Page 3,266«..1020..3,2653,2663,2673,268..3,2803,290..»

Category Archives: Transhuman News

USA: ‘Ukraine should be split like Canada’ – Ron Paul – Video

Posted: September 22, 2014 at 9:44 pm


USA: #39;Ukraine should be split like Canada #39; - Ron Paul
Video ID: 20140920-006 M/S People applauding Ron Paul SOT, Ron Paul, Chairman of the Campaign for Liberty: "They believe that we as a nation have a moral o...

By: RuptlyTV

Read more:
USA: 'Ukraine should be split like Canada' - Ron Paul - Video

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on USA: ‘Ukraine should be split like Canada’ – Ron Paul – Video

LIBERTYFEST!(And why true libertarianism isn’t around) – Video

Posted: at 9:44 pm


LIBERTYFEST!(And why true libertarianism isn #39;t around)

By: Oliver Stein

Read more from the original source:
LIBERTYFEST!(And why true libertarianism isn't around) - Video

Posted in Libertarianism | Comments Off on LIBERTYFEST!(And why true libertarianism isn’t around) – Video

Forever creator previews the newest show about immortality

Posted: at 9:44 pm

The idea of immortality has been explored in a number of ways on screens both big and small. But for Dr. Henry Morgan in ABCs new series Forever, immortality has a few twists. For one, Henry views it as a curse, something hes spent more than 200 years trying to cure. And then theres the idea that Henry does technically die. He just doesnt stay dead for long.

As a medical examiner in New York, Henry (Ioan Gruffudd) spends his days examining dead bodies and trying to find a solution for his inability to stay dead. And as viewers will see in the pilot, his years of practicing medicine and genius-like knowledge quickly get him pulled into helping a detective (Alana De La Garza) on a number of cases.

We caught up with Forevers creator, Matt Miller, to talk about the idea behind the show, what viewers can expect, and more.

EW: Where did the idea for Forever come from? MATT MILLER: I was putting my five-year-old son to bed one night and he asked me, Daddy, are you ever gonna die someday? as five-year-olds will do occasionally, and I said,No, of course not, Ill never die. I didnt want to upset him or anything, and then I realized, you know, youre supposed to kind of build trust through honesty, and all that sort of stuff. So I said to him, Okay, wait. I wasnt completely truthful. I will die someday, but it wont be for a very long time, and by then youll probably want me to be dead. At which point he burst into tears, my wife came running into the room, I was banished from the room, and she continued sort of raising our child, and I went off to try to come up with a TV show.

So I started playing around with that idea: What if a character, through some weird set of circumstances, wouldnt or couldnt die. And I started to think of like all the amazing things that you could do and how much fun it would be. And then I started to think but what would happen if my son wasnt immortal too? Would the pain of watching your family and friends, children and everything like that grow old and die, would that be too much? Would it ultimately prove to be more of a curse than a blessing? And that was sort of the initial impetus of the idea is to play with a character that was stuck with that unusual affliction, which is the thing that we all want on some level more than anything, and that he has it but sees it as more of a curse. And then the rest of it kind of extrapolated from there. I said, Well what kind of guy would he be and what would he do for a living? I sort of came upon the medical examiner thing [because] I thought it would be interesting if he was a doctor for all of these years and the medical examiner would give him access to the bodies. So hes a guy who couldnt die but was surrounded by death.

What about the idea of him being naked every time he comes back to life? We got lucky with the casting on that one. Not everyone you want to see come out of the water naked, but sort of the idea was, okay, well, if he dies every time, I was like, Can you just chop his head off? Does the ax break? How does that work? So I decided he should really die. He just keeps coming back, and if he kept coming back, like, in water, I thought it would just be an interesting kind of rebirth idea. And then the being naked part, it would have to be like a full rebirth. And to me, I sort of just thought it was funny. It would be a funny predicament of his affliction would be coming back in water, but hes always naked, and so it would lend itself to weird, awkward situations.

In general, would you say this series will have a procedural feel? Yeah, there was certainly a procedural element in the pilot but a lot of it was kind of unraveling who Henry is and then how Henry and Detective Jo Martinez, played by Alana De La Garza, were going to come into contact. And now that weve set that structure up in the pilot, we move forward with a more traditional procedural in the sense that every week theres a body, Henry is the M.E., she is the detective, we unravel and solve a crime every week, but then theres also some very non-traditional elements of our show. He cant die, your protagonist, or he does die every week but ends up coming back. Its not every week, but he does die a few times. He dies, like, four times in the pilot so that was a little excessive, and we start to pull back on that. Hell die, like, in the second episode, and then well take a few off, and well have special-occasion kind of deaths that will come up throughout the series. But we also get to utilize the flashback structure, which is that we get to see his life over the last 235 or so years.

