Ayesha Khanna interviewed by NY Times (May 24, 2012)IEET Fellow Ayesha Khanna was interviewed recently by the New York Times technology section, on the topic of “human-technology co-evolution in the Hybrid Age.” The article can be viewed HERE
“Flesh” is the Resurrection Choice of IEET Readers (May 15, 2012)
IEET rated #1 in “Top 10 Non-Profits Straight Outta Science Fiction” (May 9, 2012)
IEET Readers Want to Eliminate Sleep (May 4, 2012)
Religion, Witch Hunts, Homophobia and Human Rights in Africa
by Leo Igwe
May 24, 2012 • (6) Comments • PermalinkReligious laws are legalized religious doctrines. They are “revelations” turned into rules to govern society. Religious laws are sacred dogma institutionalized. They are sins criminalized. They are religious hatred, intolerance, discrimination and fanaticism turned into state policies.
At-Home HIV Test Raises Ethical Questions
by Arthur Caplan
May 24, 2012 • (1) Comments • PermalinkA test to determine if you are infected with HIV should be made available over-the-counter, a federal advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration has recommended.
Sex Work – Demeaning Practice or Basic Human Right?
by Owen Nicholas
May 23, 2012 • (6) Comments • PermalinkAs one of the world’s oldest professions, prostitution has historically often been relegated to the dark corners of human society, scarcely mentioned and generally ignored as much as possible. When it does emerge into mainstream discourse it is inevitably followed by the predictable group polemics which accompany almost every social issue of our time, generating fierce and often entrenched debate across the political spectrum.
Yes, I Am a Believer
by Giulio Prisco
May 23, 2012 • (86) Comments • PermalinkI frequently write and talk about things at the intersection of science and religion, spirituality and technology, and I am often asked if I am a believer. I used to give complicated, intellectual answers, but now I prefer giving a simple answer. My answer is YES, I am a believer.
We are the Borg… And That is a Good Thing
by Travis James Leland
May 22, 2012 • (5) Comments • PermalinkLet’s be real. The majority of transhumanists, scientists, astronomers, computer specialists, etc. became interested in their fields of study through their interest in science-fiction. We know the story of how cellphones were designed with Star Trek‘s communicators in mind, as were tablet computers, ebooks, and other new technologies. That has all been well-documented and I’m relatively certain that it is not news to most of us. Star Trek has been very influential in my life, guiding my thought processes in many areas, like physics, astronomy, quantum mechanics - even politics and economics. Part 2 of the Casual Transhuman.
Are You a Facebook Addict?
by Amara D. Angelica
May 22, 2012 • (1) Comments • PermalinkTake the Bergen Facebook Addiction Scale test, developed in Norway, and find out.
How IEET Could Influence Governmental Policy
by Peter Wicks
May 22, 2012 • (23) Comments • PermalinkRecently there has been commenters’s discussion here at IEET about whether it should be moving from being essentially a website that provides reading material and a forum for public debate towards more of a genuine “think tank” model, clearly advocating a techno-progressive point of view and attempting to influence policy (both public and private) in a more direct, substantial and well-defined way.
Mind Uploading, Vitology, and Crystal Minds
by Giulio Prisco
May 21, 2012 • (15) Comments • PermalinkOur cosmic destiny: Upload your mind, leave biology behind, become a cyber angel.
Sustainable to Evolvable: an introduction
by Rachel Armstrong
May 21, 2012 • (2) Comments • PermalinkThe monoculture of machine-inspired innovation means that we have effectively been building our cities for
machines, not humans.
Who, or what, is a person? Speciesism and Substrate Chauvinism
by Jønathan Lyons
May 20, 2012 • (1) Comments • Permalink
In my first installment, I began with the question - Who, or what, is a person? - using the Hierarchy of Exclusion from Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game novels as a starting point. My purpose in this second section is to expand our circle of inclusion.
Does Transhumanism Create New Social Relations?
by Ilkka Vuorikuru
May 20, 2012 • (2) Comments • PermalinkDoes Transhumanism, as a social movement, have the power to transform human society? Is technology shaping us or we it?
Are Humans Becoming More or Less Psychopathic?
by George Dvorsky
May 19, 2012 • (8) Comments • PermalinkReaders of this blog know that I’ve started to develop a bit of a fascination with psychopathy. It all got started after attending the Moral Brain Moral Brain conference at NYU last April. The more I look into this subject, the more I understand why so many neuroscientists are making such a big fuss about it.
Driverless Cars Promise Huge Impact in Our Everyday Lives
by Dick Pelletier
May 19, 2012 • (11) Comments • PermalinkImagine going to the grocery store in 25 years in your sleek new auto-drive car: You hop in, voice the destination and off you go. The quiet, electric-powered vehicle drops you off at the supermarket entrance, then auto-parks itself while you shop. As you exit the store, your car drives to the entrance, picks you up and returns home. You marvel at this incredible car that can also run errands without you on board.
Musings On Robot Sex Dolls and Companions
by John Niman
May 18, 2012 • (20) Comments • PermalinkThe currents of the internet work in odd ways; this past week the theme seems to be robot sex. Since I have had it on the brain, I figure I will contribute to the trendiness and throw my own 2c in.
The Ukrainian “Human Barbie Doll” - Valeria Lukyanova - is this the future of cosmetic enhancement?
by Hank Pellissier
May 18, 2012 • (12) Comments • PermalinkImmaculate doll-face, globulous breasts, teeny waist, slender limbs, vacant ice-blue eyes, long platinum hair - Valeria Lukyanova of Odessa, Ukraine, has re-designed her physical form to resemble Barbie, the plastic Mattel toy. Is the result “beautiful”? Critics screech that she’s “creepy” and “lifeless” with an “uncanny valley” absence of sexuality, but… let’s not kid ourselves here.
Brain Preservation: Is Your Brain Worth the Bother?
by David Brin
May 17, 2012 • (1) Comments • PermalinkThe Brain Preservation Foundation is an interesting enterprise co-developed by John Smart (Acceleration Studies Foundation) that’s offering a prize for researchers who manage to preserve animal brains in ways that would be suitable for humans and that keep intact the web of physical connections - or the connectome - that some believe to contain all of the information in both memory and thoughts. Brain preservation aims at locking in these connections against post-mortem decay.
Any Sufficiently Advanced Civilization is Indistinguishable from Nature
by Rachel Armstrong
May 17, 2012 • (2) Comments • PermalinkIn Western cultures, nature is a cosmological, primal ordering force and a terrestrial condition that exists in the absence of human beings. Both meanings are freely implied in everyday conversation. We distinguish ourselves from the natural world by manipulating our environment through technology. In What Technology Wants, Kevin Kelly proposes that technology behaves as a form of meta-nature, which has greater potential for cultural change than the evolutionary powers of the organic world alone.
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