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Category Archives: Transhumanist

Snowden Confirms the Borg/ Transhumanist Agenda – Unrecorded, Unanalysed Thoughts Will Be Impossible – Video

Posted: January 2, 2014 at 11:41 am


Snowden Confirms the Borg/ Transhumanist Agenda - Unrecorded, Unanalysed Thoughts Will Be Impossible
YouTube Channel: 1stageofawareness The Brain Chip and the Transhumanist Agenda playlist - http://bit.ly/KhHu2hSee also Alan Watt Videos playlist - http://bit...

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Snowden Confirms the Borg/ Transhumanist Agenda - Unrecorded, Unanalysed Thoughts Will Be Impossible - Video

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Snowden Confirms the Borg/Transhumanist Agenda – Unrecorded, Unanalysed Thoughts Will Be Impossible – Video

Posted: January 1, 2014 at 2:41 am


Snowden Confirms the Borg/Transhumanist Agenda - Unrecorded, Unanalysed Thoughts Will Be Impossible
The Brain Chip and the Transhumanist Agenda playlist - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRkDC7LzbiK0Y8xM1N3QMiHJkmOYj-42P See also Alan Watt Videos play...

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Snowden Confirms the Borg/Transhumanist Agenda - Unrecorded, Unanalysed Thoughts Will Be Impossible - Video

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Transhumanist controllers attempt assassination by remote suffocation – Video

Posted: December 31, 2013 at 6:41 am


Transhumanist controllers attempt assassination by remote suffocation
Published on Nov 21, 2013 ARTICLE: Transhumanist controllers attempt assassination by remote suffocation http://bit.ly/1aJNdXv LINKS Magnus Olsson: Mind cont...

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December 2013 Online Discussion Group of the Mormon Transhumanist Association – Video

Posted: December 30, 2013 at 12:41 pm


December 2013 Online Discussion Group of the Mormon Transhumanist Association

By: Giulio Prisco

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Transhumanist art – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Posted: December 23, 2013 at 5:42 am

Transhumanist art is an art movement which focuses on the concept of transhumanity, a transitional stage in a perceived progression from human to transhuman to posthuman. Transhumanist art claimed a role for artists as purveyors of futuristic aspiration and visionary thinking in an era of scientific and technological challenge,[1] questioning traditional roles of the artist, the era of modern art and conventional aesthetics. Instead its proponents advocate a future-oriented aesthetics, often reflecting transdisciplinary works in art, science and technology.

Transhumanist Arts is an art period reflecting creative works of transhumanity. Just as Modern Art represents much of the arts of the 20th Century, Transhumanist Arts covers the late 20th Century into the 21st Century. The Transhumanist Arts period coalesces arts, sciences and technologies in reflecting the efforts of transhumans in enhancing and augmenting our minds and bodies as we strive for superlongevity and ultimately indefinite lifespans. The ideas generated by those whose work is transhumanist in scope, exemplifies the content of the transhumanist culture and is generated through many modes, from painting to New Media, and modes yet to be discovered.[2]

As a consequence of its philosophical foundations, transhumanist art emphasizes the message of the art works over the mediums used by artists in producing their works. In this regard, transhumanist art reflects the ideas of Marshall McLuhan that humans are extending themselves and their bodies through technology.

Artists and the arts, throughout history, have been a voice and a vision of civilization. Artists, as communicators, reach out to others and introduce insight and vision about society and culture. Artists and the arts bring together the passions, the dreams and the hopes of humanity and transhumanity and express these emotions in ways that touch us deeply.

The art works of transhumanist art reflect a proactive vision of the future, stemming from both science fiction and traditional fiction.

[Transhumanist Arts] is in general optimistic, creative, combining intelligence and emotion in unexpected ways and is future-directed instead of backward-looking. Especially important is the automorphism sub-movement, which seeks to make self-transformation and living itself into art. On the other hand it should not be confused with techno and futurist art, which it overlaps with.

Transhumanist artworks include traditional art practices such as painting,[3]printmaking, and sculpture; in multi-media, digital, virtual reality simulations, Internet art, electronic art and robotics; in moving images of videography and filmmaking; in literature through poetry[4] and fiction; in music through real-time compositions and digitized electronic or synthesized compositions;[5] and in conceptual art and exploratory practices coalescing artificial intelligence (AI), artificial general intelligence (AGI), and nanotechnology.

