Re: Effects of Enhanced Senses for Designer Bodies

From: Anders Sandberg (asa@nada.kth.se)
Date: Mon May 17 1999 - 09:28:22 MDT


Natasha Vita-More <natasha@extropic-art.com> writes:

> I'd appreciate extropic comments from anyone interested in enhancing our
> senses, and what how this will affect our primal instincts, and, thus,
> advance our insight and intra/interpersonal communications, for example.
>
> What types of brain enhancements might be designed to deal with the
> relaying of new information gained from enhancing the senses (especially
> smell and hearing). How will the brain's cognitive capabilities sift
> through the enhanced information and utilize expanded sensorial capabilities?

There is an essay I like in Oliver Sachs' wonderful _The Man Who
Mistook His Wife for a Hat_ about a medical student with a transient
episode of "dog-like" smell. The description is evocative and really
shows the emotional impact of an amplified sense. The cause in this
case was likely some drug use; as I mentioned in my April 1 "this
week's finds" dopamine is involved in smell regulation and drugs can
affect it. I wonder if enhanced smell combined with pheromones under
voluntary control could be used to improve social interaction.

As for improving senses, there are likely three levels where they can
be improved. First, the sensors themselves can be amplified or
modified. Second, more attention spent on them - our sense of smell
isn't that bad really, but we seldom concentrate on it. Third,
processing can be improved. Maybe extra cortical processing, but also
more training in how to use the sense.

Overall, we need more attention as the world become more interesting.

> What types of intelligent agents will assist us in using enhanced
> sensorial information to discern our environments more intelligently, and
> how will this affect our communication skills?

I have always found skilled guides (or texts) essential for really
understanding art - they point out meaning and details of the artwork
that I would otherwise have missed, making it possible to really think
about it. Of course, great art is often obvious - it explains itself -
but when we learn more about something it becomes also more
accessible, new nuances appear and so on. Maybe the same would go for
enhanced senses: we need skilled guides who focus our attention to
particular nuances, suggests meanings and further associations so the
amplified world would not overwhelm us but would instead become more
comprehensible and expressive.

> Is it important to upgrade
> the job of the early primitive brain so that it works nicely in conjunction
> with enhanced senses to give it more spin, and what might be deployed to
> develop and expanded insight and "gut" feelings from the input from
> enhanced senses to better understanding of feelings, exploring empathy,
> insight, to help us make better decisions with more information?
>
> Is 'gut feeling' important in the advancement of ourselves?

Why not? It is just that we need a better kind of gut feelings. One
little scene in Egan's _Diaspora_ which really delighted me was when a
character felt it had a great idea on "the tip of the tounge", just
waiting to burst into consciousness. So the character brought up a
visualization of its own mind and looked where the activation was -
aha! Maybe a similar kind of gut feeling - why do I feel bad about
that option? Let's take a look - aha, now I know why. Makes sense /
silly me, a mis-association again.

-- 
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Anders Sandberg                                      Towards Ascension!
asa@nada.kth.se                            http://www.nada.kth.se/~asa/
GCS/M/S/O d++ -p+ c++++ !l u+ e++ m++ s+/+ n--- h+/* f+ g+ w++ t+ r+ !y


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