Archive for the ‘culture’ Category

What does second-order cybernetics have to do with human enhancement?

No Comments » June 9th, 2010 Posted in Humanity+, culture, enhancement, psychology

Here is an introduction to the talk that Humanity+ Board Member Natasha Vita-More is going to give at H+ Summit @ Harvard, in her own words:

What does second-order cybernetics have to do with human enhancement?

I anticipate human physiology going through a transformative resolution much as astronomy did with the Copernicus Revolution, as physics did with Quantum mechanics, as heredity did with the Principles of Inheritance, and as medicine with the Genome Revolution. The one element which is essential to the transformation of physiology is its self-directed nature.

Years ago, in the 1950-70s, a group of individuals with varied backgrounds were deeply drawn to two distinct areas of scientific study—biology and cognition. One such enthusiast was Norbert Weiner, an engineer and a philosopher, who applied the term “cybernetics” to the growing interest in communications and patterns of behavior. Taking this concept to a more inclusive set of principles, Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson emphasized the element of ecology of variables through second-order cybernetics. Our entire environment and its universe is an independent but interrelated, unified wholesystem, and we as life forms within this system are agents of our own physiological system. Thinking mechanisms, specifically computer generated, are interconnected systems of communications, feedback and observation.

Enhancing physiology relates to new types of human bodies, brains and behaviors, which need better processes for observation and feedback. We need to be aware what is occurring with our cells, organs and internal systems. We need to recognize how to formulate knowledge based on more intelligent and rigorous assimilation of information. We also need to be more conscious of our behaviors in how we communicate with others and how we protect our well-being. Put to the test of problem-solving, the elements form a design ecology of human enhancement.

In short, the odds are that technology will immeasurably extend human life. Until then, we need to stay alive. What ideas, means, and methods are available?

My talk covers the Human Enhancement Project as one place to start. The project began in the late 1990s with designs for transhuman and posthuman prototypes. From 2004 to 2008, it initiated a theory of human enhancement as an adaptive system and linking already available information on scientific, technological and philosophical approaches to human futures. Technology’s array of high-tech systems of robotics, AI, computer-based simulations, biotech and nanotech evidence the potential for augmenting our physiology. Sciences’ cybernetic study of systems and models imparts the awareness that ideas, means, and methods are integrated. From 2008 to the present, it has been looking for answers in dealing with a central issue that while a large percentage of society in the Western world considers certain technological augmentations as normal; an even larger percentage of socio-biopolitics considers technological enhancement as abnormal and even repugnant. This is a predicament.

The Human Enhancement Project delivers a developing sensibility which every citizen scientist might want to know for participating in an enhancement design ecology.

I look forward to seeing you all at the Summit!

Kristi Scott: "The Second Self through Second Life: Mask or Mirror?"

No Comments » December 16th, 2009 Posted in culture, psychology, virtuality

Kristi Scott has published her essay The Second Self through Second Life: Mask or Mirror? as part of the book The Real and the Virtual.

As members of a society, there is a variable and determinable array of both personality types and the combinations in which they fit together. In this particular exploration, there is a focus on the continuum between those who are self reported introverts and those who are self reported extraverts. This paper seeks to explore and lay out the real world distinctions of introverted and extraverted individuals based on published research; then to look into and examine virtual life distinctions of introversion and extraversion in SecondLife® to look for any correlations or significance.

The Real and the Virtual (book download)

H+ in Literature – Sept 10, 2009 7-9pm – London

No Comments » August 28th, 2009 Tags: , , ,
Posted in art, culture, literature, media

Re-Imagining the Human Body Through Literature

7-9pm, Sept 10, 2009

Old Operating Theatre Museum, SEI, London UK

Guests:
Cory Doctorow
Gwyneth Jones
Ian Watson
Matthew De Abaitua

It’s been away for a few months, but our unique literary event, The Butcher’s Shop, is back for a one-off sci-fi special on September 10, entitled Future Human. The night will focus on the science and literature of transhumanism, the process of upgrading the human body with technology; we’ll be exploring the utopian possibilities and nightmarish tensions that writers have found in transhumanism over the years.

