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Short sermon

Justin Case 🚫
Updated:

I got curious and had to go to the locked thread.

Saw this comment:

But hey if they are gay why should people care.

And I saw this answer:

People shouldn't. Schools definitely shouldn't. Let them grow up and decide for themselves what they're attracted to once they go through puberty.

Now for my sermon of the day….

We ALL should care.

Not because something is going on that we agree or disagree with, but because the people referenced in the above post are HUMAN BEINGS.

Any time a person seeks to "self-terminate" due to feeling that nobody cares, or because they feel so alienated that their self worth is gone, then we as a worldwide society have failed them.
(i stand by this statement unwaveringly)

It costs nothing to be kind and love your fellow human beings.

And for those of you who profess belief in God, loving your neighbor as yourself is one of the only two instructions given in the "red writing".

I am not gay, confused, or anything else.

I don't have to be.

I still can relate to the living breathing person, and I believe we have no right to persecute them in any manner or make their lives miserable.

I may write some seriously violent stuff, and some somewhat anti-gay stuff. But that is FICTION. AKA.. "Not Real".

ANYWAY… that's my words of the day.

Love others and care about their lives. It will make this planet a better place for us all.

Grey Wolf 🚫

@Justin Case

Fully in agreement with this (not that anyone would doubt it).

When in doubt, use the (modified) golden rule: do to others what you would have them do to you if you were in their shoes, as long as they do the same.

Trying to reduce everything to zero-sum games, false dichotomies, 'us versus them' fights, and the like is a lot of what's wrong with the world. And, yes, I mean that on all 'sides'. There is ample blame to go around; it's not just one group or the other who goes overboard.

As a wise man once said (giving the more traditional form): So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets.

The more restricted form is both kinder to 'others' (because you are doing to them what serves their needs, not yours), but also more restrictive on who one is kind to, because it leaves out those who don't give similar courtesy.

The same wise man also said "But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also. And if anyone wants to sue you and take your shirt, hand over your coat as well." I'm not going that far. That's a very difficult path to walk. I wouldn't fault anyone else for doing so, though.

joyR 🚫
Updated:

@Justin Case

We ALL should care.

Why?

Why should I care about someone on another continent, from a different culture?

Or course if by "care" you mean an empty platitude, devoid of any actual practical act, then sure, go ahead and "care".

That kind of "care" is like praying, it costs you nothing, takes moments and gives the self righteous an ego boost. It changes nothing.

Not caring is NOT the same as acting against others, just as it isn't acting for them. It is simply not caring, because my time and effort is better spent actively caring about those who actively care about me.

If someone desires to be gay, so what? Unless of course they also desire to "identify" as female, compete against my daughter who then loses her chance of a scholarship as a result.

Turn the other cheek and you'll find your insurance won't pay for facial damage that you invited.

Put a plaster on an injured person and get prosecuted for assault, battery or practicing medicine without a licence.

Hug a crying child and get prosecuted as a paedophile.

No I don't care about a culture that promotes female genital mutilation. I DO care if they want to practice that shit in MY country.

I don't give to charity when I know that a large percentage goes to administration and another chunk to the local warlord.

I'm honest enough to state that neither "care" nor "love" will change one damn thing on this planet. Only practical actions change things. So NO, I don't feel at all bad about not supporting those whose culture, sexuality, lifestyle etc are not mine. Again, not caring is not acting for or against, but that changes when their actions affect me and mine.

My attitude is live and let live, with a caveat of 'keep your shit off my lawn".

Charity begins at home, and extends to those who serve in our armed forces, coastguard, lifeboat, etc. THEY deserve it.

So, my words for the day:

Care and prayer without practical action is egotistical bullshit.

Rights are things worth fighting and dying to keep doing, nothing is a "right" if it requires others give it to you for free.

Replies:   Pixy
Pixy 🚫

@joyR

complete against my daughter who then loses her change

*compete, chance*

Replies:   joyR
joyR 🚫

@Pixy

chance

I'm blaming autocorrect. Thanks for catching it.

Remus2 🚫

@Justin Case

I got curious and had to go to the locked thread.
Saw this comment:

IMO, if would be a good idea to let those locked threads die without further comment.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Remus2

IMO, if would be a good idea to let those locked threads die without further comment.

Hear hear!

As far as I can tell, they're completely off-topic because they have nothing to do with reading or writing SOL stories.

