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- Madagascar's mining rush has caused no more deforestation than farming, study finds
- Scientists explore microbial diversity in sourdough starters
Centerfold Future
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The current issue of Playboy Magazine features a collection called "Future Tense: A Symposium On the New American Landscape." It includes comments extrapolating on the future implications of current technological ramifications. It avoids any prescriptions save reflection, and it even questions the future's potential for alteration. Playboy asks, “Nobody has ever experienced anything like 2009. So what lies ahead? Is the future in your hands?” Though Playboy claims to aggregate answers “from some of our foremost thinkers,” some of the writing is disappointingly poor. Even the more thoughtful contributions, by T. Boone Pickens and Martin Rees, lack novelty. Two pieces do stand out: |
Firstly, Reza Aslan's “A world without borders” refutes economist Thomas Friedman's thesis that The World is Flat. Friedman's book asserts technologically-enabled globalization equalizes the power among nations. The thesis appears obviously correct, explaining such phenomena as the McDonalds Doctrine. While the power of developing nations may be increasing relative to the West, Aslan notes the error in assuming it increases absolutely. The power of a nation is primarily a functional of the power entrusted in it by its people. Aslan more precisely notes that national power also equalizes approaching epsilon! He then channels Nietzsche, arguing religious resurgence threatens to fill this chasm and that we currently stand at “the precipice of unending cosmic war.” If we will war, I doubt it will be along religious but instead deeply philosophical lines. Cosmic war will rage over Cosmism.
Secondly, Seth MacFarlane gives food for thought with his vision that “The future will be cooked medium rare.” Like any gracious guest, he lavishes his host with complements, crediting Playboy for exposing him to the words of Vidal, Vonnegut, Hawking, and Sagan. MacFarlane, however, isn't claiming he reads Playboy for the articles. With Playboy he illustrates a basic point: The printing press enables widespread access to both prose and porn. Atavistic applications coexist with and often co-opt our more noble ends. Curiously, the creator of Family Guy insists we “resist those destructive impulses embedded in all of us.” If we suppress these impulses for any humanitarian end, are we not abandoning our humanity? If we lose ourselves along the way, what's the point? I suspect, given MacFarlane's fleshly fixations, that may be his real point.
I've found Playboy's Special Feature notable. If you do too, notate away below.
artilects
When you talk about the Cosmic War, I don't see how those opposed to the creation of artilects (super massively intelligent and huge computers) win. As history as proven time and time again, where there's a will, there's a way. If one government is able to create technology powerful enough to maintain supremacy, then it will do so. I would say this gives it the best chance of winning this 'war'.
Then again I really don't know much about this topic and only read the abstract of the paper you linked.
-Varun
good post
great post paul, but I think you (and Aslan) severely underestimate the power of conglomerates like McDonalds in the eventual globalization of the world
-andy