One half of the night will be given over to a discussion of transhumanism with four special guests – Cory Doctorow (Boing Boing blog hero and author of Little Brother), Gwyneth Jones (author of the Arthur C.Clarke Award winning Bold As Love), Ian Watson (co-author of the screenplay for A.I., and a former Stanley Kubrick collaborator) and Matthew de Abaitua (author of The Red Men).

The other half of the night will be spent, as usual, chopping and dissecting stories submitted by guests in an intensive process of live editing by the BAD IDEA team – if you’d like to submit stories of 350 words or less for inclusion, written on the transhumanist theme, then send them to info@badidea.co.uk or via our Facebook page, before September 4. The two best stories will be edited live on the night, and the best five will receive a limited edition print of the Future Human poster pictured above, designed by Bryony Lloyd.

It’s in the same place we’ve always been, the Old Operating Theatre Museum near London Bridge. If you haven’t been before, this is a beautifully preserved Victorian operating theatre, with all the disturbingly wrong-headed medical equipment, pungent herbs, and scary mannequins that entails. And as usual, Hendrick’s Gin are going to be providing delicious cucumber-laced complimentary cocktails all night.

More details: It runs from 7-9pm of Thursday September 10, the admission price is £12, and tickets are available here. Tickets will also be available from the venue on the night, but places are limited, so it’s best to buy them beforehand. Tickets will be held at the Old Operating Theatre and not mailed out before the event. The address for the Old Operating Theatre Museum is 9a St. Thomas’s St., London SE1 9RY – click here for a map.

Looking forward to seeing everyone there!

The Singularity Film from Doug Wolen

1 Comment » August 14th, 2009 Tags: , , ,
Posted in art, culture, futurism, multimedia

This feature length documentary will include interviews with Humanity+’s James Hughes, Jonas Lamis, Ben Goertzel, and Nick Bostrom, as well as dozens of others from both inside and outside the S^ and H+ community. Coming December 2009.

“The Singularity – Will we survive our technology?” is a comprehensive documentary showcasing the promises and perils of future technologies such as nanotechnology, artificial intelligence, and robotics.

Serious thinkers in the science community are wowed by the techno-utopia promises of transcending our biology, merging with our machines, and creating greater than human intelligence.

This film illustrates how these technologies may be achieved within the next two decades then questions what these technologies could mean to humanity. Not only should we be concerned with the unintended consequences of these powerful technologies, we should pause to think about what happens if these technologies actually pan out as anticipated.

Human Enhancement: What should be permitted? – Geneva – October 20-21, 2009

1 Comment » July 31st, 2009 Posted in culture, enhancement, philosophy

Human Enhancement: What should be permitted?
20-21 October 2009, Brocher Centre, Geneva, Switzerland

Biomedical science is increasingly yielding technologies that can be used to enhance the capacities of healthy people, as well as to treat disease. This two-day workshop will aim to advance the debate on the ethics of human enhancement by considering

(1) What enhancements are likely to become possible?

(2) What enhancements will be ethically permissible?

(3) What enhancements should be legally permitted?

(4) What criteria should be used to answer 2 and 3?

THE PROGRAMME WILL INCLUDE SESSIONS ON:

  • Enhancement in sport
  • Life extension
  • Neuro-enhancement
  • Enhancement in general

AND PRESENTATIONS BY, AMONG OTHERS:

  • Eric Juengst (Case Western)
  • Paul Root Wolpe (Emory)
  • Hank Greely (Stanford)
  • John Harris (Manchester)
  • Tom Murray (The Hastings Center)
  • Julian Savulescu (Oxford)
  • Alexandre Mauron (Geneva)

ORGANISERS

Julian Savulescu, Alexandre Mauron, Bengt Kayser, Verner Moller, Tom Douglas

TO ATTEND THE EVENT,

You are kindly requested to fill in the registration form and to send it back to the Brocher Foundation by mail, e-mail or fax before 5 October 2009. Places are limited.

Fondation Brocher
471 rte dHermance, 1248 Hermance, Switzerland
E-mail: {encode=”scientificprog@brocher.ch” title=”scientificprog@brocher.ch”}
Fax: 0041 22 751 93 91