AJ

Replies:   Pixy
Pixy 🚫

@awnlee jawking

because they have nothing to do with reading or writing SOL stories

I was under the impression that "Hang-out" was exactly that. Where content creators for the site could hangout and shoot the proverbial shit, whilst they see how badly their latest submission is doing... Except that due to (and continued) trouble caused by politics, that subject was now verboten...

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Pixy

'Meet and interact with authors and discuss author issues'

I'm not sure how shooting the proverbial shit squares with that. I've sometimes asked questions unrelated to stories but I usually tag them with 'off-topic' so potential contributors are warned.

I'm toying with starting one asking what QEII died from, since the media seems to be swerving that topic. (Since the time of her death was known in advance, I presume medical morphine).

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

I'm toying with starting one asking what QEII died from

Old age. Seriously, her son/heir is in his 70s.

Pixy 🚫
Updated:

@Dominions Son

This is actually an interesting one. On Thursday morning (8th), all the (closed to public) military (UK) Facebook groups were saying the late Queen died on Wednesday night (7th) and the general statement was "If you are on leave, turn off your phone and unplug your landline now!" and "If you are on leave and you live in the pads quarters, you're fucked!". By lunchtime this had firmed up somewhat and now had the additional statement of "An official statement will be made at 1830 hrs (GMT)) along with the statements of "If you were going to go on leave...you can forget it..."

I even phoned up my parents and said the rumour has it that the Queen has died and it will be made official at 1830hrs tonight. This was about 11:30 am (GMT) on Thursday.

At bang on 18:30 (GMT) Thursday evening, it was made public that she had passed away that afternoon...

All Thursday morning, various closed groups were sharing memes along the lines of the unavailability of boot polish and other items needed for parade kit.

There is a requirement/need for certain people to get their proverbial shit together in the form of some serious organisation in the security services, police, military etc etc and there was a lot of comings and goings at Balmoral on Wednesday night, way more than usual.

The family needs to get together, form a united front, get their shit squared away and all that in readiness for the inevitable press scrutiny. So it makes sense to do that out of the public eye and once they are all singing from the same hymn sheet, they can turn round and inform the world that she had just died, now that they have had the previous 24 hrs or so to process the fact privately themselves.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

Old age.

Nobody dies from old age, it's always one body part being the first to give way. Just like nobody dies from cancer, it's always something consequential like pneumonia.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son  Joe Long
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

, it's always one body part being the first to give way

Due to completely normal wear and tear of a long life. Something more specific might be the immediate cause, but the ultimate cause is still old age.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

A quango named Public Health England made a similar error when counting Covid deaths.

All deaths within a month of the deceased having a positive Covid test are recorded as a Covid death.

1) People do not die from Covid - it's because a consequential problem such as pneumonia becomes untreatable. If there was an effective treatment for pneumonia (and treatments have improved since the start of the pandemic), the patients wouldn't have died. Therefore they didn't die of Covid.
2) People run over by a bus within a month of having a positive Covid test are recorded as Covid deaths.

Similarly, if the failing body part were effectively treated or even replaced, the patient would not have 'died' from 'old age'. The problematic area is the core processor and memory. Cue metaphysical questions of whether a person's identity resides in the brain.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Similarly, if the failing body part were effectively treated or even replaced, the patient would not have 'died' from 'old age'.

Every part will wear out and fail eventually. It's simply not rational to believe that people could live indefinitely if parts could only be treated and/or replaced indefinitely.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

It's simply not rational to believe that people could live indefinitely if parts could only be treated and/or replaced indefinitely.

It's sure been the premise of a hell of a lot of science fiction if it's not rational. Including this gem by Larry Niven. Because guess what?

If you replace parts with those grown from your own clone, then you CAN live indefinitely. No alien tissue rejection, and no need for medications that current organ recipients need now. Heart failing at age 80? Here's your own heart that's 20. Liver going bad? Here's your own healthy one. Ah, your brain is wearing out? That's okay, we'll simply copy everything over into this brand new brain that's never been used, and you keep on going.

Now - whether they would WANT to live forever if that were the case is another subject entirely.

So, in this case, I'm going to go with the postulates of Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, and Robert Heinlein - just to name a few - and say you're completely wrong.

Replies:   Dominions Son  joyR
Dominions Son 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

And what happens when the brain wears out?

helmut_meukel 🚫

@Dominions Son

And what happens when the brain wears out?