Transhumanist art can include product design[citation needed], industrial design[citation needed] and architecture[6] as well as the works of scientists,[7]engineers[citation needed] and innovators[citation needed] whose goals are transhumanist in scope.

Transhumanist art was first recognized in 1979 when the 8mm short independent film Breaking Away was exhibited at the University of Colorado's Film Studies Program.[citation needed]Stan Brackage, noted independent filmmaker of the 1970-1980s, was an influence on the cinematographic style of Breaking Away.[citation needed] The storyline of Breaking Away themes human evolution as breaking away from biological restraints and the Earth's gravity as humanity moves into space. The performance art piece was written and performed by Natasha Vita-More at Red Rocks Amphitheater. Don Yannacito, Director of Film Studies Program for independent filmmakers, filmed the performance.[8]

In 1983 a Transhuman Statement, a statement of arts for the future by Vita-More and FM-2030, established a poetic doctrine of transhumanist expression.[9]

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UK Transhumanist Association

Posted: at 5:42 am

What is the UK Transhumanist Association? It is the proper business of human beings to seek to improve themselves. To deny this is to embrace stagnation and decay. It's probably safe to say that most people want to see a future where we can live healthy, happy, useful and long lives. To achieve any such improvement in the human condition, progress must be made. Today, there are so many anti-progress groups, especially in the area of science and scientific research. Neo-Luddites and bio-conservatives seek to limit the application of scientific research often as a knee-jerk reaction to the new, without considering the substantial benefits such technologies may bring. Just think for a moment about your life; have you ever been to hospital, had an operation, taken life saving drugs? If you have then you wouldn't be reading this without being a direct beneficiary of Progress. Even if you had been perfectly healthy since birth, the chances are you wouldn't be reading this, as without Progress there would be no personal computers, and no internet. The UK Transhumanist Association is here to restore the balance and promote the benefits of Progress and advanced scientific research. We are a voluntary organisation, whose aim is to raise awareness of issues relating to the creation of a better future for everyone. Certainly we must be careful with our research and its application in the new technologies, but to deny significant benefits of these technologies just because of ill thought out `doomsday scenarios' may have the reverse effect, and accelerate the problems besetting mankind at this moment in history. We want to promote sensible, balanced discussion and policy-making in issues that will affect people's lives in the near future, issues that up to now have been dominated by hysteria and scare-mongering, issues that we cannot afford to have decided by ignorance and fear. The word "Transhumanist" embodies our belief that the human condition can be improved, through our own efforts, by a rational and compassionate application of advanced technology. This technology is being developed right now, all over the world. Our use or misuse of it will determine what kind of world we, and our children, will live in. We believe that everyone can and should understand this new technology, so that they can have a say in how it will be used. You don't need to have a PhD to understand what genetically modified food actually is, and what its potential is, both good and bad. You don't have to simply accept what the newspapers say about stem-cell therapy, because it's 'too technical' for the average person to understand. These things are no more difficult to understand, from a practical point of view, than the decisions that ordinary people make throughout their lives: Use public transport or buy a car? Eat chips or salad? Send your child to a state school or a private school? Trying to ban new technologies because we don't understand them or are afraid of them is just as bad as uncritically embracing them. We teach our children to treat fire with respect, but we don't teach them that it is inherently bad and must never be used. Fire, while being one of the most destructive and frightening technologies we have ever harnessed, is also one of the most useful, when it is used carefully and appropriately. Biotechnology, Nanotechnology, Cloning, Stem-Cell Therapy - these technologies are the fire of the future, and we must learn how to handle them safely and effectively. We aim to reach all levels of British society through a mix of lobbying, outreach and education, and networking. Lobbying Decisions in areas such as stem-cell research, biotechnology and nanotechnology are too important to be left to the (unaided) politicians. There is no shortage of pressure groups that have both a technophobic agenda and the ear of politicians sitting on crucial parliamentary committees. We aim to provide an alternative and positive approach with targeted position statements delivered where they are likely to have the most impact, i.e. the government and civil society institutions where those matters are