?
Are You There, Dog? It’s Me, Gordon.
by Kyle Munkittrick
Mar 18, 2010 • (0) Comments • PermalinkOne of the biggest letdowns for me about the film Wall-E was that all of the robots, save the evil navigator, were in some way visually anthropomorphic. They had hands, eyes, voices, that were unmistakably humanish. Pixar’s great mascot, Luxo Jr., managed to be lovable without these traits. There is a certain extra level of magic involved in making a great character that is utterly unrecognizable as human.
History is Contingent, Built on Flukes, Accidents, and Surprises
by Mike Treder
Mar 17, 2010 • (0) Comments • PermalinkYesterday in Shanghai, a woman miscarried. The child that wasn’t born would have led a unified China to attack and defeat India, Russia, and finally Europe, resulting in a Chinese empire that ruled the world from 2050 to 2100. Instead, China wilted under internal political strife caused by economic and environmental pressures, and became a second-rate power in the 21st century.
Compassion
by Ben Goertzel
Mar 17, 2010 • (3) Comments • PermalinkWe tend think about compassion on the level of individual selves and minds: Bob feels compassionate toward Jim because Jim lost his wife, or his wallet, etc. Bob sympathizes with Jim because he can internally, to a certain extent, “feel what Jim feels.”
What Would You Say?
by Rocky Rawstern
Mar 16, 2010 • (3) Comments • PermalinkAfter a yearlong hiatus, I thought it was about time that I got back on the nano-horse and giddy-upped into some new thoughts and understandings regarding that tiny little thing we call “nanotechnology.”
A Long, Lonely Road
by David Brin
Mar 12, 2010 • (2) Comments • PermalinkSome informal advice to new authors…
Fifteen Minutes into the Future
by Jamais Cascio
Mar 11, 2010 • (2) Comments • PermalinkOne of the hardest things to grapple with as a futurist is the sheer banality of tomorrow.
Love’s Labour Lost: An act of desperation leads to a bad law
by Linda MacDonald Glenn
Mar 11, 2010 • (2) Comments • PermalinkThere is a saying in the law that “hard cases make bad law.” This tragic story is one of those hard cases.
Health Care Good, System Bad
by Mike Treder
Mar 11, 2010 • (5) Comments • PermalinkYou can make an argument that the quality of health care in the United States is as good as anywhere in the world (if you can afford it)—but the system we use to allocate and pay for that care is obviously broken and needs to be fixed.
Do Secularists Contribute to Social Divisiveness?
by Russell Blackford
Mar 10, 2010 • (9) Comments • PermalinkMy colleague Taner Edis, who contributed a fine essay to 50 Voices of Disbelief: Why We Atheists , has, alas, written a new essay over on the Secular Outpost blog, in which he takes me to task for my recent criticism of Gary Bouma.
Why We Need Technology Ratchets
by Andrew Maynard
Mar 10, 2010 • (2) Comments • PermalinkA lot of things keep me up at night – everything from the trivial (“did I remember to brush my teeth?”) to the to the profound (“does it matter?”). But recently, I’ve been plagued more than usual in the wee small hours by the challenge of developing sustainable and resilient technologies.
Pushing Back Against the Methane Tipping Point
by Jamais Cascio
Mar 10, 2010 • (2) Comments • PermalinkA piece in the latest issue of Science shows that there’s a considerable amount of methane (CH4) coming from the East Siberian Arctic Shelf, where it had been trapped under the permafrost. There’s as much coming out from one small section of the Arctic ocean as from all the rest of the oceans combined. This is officially Not Good.
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