You obviously only skimmed his posting, he wrote:

Ah, your brain is wearing out? That's okay, we'll simply copy everything over into this brand new brain that's never been used, and you keep on going.

HM.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

And what happens when the brain wears out?

I think yours has already, if you can't read that I actually covered that. :)

(The smiley face is because I think you know I'm kidding around with you, and not being intentionally mean. It's not like you're AJ or worse, the grinning dick.)

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

I think yours has already, if you can't read that I actually covered that. :)

You mentioned it, I'm not buying it.

1. We have no real idea how the brain actually stores information, much less how to copy it from one brain to another. I see no reason to expect that will change anytime in the next century or two.

2. Where are you going to get a physically mature "blank" brain to copy it to? Starting with a brain that already has a personality and memories has enormous ethical problems.

In my opinion, in the real world, the brain will remain an impossible to repair part for at least the next several centuries.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

We have no real idea how the brain actually stores information, much less how to copy it from one brain to another.

There's certainly an immense difference between how a biological brain stores information and how a computer brain stores information. I have no idea how we'd go about converting between the two.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

There's certainly an immense difference between how a biological brain stores information and how a computer brain stores information. I have no idea how we'd go about converting between the two.

Before you could even consider converting between the two, you would have to know how information is stored in a biological brain. We have zero real, actionable information on how biological brains store information.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

The biggest problem in acquiring that knowledge is that in the civilised world, the experiments necessary to test and confirm any hypothesis are illegal. That means any breakthrough will come from a rogue state like China or North Korea.

I think we know where to start. The process of storing information involves the formation of connections between neurons. When the connections degrade, for example with neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's, loss of memory occurs. And yet somehow the brain transfers memories from short-term storage to long-term storage, and it's been posited that stored memories have a fractal quality so when part of the brain is damaged, sometimes memories can be retrieved.

It must be a fascinating and challenging area in which to work.

AJ

Replies:   StarFleet Carl
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@awnlee jawking

It must be a fascinating and challenging area in which to work.

My wife deals with that all day at work. Director of Nursing at an Assisted Living facility, that's NOT full memory care. Although she has worked at those in the past as well. She has residents that can tell you exactly what they wore to the prom in 1952, who they dated, and everything else about their elementary and high school - and can't remember what they had for breakfast an hour ago. Brain functions ARE being studied, and we're gradually making progress.

By the way, this greatly annoys me. You're being quite reasonable on the topic, and DS is being the stick in the mud naysayer. Normally it's the other way around. Dammit, don't confuse me!

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

We have zero real, actionable information on how biological brains store information.

Incorrect. We know it's stored in neurons, with the hippocampus determining how and where it's stored. Do we fully understand the process? No. Is that real and actionable information? Yes.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

Incorrect. We know it's stored in neurons, with the hippocampus determining how and where it's stored.

No, we suspect that, we don't know it. There's a difference.

How exactly is it stored in the neurons? How much information can one neuron store?

We don't even have the beginning of the answer to these questions.

Do we fully understand the process? No.

We don't even begin to understand the process.

Is that real and actionable information? Yes.

No, it's not.

When I talk about actionable knowledge, I mean knowledge that can be used to produce real concrete technology today, not something that is a potential starting point for further research.

Do we know enough about how the brain stores memories to build a machine today that can extract memories from an unconscious person?

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

Using MRI imaging of a person's brain processes when they're asked to think of something specific, scientists are starting to develop a lexicon with a view to reading a person's thoughts.

One day it might be possible to communicate with a person in a coma.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Using MRI imaging of a person's brain processes when they're asked to think of something specific, scientists are starting to develop a lexicon with a view to reading a person's thoughts.

They are basically at the point where under live MRI imaging of the brain, they can tell what general region of the brain is involved in thinking particular thoughts. That is a very, very long ways away from actually decoding what they are thinking about.

One day it might be possible to communicate with a person in a coma.

Sure, one day, sometime in the next couple of centuries. What you describe is orders of magnitude away from decoding useful information.

Replies:   GreyWolf  awnlee jawking
GreyWolf 🚫

@Dominions Son

While it's not reading memories, we're far beyond 'general region of the brain'. See this article, and this one (they're not very similar; both are pretty informative).

Communication with a person in a coma? It's already been done. And it's been replicated.

