Zero wrote:
>Computers *will* get smaller and faster. Bandwidth *will* increase. Our
>understanding of human intelligence (and therefore intelligence in general)
>*will* get better. Our ability manipulate matter at the molecular scale
>*will* improve. Our understanding of biological processes *will* deepen.
>These are givens, they are virtual certainties. Put all that together and
>its not very hard to see where we're headed.
Be careful how you use the term "*will*." Things will only get better if
people decide to make them better...every result requires an action. I do
agree that things will *likely* get better, but it is a potentially fatal
oversight to have blind faith in the progress of our society.
I feel that informing people in general about the positive implications of
progressive technologies is as important as the creation of the
technologies themselves. One example is with GM foods: so many people have
protested the ubiquity of GM foods that manufacturers such as Frito-Lay
have publicly asserted their non-use of GM products. Currently there is
major social stigma against GM foods, which is damaging to the science as a
whole. More examples abound.
You're probably right, Zero...we *will* get there; but I, for one, don't
want to be lynched along the way.
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E. Shaun Russell Extropian, Musician, ExI Member,
e_shaun@uniserve.com Owner of NWExtropians list
==================== http://www.egroups.com/group/NWExtropians
Hear my music at: http://www.mp3.com/eshaunrussell
Read my poetry at: http://www.therecord.net/e_shaun
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