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Category Archives: Transhuman News
Libertarian Internationalism
Posted: December 21, 2014 at 3:42 pm
One of the most dismissive terms thrown around in foreign policy circles is isolationist. If you are an isolationist, you clearly have not considered the issues carefully and rationally, and need not be taken seriously. Libertarian leaning politicians such as Ron and Rand Paul are frequent targets of this epithet.
There may or may not be a handful of actual libertarians who are isolationist, but the reality is that libertarianism is among the most internationally minded philosophies. Examining several key areas of international relations makes this clear: International trade, diplomacy and the military, and institutions.
The most obvious place where libertarians are internationalists is economic relations. True libertarians advocate the free flow of trade and investment, without government restrictions. This is about as international as you can get. For libertarians, the origin of a product or service is irrelevant. People around the world should be able to buy and sell from each other without government interference.
In the international arena, libertarians can and will have a strong voice and play an important role. That role should not be diminished by simplistic and inaccurate cries of isolationism.
Unfortunately, in most countries today, there is a strong sentiment for favoring domestic economic actors over foreign ones. This feeling manifests itself in various forms, such as tariffs and Buy National procurement policies. Libertarians stand almost completely united against this nationalist feeling, believing that trade and other economic interaction with foreign actors benefits us all.
Diplomacy and the military is a more complicated policy area, involving a number of instances of potential relations between domestic and foreign. Here, though, there is a strong case that libertarians are more internationalist than most others. Of course, in part this depends on what one means by internationalism.
Libertarians are most frequently accused of isolationism when they object to military intervention in foreign territories. That libertarians usually object to these interventions is not in doubt. However, use of the military cannot always credibly be called internationalist. Colonialism and conquest, although they do require contact with foreigners, are not generally a positive form of international relations.
More controversially, libertarians may sometimes object to peaceful aid to foreigners as well. But this is not done out of anti-foreigner sentiment. Rather it is based on skepticism over the effectiveness of aid and its misuse as a foreign policy tool, and a general preference for markets over government support. Libertarians certainly believe in private outreach among civil society groups in one nation to the people of other nations. The objection is only to the mismanagement of governments when they get involved.
Thus, for libertarians, war and government aid do not reflect true internationalism. To some extent, they are really about government bullying and condescension towards foreigners, the idea that we are superior to them and can use our power to re-make them in our image. In contrast, libertarians believe in treating citizens of other countries with respect and acting with humility.
Finally, there is the issue of international institutions. This is the area where libertarians are most likely to reject what is conventionally thought of as the internationalist position, as they worry about the power of these institutions. In reality, libertarians are not rejecting the idea of international institutions, but rather the specific policies pursued by some of these institutions. For example, if the IMF advocates Keynesian fiscal policy, and libertarians object, it is the policy they object to, not the institution itself. If there were international institutions that supported balanced budgets (or protected property rights), for example, libertarians would likely be supportive. There is no fundamental libertarian objection to international cooperation through institutions; the only concern is on specific issues of substance.
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Libertarian Internationalism
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The final chapter in sports books for the festive season
Posted: at 3:41 pm
Another year, another sack of books.
This was the autumn that saw the long-anticipated arrival of Brian ODriscolls autobiography, as well as another volume in Roy Keanes life story.
Big hitters, but the quality wasnt confined to names that are usually picked out in the bright lights on Broadway.
If your tastes run to the less illuminated sports, then 2014 served you pretty well, too.
The traditional complaint about sports books is that they favour those headline-setters rather than the niche interests, though publishers are fond of pointing out just how popular those big names can be (the first instalment of Keanes autobiography, for instance, was for some time, the biggest-selling book in Ireland. Note the absence of the word sports in that sentence).
Were not book publishers, though, so we had a broader sweep this year. Dont be shy about picking up one or two of the recommendations here when youre on that last-minute blitz through the shops.
Big names or not, you wont regret it.
GAA
Hell for Leather: A Journey Through Hurling in 100 Games
Authors: Ronnie Bellew and Dermot Crowe
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The final chapter in sports books for the festive season
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Transhumanist Digital Death Coins Dec 19 2014s – Video
Posted: at 3:41 pm
Transhumanist Digital Death Coins Dec 19 2014s
New currencies and digital coins promote the transhumanism and death...blessings everyone and thanks for watching 🙂 http://hobonickels.info/css/images/hbn/l...