discussed and decisions are taken. Outreach and Education Increasingly, the prospect of a "posthuman future" is debated in the media. However, there is an abundance of misconceptions regarding the use of technology for the enhancement of the human condition, as seen in the confusion generated by the ongoing cloning debate. We aim to provide expert-speakers to interested parties, professional organisations, etc, able to clarify the issues, highlight the potential benefits and dangers, and generally outline a roadmap to the future. Furthermore, we aim to organise events that provide the general public with an opportunity to find out more about cutting- edge technologies and their impact on individuals and society. Networking We aim to create networking opportunities for UK-based professionals in the relevant enabling technologies with the aim of fostering employment opportunities and cross-fertilisation of ideas. While not directly linked to any other transhumanist organisation, we have friendly and cooperative relations with the World Transhumanist Association and the Extropy Institute (see Links) and we are working towards building further constructive relationships with other, similar, groups. Please consider joining the UK Transhumanist Association to keep up to date with developments, enable you to reach a balanced and considered position towards Progress and the new technologies, and help to contribute towards a better future for us all. What is a Transhumanist? Transhumanist thought has one very simple underlying concept: That the Human Condition, as it exists now (circa 2008), can be improved upon, with the intelligent and compassionate application of technology. This concept is expanded upon in the Transhumanist Declaration which the UK Transhumanist Association has adopted as its guiding principles. These principles leave plenty of room for variation to suit different cultures, nations, sub-cultures and individuals. There is no political agenda inherent in them. They are a formalisation of a trend toward greater capabilities, a deeper understanding of the world around us, and an enhanced capacity for survival, both as a species and as individuals, that the human race has experienced since its deepest pre-history. The means to achieving these aims is also one of the oldest of human activities - technology. It is technology that sets us apart from all the other creatures on this planet. It is the activity that defines us, sustains us, and will one day enable us to reach the stars. Within these principles, Transhumanists span a wide range of ideas. Some simply want to see an end to the tyranny of nature over humankind. They want to abolish disease, suffering and involuntary death. They uphold individual rights to live longer, more productive, and happier lives for anyone who wishes to. Others want more, and think more deeply about the future of the human race, and of intelligence itself. They want to encourage the development of thinking, living machines that can help us survive a hostile universe, they look forward to the development of technologies that will enable us to transform our bodies and brains so that they are more powerful, more flexible, and longer-lasting than our current ones, which are the product of blind evolution and can be immensely improved upon with the right knowledge and some good design. Some of these ideas may sound far-fetched, even fantastical, but they are all based upon sound philosophical and scientific principles. Of course, you don't have to subscribe to, or even believe, these more far-reaching ideas in order to be in favour of a better, safer future. All you need is common-sense, some optimism, and a determination to help make the world a better place. No matter how small your part, every little helps. If you find yourself in agreement with these ideas, then you can call yourself a Transhumanist. Join whichever of our membership options you think is most suitable, and we will keep you up-to-date with the latest developments, and offer you chances to get involved with our various projects. You will also be a part of a growing world-wide community of forward-looking, optimistic and enthusiastic people who, rather than fearing a bad future, know that they are helping to build a good one.

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Transhumanist FAQ

Posted: at 5:42 am

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

1. GETTING STARTED

1.1 What do the terms extropy, transhuman, transhumanism, and singularity mean, as used in this FAQ? 1.2 Where can I find definitions words of terms frequently used and relevant to transhumanist thinking? 1.3 5 Most often asked questions about ExI

2. PHILOSOPHY

2.1 What is transhumanism? 2.2 What is the philosophy of Extropy? 2.3 What are the Principles of Extropy? 2.4 How is the philosophy of Extropy a New Enlightenment? 2.5 Is transhumanist thinking utopian? 2.6 How do I know if I a transhumanist?

3. EXTROPY INSTITUTE

3.1 What is Extropy Institute ("ExI")? 3.2 What is ExIs history? 3.3 What is ExIs Board of Directors? 3.4 What is ExIs Council of Advisors? 3.5 What is ExIs Executive Advisory/Action Team ("EAT")? 3.6 What are ExIs email lists? 3.7 What are ExIs Extro conferences? 3.8 What is ExIs Extropy: The Journal of Transhumanist Thought?