Will there be flashbacks in every episode? Yeah, so every episode were going to tell our A story and then well tell a flashback story that will relate.

Is there any time period in particular that youre looking forward to exploring? In terms of time periods for the show, you know, the great love of [Henry's] life is a character named Abigail that we meet in the pilot. They met at the end of World War II around 1945, so we get to explore that relationship in the 1940s and as it continues into the 1950s, but we also have stories that take us back to like the tenements on the Lower East Side in the early 1900s or the 1890s and thats fun. Were talking about an episode right now that has like 1880s London because its a little bit of a Jack the Ripper episode, so that will be fun for us. Also, we want to tell stories about the Depression and the Roaring 20s and all of that. Its all really fun, interesting stuff that we get to dive into every week.

At the center of this show, Henry is trying to die. In your mind, does the series end when he figures that out? For me, the series ends when ABC tells us its over. [Laughs] But assuming that we get to play this out for a while, he wants to be looking for a way to end his affliction, but if he does come up with that way at some point, does he want to use it still? Has he found enough to live for where he doesnt actually want to be out? And thats something that well certainly explore throughout the course of the series. Solosing that character from the show gives us very little to play, so hopefully he wont actually die. But we will certainly play around with what happens if he does figure out a way scientifically out of this.

View original post here:
Forever creator previews the newest show about immortality

Posted in Immortality Medicine | Comments Off on Forever creator previews the newest show about immortality

Can We Really Control Everything with Our Thoughts?

Posted: at 9:43 pm

Inventions based on applications of electro-encephalography (EEG) are now being refined and made available to the general public. So are there any technological limits to reading peoples minds and channelling their thoughts to manipulate matter?

Controlling tools using just your thoughts is the ultimate step in abolishing man-machine interfaces. This is no longer the distant dream of just a few years ago, when you had to attach a forest of electrodes to the human brain in order to gather electrical signals powerful enough to analyse and channel. Controlling objects through the power of thought was originally known as psychokinesis, a term coined by American parapsychologist Joseph Banks Rhine on the basis of the Greek words for mind and movement, to denote the movement or change of physical objects without the application of physical force, mind over matter. These days, when we talk about objects moving in response to a persons thoughts, the word generally used is telekinesis. This concept has now become widespread with the use of electro-encephalogram (EEG) headsets, which draw on electrical signals from the brain to translate thoughts in the form of neuron connections into binary signals. Until quite recently, electro-encephalography required much more complex procedures, which were available only in research institutions but the new headset approach heralds the arrival of this technology in low-cost form.

All electrical activity, including nerve activity, generates impulses which can be translated into electronic signals and then read using advanced machine language. Accordingly, an EEG headset collects electrical signals emitted by the brain via nerve impulses, isolated by electrodes placed on the forehead. The neurons perform as a network, emitting electrical signals to and from each other via connections called synapses. The technology used in low-cost EEG headsets enables a fairly accurate transcription of the electrical information on to a computer. Fabien Lotte, a researcher at INRIA, a French public research body for digital science and technology, explains the novelty of EEG sensors: Their appearance at the beginning of the millennium represented a break with the past as they use dry electrodes, thus avoiding the need to apply gel to the cranium, which tends to increase the level of noise interfering with the brainwaves you are trying to read. Another headset, the Mindwave developed by NeuroSky, comprises a set of electrodes able to measure brainwaves from the inside, a few millimetres from the skull, once a sensor has been placed on your forehead. The great advantage of the latest EEG headsets is that they can isolate the signal from the surrounding noise at very low cost.

EEG headsets are becoming lighter and now transcribe electrical signals to higher quality levels. They are therefore proving extremely useful for people suffering from motor handicaps. However, before a person is able to make practical use of the system, s/he has to go through a process not always straightforward of re-educating the mind. Once this step has been overcome and the equipment has been mastered, paraplegics will be able for example to control the movements of their wheelchairs using thought, without having to move any of their limbs.

