I also can't imagine why someone would want to be a robot over a human.
1. Do you believe this at all possible to any extent? If so, how far do you think we can go, and if not, why?
2. Would you be in favor of being able to alter humanity at the core of what makes us "human"?
3. How long do you think this will take for us to achieve?
4. What personal moral issues do you have (if any) with this movement?
5. If given the chance, would you alter your mind or body (abolitionist theme) to reduce pain? Or, simply augment?
6. If this became possible, how would it affect world religions?
7. Is this possible without severe class warfare, i.e., the rich advancing their state, the poor behind left behind?
They are unhappy as they are and think they would be happier as robots.
Kind of what I was thinking but didn't want to say it![]()
I think that's not really all that accurate, at least not for me.
1. If the option presented itself, and it allowed me to be immortal, of course I'd robotize myself a bit.
2. I'm pretty happy with my life and my body, but I would be happier with "superpowers". If someone offered you superpowers, would you be all "nah, I'm good"?
1. I think a lot of medical sciences potentially have the same effect just without the robotics. If that turns out to be true than would you roboticize yourself or stay all natural?
2. I'd be wary of anybody selling me anything. Most of the superpowers you could want or think about can probably be worn (assisted robotics) without having to alter your body. So yes, I will say I'm good.
And why just wear something when you can integrate it into yourself completely? These hypotheticals have no catches except that you'd have non-organic parts as part of your "self".
Also, not all of these ideas I have for super powers are things to be worn. I'm not talking about "actual" superpowers really, but things like... imagine integrating a system where I could derive nourishment, some or all, from the sun? Or would let me breathe water, see in the full spectrum, make sleep optional, etc. Maybe there could be something that I could wear at all times to have all these interesting effects, but they'd be on all the time, effectively no different than if they were a part of me.
But why take it off? Why not integrate it into myself completely?You wear it so you can take it off!
Most of that stuff you could easily wear something, and the perk is if you aren't doing anything like swimming underwater, you can take it off. The only interesting thing would be to see the full spectrum, but I don't know if that's feasible or not. Everything else does not sound appealing to me, and does not have a high cost-benefit ratio for me to want to roboticize myself.
But why take it off? Why not integrate it into myself completely?
Why is taking something off a perk? Wouldn't it be a perk that I never had to put something on or take it off? That it was just a part of me?
I'm not talking about appealing to you, and these are simply a few ideas that are only currently restricted by my imagination. Wearing something for a task is different than innately having the capability. If I could replace some of my muscle tissue/cells with something 'stronger' and more effecient, and it effectively made me very very very strong, it would be more viable and useful than if I just wore some exoskeleton whenever I wanted to move something heavy. It's the difference between going to the well for water and turning on the tap.
And I can paint many more of these sorts of pictures, like blood cells that are inorganic and orders of magnitude more effective than red blood cells, allowing me to hold my breath for very long times, run for very long times, essentially never feel fatigued etc.
I guess my p.o.v. Is that I like being a boring human. The good thing about taking something off is that you don't have to constantly be surrounded by it. It's not about 'stronger, better, faster, stronger' to me. I have no desire to be a superhero.
I saw your edit. Mind sharing a link?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphakia
http://www.disinfo.com/2012/12/scie...ble-human-eyes-to-see-a-wider-color-spectrum/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrachromacy#Possibility_of_human_tetrachromats
For the vision stuff.
And I have no problem with people enjoying being a boring human, but I just want to widen your perception when it comes to people who don't mind augmenting themselves technologically~ It's not all about hating your body/circumstances.
I personally think it's a naive idea that technology will empower us should things continue as they are.
We are already seeing the effect of diminishing returns, accelerated by concentration of wealth and lack of social mobility. You are not going to see an A.I when we can't even understand our own psyche and are becoming more disconnected every day, just more cheap plastic and a stagnating hedonistic culture with an increasingly polluted nature and resource conflicts. You think this is progress?
At the same time we live in a plutocracy and social control is everywhere, it's just not centralized like in the age of a sovereign ruler.
But people seem happy to become cheerful robots just like CW Mills said. Electronic entertainment is just a new manifestation of the same thing that was used to control people in Rome. The masses are not interested about substance, we are not really searching our "souls" to improve local communities and thus eventually reach the stars by working together. At the same time the elite are well educated and understand what is up but don't really give a fuck either. Hollow monuments in Dubai, yachts and squandered opportunities.
NASA is done, stick a fork in it. A few decades ago we sent a man to the moon but now the orbit is just full of junk so we can watch pornography and sports. Angry Birds is our singularity, yay.
Business technology strategist, futurist and expert in the impact of technology on humans and society, Robert Harken, will discuss the latest in transhumanism, colonizing space and the transition to the singularity in which computers match human intelligence and possibly compete for control of Earth.
They are unhappy as they are and think they would be happier as robots.
You can't expect humanity to adapt to the digital revolution overnight. For all we know, the cultural malaise you've described is a normal and perhaps necessary symptom of our adjustment period. What we do know is that technology has made humanity safer, more peaceful, more prosperous, better fed, better educated, and more cosmopolitan. We live in a time of unprecedented knowledge and connectedness, on the cusp of at least one more major technological revolution (via nanotech). I doubt our future is as bleak as you suggest.I personally think it's a naive idea that technology will empower us should things continue as they are.
We are already seeing the effect of diminishing returns, accelerated by concentration of wealth and lack of social mobility. You are not going to see an A.I when we can't even understand our own psyche and are becoming more disconnected every day, just more cheap plastic and a stagnating hedonistic culture with an increasingly polluted nature and resource conflicts. You think this is progress?
