"J. R. Molloy" <jr@shasta.com> writes:
> Don't forget that most of the world seeks to rise to the level of $10,000.00
> per capita populations. To do so, they'll have to deplete five times more
> resources than developed nations have already done.
> >Depends on what you consider to be the box. I like being human, so much so
> that I want to be more human, even a perfect >human as I see perfection to
> be. I do plan on augmenting my brain for greater intelligence, knowledge
> retention and for >communicating better, faster, more; achieving
> immortality, correcting the genetic flaws I've inherited. Technology is
> meant >to serve the human, not the other way around. THAT, IMHO is the
> essential flaw of the borganist's argument, just as the >essential flaw of
> the socialist is to assume that the purpose of the individual is to serve
> the community.
>
> I'll drink to that! I think you've nailed the essential difficulty here...
> and the dangerous part of the hypertechnocratic experiment. To the extent
> Homo sapiens serves technology, rather than the reverse, we risk unleashing
> a Frankensteinian superorganism.
> Real science continues
> to rely on peer review, critical analysis, and the occasional reality check
> or wake up call. Wilson notes that scientists use imagination to create
> science, and level-headed reason to test it, to verify it, and to make it
> into knowledge.
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