From: Eliezer S. Yudkowsky (sentience@pobox.com)
Date: Wed Dec 08 1999 - 15:01:11 MST
Kate Riley wrote:
>
> Sure, there's no question that the contents of our present memories may be
> stored. The question is what happens a billion years down the road, with a
> billion years worth of memories, at the increased clarity which will most
> likely be desired, with presumably a billion people (more?) drawing on the
> same resources. If we discount terminal entropy, and assume that there is a
> finite amount of matter in the universe, then there logically must be a
> point where all resources will have been consumed. Is there a way to avoid
> this? Will the universe experience heat death before then? Does this
> eliminate the possibility for "true" immortality?
Glad to see you're thinking for the long term; shoulda said so.
One answer, of course - and the best - is:
"I'll worry about it a billion years from now."
But in partial answer to your question, I would say that we've had
literally dozens of speculations on this list - ranging from creating
our own Universes, to manufacturing equal amounts of positive and
negative matter, to encoding computations in warped spacetime, and so on
and so on - under which there would be no limits to growth. And we've
had nitpickers for every suggestion. It's really an open question, and
while it's fun to discuss, it's ultimately one of those things where you
just have to try and find out.
-- sentience@pobox.com Eliezer S. Yudkowsky http://pobox.com/~sentience/tmol-faq/meaningoflife.html Running on BeOS Typing in Dvorak Programming with Patterns Voting for Libertarians Heading for Singularity There Is A Better Way
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