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Technoprogressive? BioConservative? Huh?
Quick overview of biopolitical points of view



ieet books

Smart Mice, Not-So-Smart People: An Interesting and Amusing Guide to Bioethics
Author
by Arthur Caplan

From Transgender to Transhuman: A Manifesto On the Freedom Of Form
by Martine Rothblatt

Freedom of Religion and the Secular State
by Russell Blackford

The Olympics: The Basics
by Andy Miah and Beatriz Garcia


ieet events

Miah on Art-Science-Ethics
February 8
Liverpool, UK


MIah on “Should living people be able to donate their human tissue to art?”
February 9
Bluecoat, Liverpool, UK


Blackford @ Council for Secular Humanism
March 1-4
Orlando, Florida USA


Naam on “Growth on a Finite Planet”
March 9-18
Austin, Texas USA


Eagleman on The Secret Lives of the Brain @ SXSW
March 9-13
Austin, TX USA


Bradshaw on Enhancement and Disability
March 12
University of Bristol, UK


Sorgner @ Engineering, Philosophy & Ethics of the Knowledge Society in Search For a Spiritual Turn
March 15-18
University of Suceava, Romania


Swan on “Building a Culture of Empathy”
March 17
San Jose, CA USA


Lin & Wallach @ Conflict in the 21st Century
March 22-26
Tufts University, Meford, MA


Naam @  The Future State of Pharmaceuticals
March 23
Istanbul, Turkey


Eagleman @ Being Human
March 24
San Francisco, CA USA


Swan on “DIYgenomics citizen science health research studies”
March 26-28
Stanford, CA


The Moral Brain: What Is It? Can It Be Enhanced?
March 30-1
WSQ Campus, New York University, NYC, NY, USA


Miah @ Edinburgh International Science Festival
April 5
National Museum, Scotland


Sorgner on “Analogies between Narrative Ethical Structures and Spatial and Temporal Forms”
April 10
Columbia University, NYC, NY USA


Bostrom & Cascio @ Astana Economic Forum
May 22-24
Astana, Kazakhstan


Sorgner at Posthumanism in Technology, Culture, and the Arts
June 1-2
Ewha Womans University, Seoul, Korea


Cascio @ Aspen Environment Forum
June 22-25
Aspen, Colorado USA


Sorgner on Genetic Enhancement
June 27
Nachbarschaftshaus Gostenhof Nürnberg, Germany


Naam @ TEDx
October 11
Muskegon, MI USA



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ieet news

IEET Consults for Japanese Neurotech Consortium
(Feb 2, 2012)

In January, IEET Executive Director J. Hughes and IEET Fellow Wendell Wallach met with representatives of the Japanese Consortium on Applied Neuroscience (Japanese, English). They visited Trinity College as part of a national tour to meet with American neuroethicists.


Opportunity - IEET needs interns (Jan 30, 2012)

IEET Looking for Some Thoughtful Short Fiction (Jan 20, 2012)

IEET Donation Premiums (Jan 12, 2012)


ieet articles


Nicholas Agar The High Price of Long Life
by Nicholas Agar
Feb 3, 2012 • (0) CommentsPermalink

If anti-aging drugs are possible, they will require dangerous—and ethically troubling—clinical trials.


Patrick Tucker Will Artificial Intelligence be America’s Next Big Thing?
by Patrick Tucker
Feb 3, 2012 • (0) CommentsPermalink

In the next decade, the United States will use increasingly capable artificial intelligence (AI) to greatly reduce the cost of health care, accelerate research and development into new medicines, improve cars and roads to reduce gridlock, and even regain much of the manufacturing base we lost to countries like China, say researchers in computer science, robotics, and management. They claim that AI will soon change the work of doctors, nurses and teachers across the country, create entirely new businesses, and radically remake industries already in existence.


David Eubanks Breakfast Conversation
by David Eubanks
Feb 3, 2012 • (0) CommentsPermalink

In this piece David Eubanks asks how we might react to intelligence emerging from ubiquitous computing stuff in our environment. What if our imagination about where and how self-willed machine minds will arise is too narrow, and it might just pop up anywhere? What do we owe talking stuff?


Miriam Leis India – High-Biotech, IT-Hub, DIY-Science and 8-Armed Cyborgs with a Third Eye
by Miriam Leis
Feb 2, 2012 • (0) CommentsPermalink

After I recently moved to India, I was asked to write another blog-article for IEET, this time about the question of India’s role in accelerating change and the technological “Singularity.”