We have a long ways to go to really reading minds. My guess is that we're at the 1960s level of machine translation, where people expected fluency in five to ten years based on the rate of progress. Fifty years later, we're quite close to there. For most of the time in between, progress was halting, and then research and computing power converged and we hit breakthrough after breakthrough.

But we're able to read specific pictures, thoughts, and emotions. We know that different people's brains process a number of concepts in the same way. And we can actively communicate with (some) people in comas.

None of this, on its own, gets us closer to memory, though, much less replicating brains.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@GreyWolf

And we can actively communicate with (some) people in comas.

And the FMRI has nothing to do with it beyond providing some confirmation that it's happening.

I took a look at the article.

The "communication" is one way, from the researchers to the comma patient. And that communication is happening by voice with no technology.

A lot of people have insisted for a long time that comma patients can hear and understand what is said in their presence.

In this case, all the fMRI is adding is confirmation of the fact that the comma patient is responding.

None of this, on its own, gets us closer to memory, though, much less replicating brains.

It's not really even a first tiny step in that direction.

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf 🚫

@Dominions Son

The "communication" is one way, from the researchers to the comma patient. And that communication is happening by voice with no technology.

[...]

In this case, all the fMRI is adding is confirmation of the fact that the comma patient is responding.

In my mind, that's a contradiction. If we know the coma patient is responding, and they can (and do) answer yes/no questions, communication is not one-way. The direction from the coma patient to the researchers/family uses the fMRI. Communication at the 'twenty questions' level is still communication.

If one were to combine the techniques in the first two articles with that in the third, would we be able to accurately tell what coma patients were visualizing? What emotions they were feeling? My suspicion is yes, but the research hasn't been done (to the best of my knowledge).

At this point, I have no idea if it's a first tiny step or not, and I'm not sure that anyone else does, either.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Grey Wolf

In my mind, that's a contradiction. If we know the coma patient is responding, and they can (and do) answer yes/no questions, communication is not one-way.

There's no indication I saw in the referenced article to the comma patient being asked yes/no questions.

It was things like "we know from work on conscious patients that a certain area of the brain lights up when they think about playing tennis. We asked the comma patient to think about playing tennis and the right area of the brain lit up."

That is not two way communication.

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf 🚫

@Dominions Son

From the article:

On many occasions in the months that followed, we conversed with Scott in the scanner. He expressed himself, speaking to us through this magical connection we had made between his mind and our machine. Somehow, Scott came back to life. He was able to tell us that he knew who he was; he knew where he was; and he knew how much time had passed since his accident. And thankfully, he confirmed that he wasn't in any pain.

The questions we asked Scott over the next few months were chosen with two goals in mind. In part, we tried to help him as best we could, by asking questions that might improve his quality of life. We asked him whether he liked watching ice hockey on TV. Prior to his accident, Scott had been a hockey fan and his family and carers would tune his TV to a hockey game as often as they could. But more than a decade had passed since Scott's accident. Perhaps he no longer liked hockey? Perhaps he had watched so much hockey that he could not stand it any longer? If so, checking in to see what his current viewing preferences were might significantly improve his quality of life. Fortunately, Scott still enjoyed watching hockey, much as he had for many of the years prior to his accident.

and also

For example, after lecturing about patients in the grey zone, I had often heard comments such as "I doubt they have any sense of the passage of time", "they probably don't remember anything about their accident", or even "I doubt they have any awareness of the predicament they're in".

Scott told us otherwise. He answered all of those questions and more. When we asked him what year it was, he told us correctly that it was 2012, not 1999, the year of his accident – clearly he had a good sense of the passage of time. He knew that he was in a hospital and that his name was Scott – he had a good sense of who he was and where he was. Scott was also able to tell us the name of his primary caregiver. This was important to us and to our understanding of grey-zone science, because one question that had frequently come up was what patients in this situation could remember. Scott would not have known his caregiver prior to his accident, so his knowing her name was clear evidence that he was still able to lay down memories.

Very much two-way communication.

Replies:   DBActive
DBActive 🚫
Updated:

@Grey Wolf

It's two way communication if you believe that the "responses" are truly responses to the questions and that the "responses" are interpreted correctly.

I think this is a glaring case of confirmation bias. The author desperately wanted this to be true and his vision of the results of the experiment confirmed his hope.

I think that conscious thought would also imply memory of thought during coma. People who are awakened after coma don't have that memory of what happened while comatose. They usually don't have memory of what occurred before the the trauma that caused the coma. That memory loss may, or largely is, temporary, but some is permanent. How could he conduct "conversations" with someone who has no memory of what happened ten minutes ago?