Young engineers from French engineering school ESME have recently been investigating how to benefit from the low cost aspect of the headset made by NeuroSky. They have invented a mind-controlled wheelchair, which responds to eye-blinking i.e. facial muscles and concentration, which affects blood flow, to regulate the speed. When it comes to concentration, claims Pierre Pagliughi, one of the inventors, theres no need to train the user in advance. S/he will be able to apply it automatically. In fact, the only way to achieve finer monitoring of brainwaves, explains Pagliughi, is to increase the number of electrodes placed on the cranium. This would enable the user for example to send directional commands, such as go to the right, or go to the left, via pure thought rather than by blinking his/her eyes.

Increasing numbers of projects using EEG headsets from steering drones to manipulating bionic limbs are now under way. Connected artificial limbs are still among the easiest tools for people to control by brainwaves once they have received some training, as this calls for motor commands, which can be isolated and captured much more easily than abstract thoughts which require more electrodes and more user training.

Meanwhile London-based startup MindRDR is focusing on combining the trend for wearable electronics with mind control, and has succeeded in connecting Google Glass with a device that monitors brain activity. The current version uses a commercially available NeuroSky brain monitor to extract core metrics from the mind. These are expressed as Meditation and Attention levels. One of their test applications allows users to take pictures, triggered by a conscious level of concentration which the sensors attached to the subjects forehead detect from the increased blood flow to the spot. By concentrating even harder, the user is then able to share the photos on social networks such as Facebook and Instagram via Google Glass.

The low-cost EEG headset, which marks a paradigm-shift in man-machine interfaces, raises the question of how we relate to technology. For a number of years now, various artists have been working in this area. The fact that artists are getting into in this area of technology is a good illustration of how electro-encephalography raises questions that go beyond the mere notion of innovation.

For the Head Edit project, (2011), artist Gregory Chatonsky wore an EEG headset to undertake mind-controlled editing, thus responding to the call from the Russian film director Vertov for somebody to invent a means of editing flilm through thought. In Dislocation VII: Suspension of Attention (2013), the artist invites the audience to interact with a heavy iron door, which s/he can move using the power of thought alone channelled through an EEG headset. Chatonskys intention here is however to show that the impression of power that we feel when the door is controlled by the mind is actually illusory. He believes that the alternating concentration and relaxation demanded by the experiment demonstrates that it is the door that guides us. We are not in control. So the artist is using the EEG headset to debunk some of the promises made for the science of mind control. He argues that the EEG headsets as he has used them in his projects, i.e. worn by spectators, illustrate the limited extent of the information provided by brain waves, which operates in a purely binary way.

In spite of these limitations, EEG headsets are nevertheless likely to become increasing widespread among the general public, and may well change peoples relationship with both the material world and our notion of what an idea is. If a thought can be read, why can it not be programmed? Chatonsky sees the optimism expressed by some people in the scientific community regarding this new thought-reading technology as yet another form of faith. Although he does not think EEG headsets will live up to the promise of reading peoples minds clearly, which would involve complex, culture-based factors, headsets that are touted as being able to scan thoughts are still likely to have an impact on the way people relate to ideas.

Read more:
Can We Really Control Everything with Our Thoughts?

Posted in Transhumanist | Comments Off on Can We Really Control Everything with Our Thoughts?

David Pearce – The World Transhumanist Association (WTA) – Video

Posted: at 9:43 pm


David Pearce - The World Transhumanist Association (WTA)
David Pearce (born 3 April) is a British philosopher. He promotes the idea that there exists a strong ethical imperative for humans to work towards the abolition of suffering in all sentient...

By: Adam Ford

Continue reading here:
David Pearce - The World Transhumanist Association (WTA) - Video

Posted in Transhumanist | Comments Off on David Pearce – The World Transhumanist Association (WTA) – Video

City promotes from within for human resources post

Posted: at 9:43 pm

CHAMPAIGN The city's new human resources director comes from inside city hall after former community relations manager Jason Hood assumed the role on Monday.

Hood takes over as the head of the city's human resources department, a job that was left vacant when Chris Bezruki retired in May 2013. Hood was first hired by the city as a community relations specialist in July 2012.

City Manager Dorothy David said in a press release Hood's advanced degrees, including an MBA from Millikin University and law degree from the University of Illinois, plus his 10 years' experience in both the private and public sectors, will serve the city well.

"It is my pleasure to be able to promote an internal candidate that is so well-qualified to lead our HR function," she said.

Hood was selected from a field of 45 candidates and will make $110,000 annually, according to the city.

