Cyber Eugenics at Game Developer’s Conference

Lipitor Online Buy Lipitor Erythromycin Online Buy Coumadin Penisole Online Buy Phentrimine Zelnorm Online Buy Elavil Flomax Online Buy Aldactone

If the Matrix existed in our world today, Ray Kurzweil would most definitely have to be the Architect. Kurzweil was one of the keynote speakers at this year’s Game Developer’s Conference, and once again he pitched his cyber-future ideas to the naive audience of 16 year old Nintendo junkies and witless gaming editors, who are only concerned about the HD wars and the color choices of next year’s ipods. Kurzweil spoke about the future of gaming for the next 20 years, and how advances in technology would not only benefit mankind in creating new video game capabilities, but that technology would soon be affecting humans directly, mainly in the use of nanotechnology and integration of computer interface systems and biology. All of this was of course bottled up in the Christmas present of video gaming advancements in order to win over the gaming kids and industry heads.”Biology is very capable and intricate and clever,” Kurzweil said, “but it’s also very suboptimal compared to what we ultimately can build with information technology and nanotechnology… If you were to replace a portion of your blood with these respirocytes, you could do an Olympic sprint for 15 minutes without taking a breath or sit at the bottom of your pool for four hours.”

 
Transhumanism  
 
   
 

The Transhumanist and technocratic societies have longed dream for the time when technology and man would combine and allow for our ‘weaker’ elements to be removed, in order for man to become free of disease, memory loss, conflicting emotions, and even mortality. Rise in augmented cognition hardware is currently advanced enough that the U.S. military is now prototyping HCI devices for their next generation warrior programs (which of course use video games to demo and develop their AI routines, remove faulty system operations, etc).

“In a more general view, Kurzweil noted that the average life expectancy was growing at the rate of roughly three months a year. Now that information technology is affecting medicine, Kurzweil projected that in 15 years, the life expectancy of people will start expanding at the rate of more than a year for every year that passes, essentially not just delaying off death, but actually pushing it further away with each passing day.”

“We didn’t stay on the ground,” Kurzweil said. “We didn’t stay on the planet. And we have not stayed within the limitations of our biology.”

One can only weep for the future when the ideas of transhumanism are being sold to our children disguised in shiny digital packages and gizmos that play MP3s and offer the chance to upload media to their hippocampus. What may be seen as a boon for the digital entertainment industry by some is seen as a dangerous warning sign of overbearing social engineering by others. The Terminator movie’s main theme is that the future is not set, and that mankind only chooses to make his own destiny. If we leave our destiny up to people like Kurzweil we won’t have a future for much longer; we will be nothing more than echoes, ghosts in a machine.

“Lo! Men have become the tools of their tools.”

- Henry David Thoreau

Ethan Allen
Rogue Government
February 22, 2008

Leave a Comment »

Comments RSS 2.0
1. Anonymous - September 27, 2008

Ray Kurzweil’s point is a strong one. The ideas that we put forward especially the notion that men and women are becoming the tools of their tools may not be as far off into the future as we may think. The novel CYBER-EUGENICS: The Neural Code by Bernard Amador, leaves the reader with the notion that reality is not what it seems especially when considering the uses of modern technology and the realities of cyber-eugenics.


Captcha

Enter the letters you see above.

« Insulation and clean heat boost from EECA // New Zealand Pioneers New Climate Change Initiative With United Nations »


FireStats icon Powered by FireStats