4. KEY SCIENCES AND TECHNOLOGIES

4.1 Do transhumanists favor particular technologies? 4.2 Which technologies seem especially significant right now? 4.3 Why are technologies relevant to life extension critical to transhumanists? 4.4 Why do some journalists refer to technology as "the new religion"?

5. TRANSHUMANIST FUTURES: CHALLENGES AND CONCERNS

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Transhumanism’s Extropy Institute – Transhumanism for a better …

Posted: December 20, 2013 at 4:41 pm

Extropy Institute continues to support critical research and development of sciences and technologies of human enhancement. For further information on our 2004 Vital Progress Summit please follow this link: About the VP Summit

In late 2006, Extropy Institute closed. ExI's Strategic Plan explains the details of this decision and the potential for the future of ideas that were generated during ExI's lifetime.

The philosophy of Extropy continues on into the future.

This website is the "Library of Transhumanism, Extropy and the Future". The Extropy e-mail list continues to be very active and is the main venue for transhumanists and one of the best places on the Internet to meet transhumanists for challenging and creative discussions about the future. ____________________________________

Welcome to website of Extropy Institute, the original force behind the philosophy and global cultural movement of transhumanism. We welcome you to join our efforts in promoting The Proactionary Principle.

The world needs critical thinkers now! What is Extropy Institute? Extropy Institute is a think tank ideas market for the future of social change brought about by consequential technologies.Our Board of Directors, Advisors and Proactive Supporters bring together diverse ideas about the future.Our approach is proactive, our focus critical, and our ideas are principled in addressing social concerns and questions that will make or break the future of humanity. Extropy Institute has been pioneering critical and creative thinking about the future for the past 17 years.

The Mission of ExI has been to serve its members by ensuring a reputable, open environment for discussing the impacts of emerging technologies and for collaborating with diversely-skilled experts in exploring the future of humanity.

As a philosophical and cultural organization, our goals include being an international resource for strategic thinking about the future. Specific outcomes of our vision over the years have been recognized through publications, conferences, virtual summits, university courses, extropy-chat email list, and members' projects; working toward designing our future. The outcomes are located on our resources page. _______________________________________________________________]

Support the ideas vital to our future by participating in the globalcommunity and become proactive and support the Proactionary Principle.

The current project: ExI Project No. 1 - PROACTIONARY PRINCIPLE As human lives and the global environment become ever more interconnected with technology, we become increasingly responsible for making wise decisions about how to use it. We need a balanced opinion on how to apply technology to human needs. We should not reject the products of applied science; neither should we implement powerful new technologies without foresight and proactive preparation. Above all, we must not tackle the decisions of the future with the cognitive habits of the past. We need new, smarter ways to evaluate the opportunities and dangers issuing from nanotechnology, genetics, machine intelligence, climate engineering, or neurological modification. The Proactionary Principle (ProP) is designed explicitly for this purpose.

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When will computer hardware match the human brain? by Hans Moravec

Posted: at 4:41 pm

Journal of Evolution and Technology. 1998. Vol. 1

When will computer hardware match the human brain?

ABSTRACT

This paper describes how the performance of AI machines tends to improve at the same pace that AI researchers get access to faster hardware. The processing power and memory capacity necessary to match general intellectual performance of the human brain are estimated. Based on extrapolation of past trends and on examination of technologies under development, it is predicted that the required hardware will be available in cheap machines in the 2020s.

By our estimate, today's very biggest supercomputers are within a factor of a hundred of having the power to mimic a human mind. Their successors a decade hence will be more than powerful enough. Yet, it is unlikely that machines costing tens of millions of dollars will be wasted doing what any human can do, when they could instead be solving urgent physical and mathematical problems nothing else can touch. Machines with human-like performance will make economic sense only when they cost less than humans, say when their "brains" cost about $1,000. When will that day arrive?