Again, my personal experience: after weeks as a Ranch Los Amigos Level 1 patient, my daughter began to emerge - unlike in the movies, it's not instantaneous - it takes days, weeks, months. She had no memory whatsoever of her life since 4th grade and insisted that she was in elementary school - she was a college graduate. That later progressed to a, sometimes violent, insistence that she was in high school. Eventually she recovered most of her memory but still, a decade later, has no memory of the last year before her accident.

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf 🚫

@DBActive

It could be confirmation bias, absolutely. However, it certainly appears from the article that they went to a decent length to avoid confirmation bias and verify that the information wasn't just guesswork. It would certainly be easy to device experiments to confirm that, given that there was absolutely at least a stimulus/response going on (the target fMRI state only occurring when requested).

On memories, this is one of those cases where I agree that we have too little information. It might be that people in comas are forming memories but not saving the 'key' to access the memory. Perhaps, while in the coma state, the key is present, but it goes away when conscious. We simply don't know.

It could be that the conversation was all short-term memory, too. It's possible to have a solid conversation with some (not all) Alzheimer's patients. They simply won't remember it half an hour later - but during the conversation, short-term memory is doing just fine.

That doesn't really correlate with this patient knowing their caregiver's name, though. That would be long-term memory.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

They are basically at the point where under live MRI imaging of the brain, they can tell what general region of the brain is involved in thinking particular thoughts.

I think they're some way beyond that. By recording exactly which parts of the brain light up in association with subjects thinking about specific emotions and object, finding sufficient similarities between test subjects is enabling the development of a lexicon. Applied to coma patients the 'lexicon' can provide insights into what they're thinking about.

AJ

Replies:   DBActive
DBActive 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Brain damage causes changes in which areas respond to different stimuli. Since this is touted as communication with brain damaged people, there is no way to confirm that the activity means what the experiment results actually mean.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

You mentioned it, I'm not buying it.

Again, the premise from multiple respected and highly intelligent science fiction authors, not something I've pulled out of my ass.

1. We have no real idea how the brain actually stores information, much less how to copy it from one brain to another. I see no reason to expect that will change anytime in the next century or two.

Um - yeah, we do. Neuron connections. Now, at this particular juncture in the space-time continuum, we don't have an actual completely accurate map and model of the procedure it uses, but that is something being researched and will probably be figured out within that century or two.

2. Where are you going to get a physically mature "blank" brain to copy it to? Starting with a brain that already has a personality and memories has enormous ethical problems.

What part of having a clone of you grown did you not quite grasp? Can we do that now? No - with the caveat that we're doing things in this realm already. I'm not talking about cloning cells and then implanting them in utero so a baby is born, like Dolly the sheep. I'm talking about cloning full sized body parts under laboratory conditions - including 'blank' copies of someone's brain. Can we do it now? No. Will we be able to in the future? Sure.

In my opinion, in the real world, the brain will remain an impossible to repair part for at least the next several centuries.

I guess it's a good thing you don't start a horse whip and buggy company and then sue all the car companies for restraint of trade. Not with a closed mind like that. Here, touch on the doll where the big, bad dose of creative thinking hurt and did mean things to you.

You know, I could see you standing on the beach, saying, "I told your brother, and I'm telling you, Orville Wright, that even if you CAN get that thing off the ground - which is impossible for centuries to come - that it'll never amount to anything useful in the world."

Dominions Son 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

Again, the premise from multiple respected and highly intelligent science fiction authors, not something I've pulled out of my ass.

Again, fiction not reality. Those stories are not predictions of the future.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

Those stories are not predictions of the future.

Really?

Computer generated avatars
Air dryers that you see in bathrooms all over the place
Computers that can pass the Turing Test
Astrogation
Atmospheric Braking
Implanted RFID chips and ear buds
Self driving cars and fully automatic taxis
Automated accounting systems
Self service hotels
Computer driven self travel websites
Automatic sensors to turn lights off if no one present
The Sports Utility Vehicle
Hands free controls
Using cold to slow down human bodily functions to help with certain injuries
Automated delivery drones
Household cleaning robots (Roomba, anyone?)
Waterbeds
Precision surgical waldos
The internet

Oh, and that's just from the Science Fiction of Robert Heinlein. Yes, he created ALL of those ideas.

