Re: dr suess on the loose...

From: Brian D Williams (talon57@well.com)
Date: Fri May 28 1999 - 09:16:06 MDT


-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

From: Anders Sandberg <asa@nada.kth.se>

>I read a lot of popular science books when I was a kid, and then
>moved on the science fiction. It was at least a partial cause for
>me becoming a transhumanist, but the reason I started with science
>is at present unclear to me. But once I was immersed in the world
>of science/science fiction, transhumanism slowly emerged as a
>logical conclusion to me.

>I wonder if children shouldn't be introduced to Stanislaw Lem's
>_The Cyberiad_ at an early age. Many of the stories can likely be
>translated into a simpler language (even if they often are
>readable as they are in the translations I read), and put
>transhumanistish ideas into the heads of children. Beside the
>humor and nonsense, he deals with how to solve problems with
>intelligence (such as the hillarious story about making the
>perfect monster), the philosophical consequences of robots,
>uploading, copying and a lot of other stuff, trains recursive >
>thinking and overall plays with your mind.
 
I was a Tom Swift addict, and also another series with a character
called "Brains Benton". There was another series featuring a father
and his two sons, (one son named Randy) that covered things like
rocketry and the basics of atomic energy, very cool!

Let's not forget Johnny Quest.....

>We need more transhumanists to write childrens books! And
>cartoons!

Agreed, but lets remember Socrates....

Brian
Member, Extropy Institute
www.extropy.org
Member, Life Extension Foundation
www.lef.org
Member, National Rifle Association
www.nra.org
1.800.672.3888

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.2

iQCVAwUBN06yGnsfmVh/uI7xAQGdzAQAlOSBQF6DLZ4MzgSumKGCmk8zTjWgXNu5
7dBp7J6pIuA3OudzkADwVEbNvNVWoenmiFKW/8u85DW4IgaZZvzBrLA9Idzkik+D
zLJItlAHZGtXYIMK4sCr7miXTpaM/x2MKISoFq2tdd7CISsmFHglBGQ2QY66ngbd
kCwcs4icwAo=
=buJn
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 15:03:51 MST