The expense of computation has fallen rapidly and persistently for a century. Steady improvements in mechanical and electromechanical calculators before World War II had increased the speed of calculation a thousandfold over hand calculation. The pace quickened with the appearance of electronic computers during the war--from 1940 to 1980 the amount of computation available at a given cost increased a millionfold. Vacuum tubes were replaced by transistors, and transistors by integrated circuits, whose components became ever smaller and more numerous. During the 1980s microcomputers reached the consumer market, and the industry became more diverse and competitive. Powerful, inexpensive computer workstations replaced the drafting boards of circuit and computer designers, and an increasing number of design steps were automated. The time to bring a new generation of computer to market shrank from two years at the beginning of the 1980s to less than nine months. The computer and communication industries grew into the largest on earth.

Computers doubled in capacity every two years after the war, a pace that became an industry given: companies that wished to grow sought to exceed it, companies that failed to keep up lost business. In the 1980s the doubling time contracted to 18 months, and computer performance in the late 1990s seems to be doubling every 12 months.

Faster than Exponential Growth in Computing Power. The number of MIPS in $1000 of computer from 1900 to the present. Steady improvements in mechanical and electromechanical calculators before World War II had increased the speed of calculation a thousandfold over manual methods from 1900 to 1940. The pace quickened with the appearance of electronic computers during the war, and 1940 to 1980 saw a millionfold increase. The pace has been even quicker since then, a pace which would make humanlike robots possible before the middle of the next century. The vertical scale is logarithmic, the major divisions represent thousandfold increases in computer performance. Exponential growth would show as a straight line, the upward curve indicates faster than exponential growth, or, equivalently, an accelerating rate of innovation. The reduced spread of the data in the 1990s is probably the result of intensified competition: underperforming machines are more rapidly squeezed out. The numerical data for this power curve are presented in the appendix.

At the present rate, computers suitable for humanlike robots will appear in the 2020s. Can the pace be sustained for another three decades? The graph shows no sign of abatement. If anything, it hints that further contractions in time scale are in store. But, one often encounters thoughtful articles by knowledgeable people in the semiconductor industry giving detailed reasons why the decades of phenomenal growth must soon come to an end.

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When will computer hardware match the human brain? by Hans Moravec

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Transhumanist novel by Zoltan Istvan sparks intense dialog among futurists

Posted: at 4:41 pm

By Vicki Larson Marin Independent Journal

ZOLTAN ISTVAN has no idea what to expect in 2014, but he's certain about two things: he will welcome a second baby and a lot more people are going to know about transhumanism.

His newly self-published debut novel, "The Transhumanist Wager," based on the science that uses technological advancements to enhance the human condition, especially radical life extension, will no doubt help make that happen. Often compared to Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" and a best-seller on Amazon, it has not only sparked an intense dialog among futurists, scholars and religious authorities across the globe, but its controversial philosophy and ideas are also the subject of a forthcoming book. It's also brought him a fair share of hate mail.

The Mill Valley resident had more than an inkling it would stir up things. His protagonist, Jethro Knights, a man willing to annihilate the rest of humanity in his quest to be immortal, becomes dictator and causes a global revolution as he seeks to advance his transhumanist ideas.

While Istvan doesn't want to cause a revolution (although he believes it's inevitable), he shares many of Knights' ideas and libertarian philosophy.

"I am a person who loves life and doesn't want to die," says Istvan, 40, who became interested in transhumanism as a philosophy and religious studies student at Columbia University. "I think in the 21st century most scientists who are in longevity and who are in the field of trans-humanism believe if we can develop the technology we need, if we could have $50 billion and put it toward this technology, we would probably, within 10 years, solve the mechanisms for aging and be able to extend life indefinitely."

One of the book's controversial ideas would transfer those billions from programs that fund society's most vulnerable or as Knights says, "lazy welfare recipients," "mentally challenged, "uneducated repeat criminals" and "obese second-rate citizens bankrupting our medical system" as well as funding wars for oil.

Hardly PC for a Marin County resident, he agrees.

"Morality is defined by the amount of time you have left to live. I firmly believe that. Everyone when they're at the end of their life or they only have a couple days left to live makes very different moral choices," he says. "The transhumanist wager is really about how far do you take technology and science to make yourself the very strongest entity that you can become, and that's the question; if you could become all-powerful, would you do that?"

The novel, writes science writer and trans-humanist Giulio Prisco, "has the potential to become a cult book."

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