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Transhumanist Digital Death Coins Dec 19 2014s - Video
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Can NASA's Orion program reinvigorate human spaceflight?
Posted: at 3:40 pm
Rising on a tongue of flame and easing to a gentle splashdown in the Pacific Ocean nearly 4-1/2 hours later, the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations newest spaceship for human exploration made its debut earlier this month in a virtually flawless initial test flight.
Dubbed Orion, the craft has been hailed as NASAs first step toward putting humans on Mars by the 2030s. Indeed, its purpose is to reinvigorate the agencys human spaceflight program in the post-shuttle era.
But look deeper at Orions potential path to Mars, and the assumptions surrounding it, and the way ahead appears to be littered with question marks.
What will Orion do before then? Will it make enough flights to justify the program? Are NASA budgets big enough to develop the technologies needed for interim missions, let alone realistically fund a trip to Mars? In a time of fiscal austerity, will subsequent presidents and Congresses even want to make that commitment?
Since the last American set boots on the moon in 1972, politicians and NASA officials have struggled with a stubborn question: What now? The money needed to send humans to intriguing places beyond low-Earth orbit is, well, astronomical. The fall of the Soviet Union made it harder politically to justify such big budgets for human spaceflight.
Orion and its goal of a journey to Mars give NASA a fresh start. And the agency is already applying lessons learned from the recent past, looping in other countries to help pick up the tab for the spacecraft.
But the question remains: Can NASA execute a human space-exploration program on tight budgets? With Mars rovers and probes sent to the outer solar system, NASA has worked wonders with its unmanned missions. In many ways, Orion and the journey to Mars represent a test of whether the agency can do the same with its manned-exploration program.
On the plus side, Americas astronaut corps appears to be excited again.
I think youd be hard-pressed to find an astronaut past, present, or future who wouldnt love to fly in Orion, said Rex Walheim, a space shuttle mission specialist and an astronaut liaison to the team building the craft, following the Dec. 5 test flight. This is the true exploration that we live for.
But NASAs current plans for human exploration of space could span six presidential elections and a dozen sessions of Congress. How solid or consistent will Washingtons willingness to send astronauts on deep-space exploration missions be?
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Can NASA's Orion program reinvigorate human spaceflight?
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Can NASA's Orion program reinvigorate human spaceflight? (+video)
Posted: at 3:40 pm
Rising on a tongue of flame and easing to a gentle splashdown in the Pacific Ocean nearly 4-1/2 hours later, the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations newest spaceship for human exploration made its debut earlier this month in a virtually flawless initial test flight.
Dubbed Orion, the craft has been hailed as NASAs first step toward putting humans on Mars by the 2030s. Indeed, its purpose is to reinvigorate the agencys human spaceflight program in the post-shuttle era.
But look deeper at Orions potential path to Mars, and the assumptions surrounding it, and the way ahead appears to be littered with question marks.
What will Orion do before then? Will it make enough flights to justify the program? Are NASA budgets big enough to develop the technologies needed for interim missions, let alone realistically fund a trip to Mars? In a time of fiscal austerity, will subsequent presidents and Congresses even want to make that commitment?
Since the last American set boots on the moon in 1972, politicians and NASA officials have struggled with a stubborn question: What now? The money needed to send humans to intriguing places beyond low-Earth orbit is, well, astronomical. The fall of the Soviet Union made it harder politically to justify such big budgets for human spaceflight.
Orion and its goal of a journey to Mars give NASA a fresh start. And the agency is already applying lessons learned from the recent past, looping in other countries to help pick up the tab for the spacecraft.
But the question remains: Can NASA execute a human space-exploration program on tight budgets? With Mars rovers and probes sent to the outer solar system, NASA has worked wonders with its unmanned missions. In many ways, Orion and the journey to Mars represent a test of whether the agency can do the same with its manned-exploration program.
On the plus side, Americas astronaut corps appears to be excited again.
I think youd be hard-pressed to find an astronaut past, present, or future who wouldnt love to fly in Orion, said Rex Walheim, a space shuttle mission specialist and an astronaut liaison to the team building the craft, following the Dec. 5 test flight. This is the true exploration that we live for.
But NASAs current plans for human exploration of space could span six presidential elections and a dozen sessions of Congress. How solid or consistent will Washingtons willingness to send astronauts on deep-space exploration missions be?