At the same time we live in a plutocracy and social control is everywhere, it's just not centralized like in the age of a sovereign ruler.
But people seem happy to become cheerful robots just like CW Mills said. Electronic entertainment is just a new manifestation of the same thing that was used to control people in Rome. The masses are not interested about substance, we are not really searching our "souls" to improve local communities and thus eventually reach the stars by working together. At the same time the elite are well educated and understand what is up but don't really give a fuck either. Hollow monuments in Dubai, yachts and squandered opportunities.
NASA is done, stick a fork in it. A few decades ago we sent a man to the moon but now the orbit is just full of junk so we can watch pornography and sports. Angry Birds is our singularity, yay.
You can't expect humanity to adapt to the digital revolution overnight. For all we know, the cultural malaise you've described is a normal and perhaps necessary symptom of our adjustment period. What we do know is that technology has made humanity safer, more peaceful, more prosperous, better fed, better educated, and more cosmopolitan. We live in a time of unprecedented knowledge and connectedness, on the cusp of at least one more major technological revolution (via nanotech). I doubt our future is as bleak as you suggest.
Just wondering if anyone is trying out calorific restriction or other methods to prolong ones lifespand (long enough for medical technologies to pop out that'll take care of that for you)?
Afaik, the safest bet of prolonging your life is to live on a constant calorie deficient (50% or so), which I can't handle.
If those extra years are frail and shitty, whats the point. I guess if you are hoping to stay around long enough until the breakthrough of indifinite lifespan; but even then you would require a lot of finances to afford it.
And this is why, despite my misgivings above, I recognise the desire and need for advancements (and don't put my own squeamishness ahead of that need). When I say I'm unwilling to be a pioneer, of course there are plenty of people around who would give their eye teeth for the opportunity. Good luck, I hope you see a transformation in your lifetime.my heart is weak and my entire body suffers from it. Get me augmentation anytime. heart first. leg/arms next. Eyes (hud) and brain (memory) then.
Haha, an eloquently painted picture. However I don't believe it's possible to make any statement, from any perspective no matter how wide, that doesn't still have its equally relevant and powerful opposite. And here I think Monocle does a fair job:I personally think it's a naive idea that technology will empower us should things continue as they are.
We are already seeing the effect of diminishing returns, accelerated by concentration of wealth and lack of social mobility. You are not going to see an A.I when we can't even understand our own psyche and are becoming more disconnected every day, just more cheap plastic and a stagnating hedonistic culture with an increasingly polluted nature and resource conflicts. You think this is progress?
At the same time we live in a plutocracy and social control is everywhere, it's just not centralized like in the age of a sovereign ruler.
But people seem happy to become cheerful robots just like CW Mills said. Electronic entertainment is just a new manifestation of the same thing that was used to control people in Rome. The masses are not interested about substance, we are not really searching our "souls" to improve local communities and thus eventually reach the stars by working together. At the same time the elite are well educated and understand what is up but don't really give a fuck either. Hollow monuments in Dubai, yachts and squandered opportunities.
NASA is done, stick a fork in it. A few decades ago we sent a man to the moon but now the orbit is just full of junk so we can watch pornography and sports. Angry Birds is our singularity, yay.
They're both true and worth incorporating imo.You can't expect humanity to adapt to the digital revolution overnight. For all we know, the cultural malaise you've described is a normal and perhaps necessary symptom of our adjustment period. What we do know is that technology has made humanity safer, more peaceful, more prosperous, better fed, better educated, and more cosmopolitan. We live in a time of unprecedented knowledge and connectedness, on the cusp of at least one more major technological revolution (via nanotech). I doubt our future is as bleak as you suggest.
I'm much more interested in inward improvements over outward ones.
Robotarms, roboteyes, etc, might be cool, but they don't excite me like being able to change your mood or the way you think.
Take the third possibility:Should I become a cyborg in the future?
Or should I spend that money making my wheelchair transformable into a dual rotor helicopter?
Choices, man.
Take the third possibility:
Fuse the wheelchair with your body. Become a flying cyborg with wheels.
Consider the classic philosophical example of the Tin Man, who had all of his parts replaced one by one, heart, legs, torso.... including eventually his brain. Is it really the same tin man as before, when all of the parts are replaced?
... I am skeptical that any "backup" of your brain to digital will actually be you. That makes a LOT of assumptions about what life and consciousness are. It could be the case that you simply create an automaton that acts like you... but is not actually "conscious" in the same way, and is not actually "you". You will really die, but you leave behind a robot or digital consciousness that acts like you. Not really what you were going for.
What if consciousness actually is based fundamentally on the function of the universe, and the brain is not a computer that we can just hack as we want? (or at least, is not a computer that contains the entirety of what we are)
For me, the 2 endings that correspond to my beliefs are the Helios Ending for the First one, and the Omar one for IW.
h+ (transhumanism) has always been one of the ideas I've liked the most. In both endings, you seek a way yo be something more than human, the next step in evolution.
When we have the tools to transform ourselves, to outrun natural evolution, I think we should use them. And we should. In an always changing society, where nothing conforms to the rules of the past, somewhere down the line we are going to hit a roadblock, then, we will need to make use of these tools.
And I don't think we will be less human by accepting these changes. I like to think that the concept of humanity does not makes us, instead, we create that concept. If we change it will change accordingly.
I saw this interesting argument on reddit couple of days ago, that I thought I'd share with you guys.
Aren't we all already kinda transhumanist?
Modern medicine&technology has already for years been used to change our bodies and environment for what most agree is the better.
Is there any difference from being handed pencillin, or having an operation, to replacing your eyes with robotic ones?
It's just a case of changing what would have happened if you lived unassisted in the wild.