Hank Pellissier Seven Ways to Boost Your Brain - the medieval, the modern, and the mammal diving reflex
by Hank Pellissier
Feb 2, 2012 • (1) CommentsPermalink

Concerned about your cognitive functions?  Did you read “Brain Damage - 83 ways to stupefy intelligence”  and realize that your mind’s been mercilessly mutilated? Fear not. There’s hope. Neurogenesis - the growth of brain cells - can be activated via several science-proven techniques. Many are recent discoveries, one is as ancient as bipedalism, one is futuristic, one is wet and weird. To pop open your head, read on:


Giulio Prisco The Perils and the Promises of Mind Uploading
by Giulio Prisco
Feb 1, 2012 • (13) CommentsPermalink

Science fiction authors Richard Morgan and Greg Egan have described mind uploading  and “backup copies” as a practical technology for immortality. Of course, “carbon chauvinists” often speak against mind uploading, and some have interesting things to say.


Andrea Kuszewski A New School Of Thought
by Andrea Kuszewski
Feb 1, 2012 • (1) CommentsPermalink

How do we learn best?  It depends on the individual!


Lawrence Krauss To the Moon, Newt!
by Lawrence Krauss
Feb 1, 2012 • (3) CommentsPermalink

Gingrich’s wasteful, scientifically unsound plan to put colonists on lunar soil.


Martine Rothblatt The Fiction of Biology
by Martine Rothblatt
Jan 31, 2012 • (1) CommentsPermalink

Biology is said to be the study of life. But this is not really true. In fact, biology is only the study of some kinds of life. Biology, as practiced today, studies living things that are deemed similar to human life in one particular aspect – the possession of organic cellular chemistry characteristics. These characteristics are the use of six atoms (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur) to form molecules that build cellular membranes, metabolize nutrients and self-replicate in accordance with a chemical code.  (part 2 of Hybriduality and Geoethics)


piero scaruffi The Russian Spring
by piero scaruffi
Jan 31, 2012 • (3) CommentsPermalink

The Russian Revolution of 1917 that installed the communists in power and created the Soviet Union had a side effect that has been harder to undo than communism itself: it isolated Russia from the rest of Europe (at least from the part of Europe that was not occupied by the Soviet Union). Until then the Soviet Union had been a full member and protagonist of the big European mess, a continuing shift of alliances for the purpose of conquering small (and sometimes irrelevant) territories.


David Brin Is Libertarianism Fundamentally about Competition? Or about Property?
by David Brin
Jan 30, 2012 • (13) CommentsPermalink

Some folks have heard me beat this drum. But it’s a fresh-enough thought - going to fundamentals that run deep beneath normal politics - so that I am moved to raise it yet again. In part because someone recently asked me, as author of The Transparent Society:“Can transparency and libertarianism complement each other?”


Annalee Newitz Does Newt Gingrich want to make Neuromancer come true?
by Annalee Newitz
Jan 30, 2012 • (4) CommentsPermalink

U.S. Presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich calls himself a futurist, and never tires of prognosticating.


Hank Pellissier Korean Reunification - would it weaken or superpower the south?
by Hank Pellissier
Jan 30, 2012 • (3) CommentsPermalink

Identical twins they’re not. The two halves of Korea - a rabbit-shaped, mountainous peninsula jutting into the Yellow Sea - are wildly dissimilar. The North is an impoverished, tyrannized, height-and-economy stunted state, bizarrely cloistered with secret tunnels, rogue nuclear missiles and a recent “boy-king.” The South is a workaholic, studious, sleep-deprived builder of huge ships, skyscrapers, Samsung, Hyundai, globe-leading innovations, and direct democracy.





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ieet multimedia

Robert J Sawyer on living forever
Guest image
Robert J. Sawyer

‪Robert J. Sawyer: “A Galaxy Far Far Away” - My Ass!‬
(Feb 3, 2012)

The Invention of Dr. NakaMats - Underwater Scene
(Feb 2, 2012)

‪IIT - Indian Institutes of Technology - The Pride Of India‬
(Feb 2, 2012)

‪2B - The Era of Flesh is Over‬
(Feb 1, 2012)

Salman Khan, Founder of Khan Academy, at Web 2.0 Summit
(Feb 1, 2012)

‪Anders Sandberg - The Ethics Of Uploading‬
(Feb 1, 2012)

Robert Reich - the Seven Biggest Economic Lies
(Jan 31, 2012)

Randal Koene on Singularity 1 on 1
(Jan 31, 2012)



comments

Intomorrow on 'We Are All Pirates' (Feb 3, 2012)

Peter Wicks on 'The Perils and the Promises of Mind Uploading' (Feb 3, 2012)

Peter Wicks on 'The Perils and the Promises of Mind Uploading' (Feb 3, 2012)

Peter Wicks on 'We Are All Pirates' (Feb 3, 2012)

Intomorrow on 'We Are All Pirates' (Feb 3, 2012)

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The IEET is a 501(c)3 non-profit, tax-exempt organization registered in the State of Connecticut in the United States.

Contact: Executive Director, Dr. James J. Hughes,
Williams 119, Trinity College, 300 Summit St., Hartford CT 06106 USA 
Email: director @ ieet.org     phone: 860-297-2376