Seems Dick Tracy watches were seen as fantastic and not a prediction of the future, either. Gee, maybe it's because someone read a story of something that WAS fiction and then turned it INTO reality. (I won't even tell you that they've already actually created the basis for the transporter from Star Trek - you'd probably just poo-poo it. But they have ...)

Are you going to start a candle factory now and file an injunction against all the light bulb makers?

awnlee jawking 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

Oh, and that's just from the Science Fiction of Robert Heinlein. Yes, he created ALL of those ideas.

I'm pretty sure he didn't create all of them, although he was very adept at taking concepts already in existence and expanding them. In fact, some of them already existed in real life at the start of the 20th century, before Heinlein was even born.

AJ

Replies:   DBActive
DBActive 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

The most laughable, and commonly cited, is the waterbed. They had been around for a hundred years before his "invention" of the idea.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@DBActive

Google claims waterbeds were around long before Heinlein was born, used mainly by the medical profession.

AJ

Replies:   StarFleet Carl
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Google claims waterbeds were around long before Heinlein was born, used mainly by the medical profession.

While they existed in different forms, Heinlein is credited with the actual invention, even if he didn't build them. That's also why the first patent application was denied for them, and only granted after revision.

Replies:   awnlee jawking  DBActive
awnlee jawking 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

Heinlein is credited with the actual invention

That's bizarre. How can you be credited with the invention of something that's been in use for hundreds of years?

AJ

Replies:   StarFleet Carl
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@awnlee jawking

That's bizarre. How can you be credited with the invention of something that's been in use for hundreds of years?

Same way they're always coming up with new patents for wheels. You've described something in great detail, so you get credited for it. If Anonymous Doctor did something in 1850 but never published anything so he could be credited for it, well, then when Samuel Kellogg comes along and takes that idea to make a cereal out of it - then Kellogg gets the credit.

awnlee jawking 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

I've always had a positive view of Robert Heinlein. I mostly like his stories and I respect the work he did with other SF authors. But I didn't realise he had a dark side :-(

In any case, 'creating' something already in existence does not count as a prediction of the future.

AJ

Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

If Anonymous Doctor did something in 1850 but never published anything so he could be credited for it, well, then when Samuel Kellogg comes along and takes that idea to make a cereal out of it - then Kellogg gets the credit.

By the way, not an anonymous Doctor. The Kellogg who created the cereal company stole the idea from his own brother, Dr. John Harvey Kellogg. Who was more than a bit of a health nut.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_Creek_Sanitarium

Dr. Kellogg was simply uninterested in commercializing the corn flake idea, so his brother Samuel Kellogg, went behind his back to do it.

DBActive 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

No, that is a history made up by Heinlein and his fanboys.

Hall (the "inventor" of the modern waterbed" filed for the patent in 1969 and it was issued in 1970. His improvement was the use of vinyl.

The first challenge to the patent's validity was in 1991 when Intex sued claiming that the patent wasn't valid because of the preexisting technology for the use of the device for medical purposes. Intex lost.

If you are interested check this cite https://www.casemine.com/judgement/us/5914bcb1add7b0493479e128 in which the court gives a description of the patent history.

You might also find interesting the patent issued in 1914 that describes the bed Heinlein claimed to have invented

SAMUEL N. HALL, OF MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE.

HYDRAULIC BED.

Specification of Letters Patent.

ratentea Jan. ic, iai a.

Application filed October 7, 1914. Serial No. 865,571.

that describes the exact bed that Heinlein claims to have invented.

BTW, the electric hand dryer was invented and patented in 1921.

GM had self-driving vehicles displayed at the New York World's Fair in 1939.

Lowering body temperature for medical treatment has been practiced for thousand of years. From wikipedia:

NTRODUCTION

Since the time of the Edwin Smith Papyrus's, and undoubtedly before, physicians have employed hypothermia (HT). HT has been used for treatment of cancer pain, induction of electrocerebral silence in surgery, tetanus, traumatic brain injury (TBI), and even status epilepticus (SE)[1-6]. It is unquestionably the greatest tool for neuroprotection in surgical cases requiring circulatory arrest and the standard of care for ventricular fibrillation/pulseless ventricular tachycardia cardiac arrest (CA)[7-9].

