WESAK 2008 - New Age Festival of Spiritual Unity and Blessings
Lectures, Teaching & Meditation On 17th,18th May 2008,9:30 am to 5:30 pm
venue: The auditoriam of the Indian Society of International Law, opposite the supreme Court 9, Bhagwan Dass Road, New Delhi.
Moon Light Meditation
19th May 2008, 6:30pm to 9:30pm Venue:97-A Eastern Avenue, Sainik Farm,New Delhi. For Reg:Poonam Sharma: 919313034752,Snigdha Nanda: 919818291375. More Detail>>
When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
Is consciousness purely material? If so in the future, we may be heading
for the cyborga man-machine symbiosiswhen even our thoughts
may be determined by silicon implants.
Anyone who has seen the movie Terminator starring Arnold Schwarzeneggar
knows what a 'cyborg' looks likepatently human, just like you and
me. But beneath the familiar exterior, it is a cold and logical machine
that thinks in algorithms and displays a strength and precision way beyond
human capabilities.
Of course, the Terminator was a nasty piece of machinery programmed to
eliminate humansobviously a reflection of our deep-rooted mistrust
and revulsion for machines that show anything resembling motivation and
intelligence. But such negative attitudes towards machines are fast becoming
obsolete as the digital revolution remolds our perceptions about life,
the body, and machines in general.
'Cyborg' is actually a science fiction shortening of 'cybernetic organism'.
The idea is that, in the future, we may have more and more artificial
body partsarms, legs, hearts, eyes and so ontill one might
end up finally as a brain in a wholly artificial body. The fact that our
ideas about what constitutes a machine have changed notably is evident
in the ubiquitous desktop personal computer that's capable of instantaneously
morphing from a word processor into an entertainment centre playing music
and video. Or from an accounting machine into a speech synthesizer or
a game station within the span of a mouse click. A far cry from the oil-spewing,
smoke-belching, noisy clumps of twisted metal that represented machines
of the past.
As the attributes of machines changed, our basic attitudes toward them
underwent a remarkable shift. For many of us, the computer is no longer
a cold grey machine, but a trusted assistant without which everyday business
would come to a grinding halt. In the mid-'80s, science fiction writer
William Gibson coined the term 'cyberspace', and offered the vision
of a man-machine linkup at the neurological level hinting at some sort
of techno-transcendence. A decade later we have the World Wide Web or
the Internet, which is actually a machine, and the race to achieve such
a man-machine linkup is on. The idea is to be linked to the Internet through
surgically-implanted chips capable of wireless communication with the
Net: making you physically here and virtually embodied in cyberspace.
Virtual reality as a technology is still in its infancy, but once perfected
we would have individuals with the implants for wireless linkup opting
to spend most of their time in designer realities and virtual heavens.
This Gibsonian world of man-machine symbiosis is a direction we are definitely
moving towards, amply demonstrated by the recent chip implant on 44-year-old
professor of cybernetics, Kevin Warwick from the University of Reading,
Britain. The implanted chip in his left arm wirelessly linked him to the
network, made his office welcome him in the morning, turned on his computer,
switched on the lights in the office corridor, opened doors and even helped
his secretary track him irrespective of where he was on the campus. After
a week of this, when the implant was removed from his body terminating
the linkup, Professor Warwick experienced a sense of loss as though he
was cut off from something, similar to a shared sense of being with the
computer network. He later admitted that with the implant he had felt
"an affinity to the computer".
This shift in our attitude towards machines and machine intelligence is
gradually gaining legitimacy. Identified as 'post-humanism', this new
ideology endorses the idea that humans need to involve intelligent machines
in the evolutionary process. The proponents of post-humanism perceive
this involvement as using technology to overcome our physical and mental
limits.
As machines continue their rapid evolution towards increased miniaturization
and functionality, and as we keep tinkering with our bodies and brains
at the molecular and genetic level, this involvement will become more
feasible. For instance, the problem of how to increase human intelligence
is being approached from various angles. One approach is the use of chemicals
like Vasopressin to enhance already existing processes in the brain such
as memory. The other is an attempt to link the brain directly to computers.
Such brain-computerinterfaces could amplify the processes that constitute
the human mind to unimaginable levels. The computers could be small enough
to be implanted within the body of the user.
According to post-humanist thinker Max More: "A human brain reasons, creates,
feels, plans, calculates, appreciates. These properties of living, conscious
beings result from the immensely complicated connections among our billions
of neurons. An individual neuron by itself displays no consciousness,
reasoning, or creativity. The neuron is a biochemical machine. We should
therefore be able to replace or repair damaged neural tissue with implants
and supplement biological neurons with synthetic neurons while retaining
the same functions. We should be able to add memory, processing power,
and new abilities by doing so. In principle, we could replace all our
neurons until we had an entirely synthetic or prosthetic brain. If the
new neurons worked similarly to the old, and were connected up the same,
we would never notice the difference."
By far the most ambitious project of this kind is 'migration through silicon'
or 'uploading', which involves putting the mind into a machine. Uploading
or 'migration through silicon' plainly means transferring or duplicating
the mental processes of a living person along with his/her identity on
to a specially designed computer. Once a mind is successfully transferred
on to silicon, one could modify that mind by increasing the scope of the
senses or even add new senses. Or increase and enlarge the memory functions
by creating remote links to all the existing records in human cultural
and intellectual history. One could eliminate unnecessary activities like
sleeping, or eliminate unwanted personality traits, instal new ones, invent
new emotions, dream while fully awake, choose what emotions and moods
to experience, inhabit artificial bodies of either sex or of completely
new sexes, experience completely imaginary states of being, and so on...
The truth is those among us who use a pacemaker to sustain the normal
heart functions and be alive are in effect part-machine and part-human,
a minor cyborg. But in the vision of the future, presented by people like
Gibson, intelligent technology intrudes into the hitherto sacred space
of the human body to morph into a tool that offers transformation and
transcendence. The future is no longer seen to be existing out there,
where life is full of pain and all-too-human suffering, but within a digitally
constructed space, melded with the nerves and guided by all-knowing machines.
Post-humanism and other technocentric New
Age philosophies seem to be preparing us for this radically different
world we are going to inhabit, where we will coexist with intelligent
machines by integrating
them into our own being. Perhaps that is the only way we can prevent ourselves
from being at the mercy of our own magnificent creation-the super-intelligent
machine.