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How to Redesign our Communities for the Internet Age

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Postapocalyptic Gardens

The Difficult Questions of ‘Personhood’

7th European Conference on Computing And Philosophy


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J.D. on 'Do We have a Right to DNA Evidence in Trials?' (Jul 4, 2009)

EmbraceUnity on 'How to Redesign our Communities for the Internet Age' (Jul 4, 2009)

Y on 'Technological Revolutions: Ethics and Policy in the Dark' (Jul 4, 2009)

fairyhedgehog on 'The Difficult Questions of 'Personhood'' (Jul 4, 2009)

Forrest Higgs on 'How to Redesign our Communities for the Internet Age' (Jul 3, 2009)








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IEET > Rights > Neuroethics > Life > Enablement > Vision > Virtuality

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Will Blackberrys Alter the Brains of Future Generations?



Molly Bentley

Are We Alone?


Posted: Oct 31, 2008

We’ve all descended from a common ancestor, but, as Homo sapiens, we no longer brachiate through trees and have long abandoned our stone tools for Blackberrys and iPods. Evolution has shaped us into the big-brained, bipedal, text-messaging specimens we are today. But it didn’t happened without a lot of pressure. SETI Radio takes a look at some of the forces that have driven human evolution - from the snake-phobia that sharpened our eyesight, to the anger-management that was a prerequisite for civilization.

Also, how your Blackberry may be changing the brains of future generations.
And, are we engineering our own successors through robotics?

Guests:

Listen:

  • mp3 - Higher Quality
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