Temple Fay, Claude Beck, and Charles Bailey ushered in the modern era of HT in the 1930s and 1940s with their work on TBI and circulatory arrest for cardiac surgery[6]. Fays work demonstrated the absence of irreversible neurologic change in humans refrigerated to as low as 26β€…Β°C[10]. In this era and into the 1960s, patients were often cooled over 24 h, and to temperatures below 28β€…Β°C. With increased awareness of the numerous cardiac, pulmonary, and infectious side effects, interest waned[11-17]. These side-effects were a function of the duration and depth of HT, and the state of intensive care unit (ICU) care at the time. Interest in HT again developed in the 1990s, when data from TBI, stroke, and CA animal models demonstrated mild to moderate HT (30-35β€…Β°C) for 2-24 h produced sizeable improvements in outcome[18-21].

Heinlein was a talented science fiction writer. He was not a great predictor.

Replies:   richardshagrin
richardshagrin 🚫
Updated:

@DBActive

Heinlein was a talented science fiction writer. He was not a great predictor.

He was a Naval Officer from 1929 to 1934. He graduated from Annapolis and made the rank of Lieutenant (O-3, and equivalent to being a Captain in the Army. He "retired" due to illness (Tuberculosis) and was not allowed to rejoin the Navy during WW2. He served as an Engineer (civilian job) for the Navy during the war. Research was involved in that job.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

prediction

Given the number of respected Sci Fi authors whose stories include Faster Than Light travel with no time dilation effects (and that might include myself, excluding the 'respected' bit), it's surely a nailed-on dead-cert to be invented for real in the future ;-)

AJ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

Those stories are not predictions of the future.

For every SciFi story that included a prediction of the future that turned out correct, there must be hundreds that got it wrong.

Even if you turn to the predictions of respected scientists (ie no handwavium), the success rate is not much better.

The UK used to have a TV series called 'Tomorrow's World' that presented scientific advances and predicted how they would affect our lives in the future. Not long ago there was a retroanalysis and virtually all the predictions turned out wrong :-(

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

For every SciFi story that included a prediction of the future that turned out correct, there must be hundreds that got it wrong.

Exactly my point. Carl's list was a huge chunk of confirmation bias.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

Carl's list was a huge chunk of confirmation bias.

It sort of gels why a fictional Bob Heinlein plays such a major role in SC's 'True History' erotic fantasy ;-)

Michael Loucks seems a Heinlein fan too - his eponymous religious 'Good Medicine' protagonist recommends reading 'Stranger in a Strange Land' to some of the girls who come under his thrall.

AJ

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Michael Loucks seems a Heinlein fan too - his eponymous religious 'Good Medicine' protagonist recommends reading 'Stranger in a Strange Land' to some of the girls who come under his thrall.

Indeed! And the protagonists in my other two series reference it as well. :-)

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Michael Loucks

The Steve Adams and Michael Loucks characters are becoming so similar that if they ever met in real life, they'd scratch each other's eyes out ;-)

AJ

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks 🚫

@awnlee jawking

The Steve Adams and Michael Loucks characters are becoming so similar that if they ever met in real life, they'd scratch each other's eyes out ;-)

Interesting observation, but I don't see it. Unless you're referring to 'body count' they are very different in their philosophy, politics, and theology.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

Carl's list was a huge chunk of confirmation bias.

Not my list. I just picked a few things.

I'd just make a guess that when you were young, you didn't read a like of science fiction. First serious book I read was '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea', while I was in kindergarten. All the Edgar Rice Burroughs science fiction, the Tom Swift books, Hardy Boy detective books - my parents were just happy that I liked to read, so they didn't have a problem taking me to the Used Book Store in Terre Haute to get more materials. (They didn't know what Gor was, so they were fine buying me the books because they thought they were science fiction. Probably shouldn't have been reading those in Junior High School.)

Ray Bradbury, Arthur C. Clarke, Kurt Vonnegut, Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, and of course, Robert Heinlein, were some of my childhood companions. Now it's more like David Drake, John Ringo, David Weber, and Travis Taylor. I prefer hard science-fiction to fantasy.

I'm not denying I have confirmation bias. I'm an optimist about our future and life itself. I have to be - otherwise I'd have been dead 40 years ago, because the doctors that came up with the cure for my cancer wouldn't have been motivated to do so without a belief they could do something, rather than listening to all the nay-sayers that said it was impossible.

Replies:   Dominions Son  DBActive
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

I'd just make a guess that when you were young, you didn't read a like of science fiction.