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Can NASA's Orion program reinvigorate human spaceflight? (+video)
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Dadaism, Bauhaus, and Futurism – Video
Posted: at 3:40 pm
Dadaism, Bauhaus, and Futurism
I #39;m not an expert on any of these subjects, but I really enjoy discussing them~. -- Watch live at http://www.twitch.tv/catmint.
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Dadaism, Bauhaus, and Futurism - Video
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Define futurist: Pronunciation, Definitions, and Examples for futurist – Video
Posted: at 3:40 pm
Define futurist: Pronunciation, Definitions, and Examples for futurist
Pronunciation, Definitions, and Examples for futurist.
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Define futurist: Pronunciation, Definitions, and Examples for futurist - Video
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Top 10 Science Fiction Movies About the Future of Medicine – The Medical Futurist – Video
Posted: at 3:40 pm
Top 10 Science Fiction Movies About the Future of Medicine - The Medical Futurist
As a science fiction movie geek, I collected those 10 movies that give a good picture about what we can expect to see in the next years in the future of medicine. Please share your favorite...
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Top 10 Science Fiction Movies About the Future of Medicine - The Medical Futurist - Video
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Measure and improve your brain at home! – The Medical Futurist – Video
Posted: at 3:40 pm
Measure and improve your brain at home! - The Medical Futurist
For many years, I have been using gadgets to motivate myself for a healthier life and my mental health is crucial for my entire well-being. Here are the gadgets and methods I use to learn to...
By: The Medical Futurist
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Measure and improve your brain at home! - The Medical Futurist - Video
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Author Neal Stephenson joins AR upstart Magic Leap as Chief Futurist
Posted: at 3:40 pm
Neal Stephenson, the author of science fiction classics likeSnow Crash and Cryptonomicon, has joined the augmented reality startup Magic Leap as itsChief Futurist. A press release from Magic Leap announces the appointment.
In his first blog post for the company, Stephenson elaborates on what Magic Leaps technology does, and what he brings to the table. Magic Leap is mustering an arsenal of techniquessome tried and true, others unbelievably advancedto produce a synthesized light field that falls upon the retina in the same way as light reflected from real objects in your environment. Depth perception, in this system, isnt just a trick played on the brain by showing it two slightly different images.
Im fascinated by the science,but not qualified to work on it, he says. Where I hope I can be of use is thinking about what to do with this tech once it is available to the general public.
Stephenson highlights the potential for Magic Leaps technology to revolutionize gaming. It feels like the right time to give those people a new medium: one in which three-dimensionality is a reality and not just an illusion laboriously cooked up by your brain, and in which its possible to get up off the couch and movenot only around your living room, but wherever on the face of the earth the story might take you. Making such games is not going to be a matter of porting existing ones to the new system. Its going to mean redefining the medium from the ground up.
Oculus Rift makes screens more immersive, but ultimately remains limited to the two-dimensional plane supplemented by optical trickery. Magic Leaps technology, as Stephenson describes it, purports to interface more directly with the way our eyes works to create a natural and immersive way to interact with virtual objects and spaces.
Related:En garde! Clang goes medieval with realistic sword controllers
Stephensons idea-saturated work has dealt with subjects like mathematics, cryptography, currency, the history of science, and philosophy, but he holds particular sway over VRenthusiasts for his revolutionary conceptualization of online virtual reality in his 1992 cyberpunk classic,Snow Crash. In thatseminalwork of near-future science fiction, the internet is represented as the Metaverse, arichly-realized, shared VR environment. Notably, Stephenson popularizedthe modern use of the word avatar in the book, co-opting the term from the Sanskrit word for a deitys earthly representation.
The authors last foray into gaming wasClang, a Kickstarted sword-fighting game under development by his Subotai Corporation. Subotai was developing motion controls to represent sword-fighting more accurately than any game previously had. That project was put on indefinite hold in September.
Magic Leap was founded in 2011 and has been gradually drawing the interest of investors from both Silicon Valley and the entertainment industry. The companymadeheadlinesin October for generating$542 million in funds from a group of investors led by Google.
CEO and founder Rony Abovitz has chosen to foregovirtual reality and augmented reality in favor of cinematic reality. Those older terms, he explained, are associated with things that didnt necessarily deliver on a promise or live up to expectations. Googles investment might point toward the possibility of Magic Leapss technology being integrated into Google Glass at some point in the future.
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Author Neal Stephenson joins AR upstart Magic Leap as Chief Futurist
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