Here is the original post:
City promotes from within for human resources post

Posted in Post Human | Comments Off on City promotes from within for human resources post

First Zero-G 3D Printer Is On Its Way To The Space Station

Posted: at 9:43 pm

This 3D printer will be making parts on board the International Space Station (Credit: Made In Space)

On Tuesday morning, a SpaceX Dragon capsule will berth with the International Space Station. Included in its nearly 2 and a half tons of cargo is a first for the final frontier a 3D printer.

This 3D printer was developed by a small startup, Made In Space, which was founded in 2010 and incubated at Singularity University. Since 2011, the company has been actively working on development of their printer with NASA. The company has also received $824,597 in Small Business Innovation Research grants from NASA.

In 2013, NASA awarded Made In Space a Phase III Sole Source contract to build a 3D printer to send to the International Space Station the printer thats on its way to the station right now. The purpose of this printer is the demonstrate that 3D printing can work on board the station. If so, NASA intends to use its printer for experimental purpose with an eye to one day printing parts for the station on-demand.

As you might imagine, 3D printing poses some special challenges when you try to do it in zero gravity.

There are two main categories of problems, Brad Kohlenberg, a Business Development Engineer at the company told me. First is just making work. Second is making it safe in a closed loop environment.

The safety issue is the simple fact that when a 3D printer creates objects from its plastics, it will off-gas emitting toxic gasses into the local air. This isnt a problem on Earth, where doors, windows and HVAC systems allow those gases to diffuse safely. On the space station, however, the atmosphere is strictly controlled and this becomes a real problem.

To solve that problem, the company has developed an environmental control unit that filters out harmful gasses and nanoparticles produced during the printing process. Its so efficient, in fact, that the filter all by itself can purify a room on Earth.

Were actually in talks with other manufacturers about spinning that off, Kohlenberg told me. Doing crazy things that even if you fail to meet your goal, you could revolutionize another industry.

Made In Space tests its 3D printer on a microgravity parabolic flight.

Follow this link:
First Zero-G 3D Printer Is On Its Way To The Space Station

Posted in Futurism | Comments Off on First Zero-G 3D Printer Is On Its Way To The Space Station

David Houle – Futurist, Speaker and Author – Video

Posted: at 9:43 pm


David Houle - Futurist, Speaker and Author
David Houle is a futurist, thinker and keynote speaker. He has always been slightly ahead of the curve. Houle is consistently ranked as one of the top futuri...

By: speakerchannel

The rest is here:
David Houle - Futurist, Speaker and Author - Video

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on David Houle – Futurist, Speaker and Author – Video

'Digital twins' will make decisions for us – and even console loved ones after we die by 2020, futurist claims

Posted: at 9:43 pm

The claims were made by futurist and system theorist John Smart He believes we will have digital twins within the next five years These twins could act like digital personal secretaries or agents They could also, one day, have human faces and hold conversations In addition, when people die, loved ones could converse with digital versions of ourselves long after our death Apps already exist that offer similar tools including Siri and Google Now The claims signal a step towards the futurist theory of singularity

By Victoria Woollaston for MailOnline

Published: 06:56 EST, 22 September 2014 | Updated: 06:57 EST, 22 September 2014

696 shares

43

View comments

By 2020, our day-to-day lives, relationships and even what to have for dinner could be controlled and run by digital versions of ourselves.

According to futurist John Smart, within the next six years many of us could have so-called digital twins that schedule our appointments and even have conversations with others on our behalf.

And they could one day console loved ones after we die by mimicking our voice, emotions, mannerisms and thoughts.

According to futurist John Smart, within the next five years many of us could have so-called digital twins (illustrated) that schedule appointments, make decisions and have conversations with others on our behalf. They could even console loved ones after we die by mimicking our voice, emotions, mannerisms and thoughts

Read the rest here:
'Digital twins' will make decisions for us - and even console loved ones after we die by 2020, futurist claims

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on 'Digital twins' will make decisions for us – and even console loved ones after we die by 2020, futurist claims

David L. Smith – Economist, Futurist and Market Strategist – Video

Posted: at 9:43 pm


David L. Smith - Economist, Futurist and Market Strategist
David L. Smith has the education, experience and proven track record to reassure audiences he knows what he is talking about. A Dartmouth- and Stanford-train...

By: speakerchannel

See more here:
David L. Smith - Economist, Futurist and Market Strategist - Video

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on David L. Smith – Economist, Futurist and Market Strategist – Video

Page 3,266«..1020..3,2653,2663,2673,268..3,2803,290..»