
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book: Sirius, R.U. and Cornell, Jay (2015-01-01), Transcendence, Red Wheel Weiser, Retrieved on 2015-01-25Source Material [books.google.com]
Folksonomies: science futurism transhumanism Memes
25 JAN 2015
Enlightenment as the Birth of Progress
Only in the 18th century Enlightenment did the concept of progress become widespread. Earlier, most
people thought of history in terms of a fall from a past Golden Age, or perhaps repeating cycles. (If
they thought of such things at all. Mostly they just worried about their next meals.)
With the Industrial Revolution, progress became almost synonymous with science and technology.
By the late 19th and early 20th century, we see the beginnings of modern science fiction (Verne,
Wells), and prot...Folksonomies: enlightenment progress
Folksonomies: enlightenment progress
25 JAN 2015
Biotechnology will Free Us from the Tyranny of Normalcy
Christopher Dewdney: Most people's “ideals” would turn them into underachieving Nicole
Kidmans and eight-foot Brad Pitts, identical cutouts. My previous, rather naïve, notion was that
biotechnology would free us from the tyranny of “normalcy”—that we could become anything we
wanted, morph ourselves into elongated, blue-skinned, orange-haired, sixteen-fingered geniuses,
or perhaps flying ribbons of sensual bliss that performed acrobatic choreographies above the
sunset.25 JAN 2015
NBIC: Nano-Bio-Info-Cogno
There's no one silver bullet technology that's going to make us all into superbeings. The trick is in the
mix of different technologies. NBIC stands for nanotechnology, biotechnology, information
technology, and cognitive science.
Look at it this way: with nanotechnology and biotechnology, we stand to gain control over
inorganic and organic matter. With advanced information technology, we get not just the horrendous
data glut that's now tormenting us (and our National Security Agency), but d...25 JAN 2015