You would guess wrong.

The problem with list like this is two fold.

They ignore a lot of things from Science Fiction from the same periods, sometimes even the same books that haven't become reality.

Another problem is that they count existing technologies that may have been named for ideas from science fiction but that don't come anywhere near the capabilities of the namesake "technologies" as they appeared in science fiction, so in a very real sense, they aren't actually the same technology.

ETA: There is a third problem. These kinds of list often credit science fiction that made a certain idea popular with originating that idea, when that idea actually predates the science fiction.

As an example, you mention '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea' which is often credited with the idea of submarines.

The problem with that is that there was a submersible boat built and used in combat during the American Revolution, nearly a century before Verne wrote '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea' in 1869.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turtle_(submersible)

There was also a submarine built and used by the Confederacy during the American Civil War, also before Jules Verne wrote '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea'

https://www.hunley.org/

So no, the idea of a submarine did not originate with Jules Verne and '20,000 Leagues Under the Sea'

DBActive 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

Not my list. I just picked a few things.

It's a good thing you "just picked a few things."
Most of them are either stupid and useless, or impossible.

One of his best predictions of the future is that communism and the USSR would prevail in the end-less than a decade before the USSR collapsed.

Michael Loucks 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

You know, I could see you standing on the beach, saying, "I told your brother, and I'm telling you, Orville Wright, that even if you CAN get that thing off the ground - which is impossible for centuries to come - that it'll never amount to anything useful in the world."

Today's Dilbert makes that reference! And it's on the same general topic!

Comic for 2022-09-18

😎

Replies:   StarFleet Carl
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Michael Loucks

Today's Dilbert makes that reference! And it's on the same general topic!

Hadn't read it until seeing your link, but I truly appreciate and understand the sentiment.

Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

1. We have no real idea how the brain actually stores information, much less how to copy it from one brain to another. I see no reason to expect that will change anytime in the next century or two.

Um - yeah, we do. Neuron connections.

Suspicions and unproven theories which are as likely to be wrong as they are to be correct.

2. Where are you going to get a physically mature "blank" brain to copy it to? Starting with a brain that already has a personality and memories has enormous ethical problems.

What part of having a clone of you grown did you not quite grasp?

The fact that we don't have the technology for accelerated growth and don't have the slightest idea where to begin researching it.

It takes 20 years to produce a 20 year old brain even with cloning and then you have the ethical problems that come with the fact that the brain is not a blank slate.

That does no good for an 80+ year old patient who needs a new brain this week.

Replies:   StarFleet Carl
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

It takes 20 years to produce a 20 year old brain even with cloning and then you have the ethical problems that come with the fact that the brain is not a blank slate.

Under CURRENT technology, yes. I'm so glad we live in a world where new technology is created every day, instead of in your caveman world, Fred Flintstone.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

I'm so glad we live in a world where new technology is created every day

Like nuclear fusion, which they have been telling us is 10 years away for at least the last 50 years? Don't get me wrong, if they finally get this right within my lifetime I will be celebrating. I just don't expect that to actually happen at this point.

What happened to flying cars?

Not every idea from science fiction becomes reality, and there is no way to predict which ones will and which ones won't or on what kind of schedule it will happen.

Your idea of cloning people for spare parts is quite frankly, in my opinion, a dystopian idea that is riddled with enormous ethical problems.

Organ cloning (making just a single organ in a lab, rather than a complete organism) has a bit more promise, and fewer ethical issues, but for the foreseeable future will probably be limited to relatively simple organs that are entirely or mostly a single tissue type like the heart and liver.

Replies:   StarFleet Carl  Keet
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

Like nuclear fusion, which they have been telling us is 10 years away for at least the last 50 years?

What happened to flying cars?

Um - nuclear fusion has been around for a long time. Now, CONTROLLED nuclear fusion reactions are still experimental at this time, but it's being figured out.

As for flying cars ... here's 10 of them. We're getting there.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

Um - nuclear fusion has been around for a long time. Now, CONTROLLED nuclear fusion reactions are still experimental at this time, but it's being figured out.

I'm talking about sustained nuclear fusion as an energy source. In the last half century, approximately zero progress has been made on that.

As for flying cars ... here's 10 of them. We're getting there.

They will never get past the regulatory issues.

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@Dominions Son

They will never get past the regulatory issues.

You didn't bother to look at the link I gave: https://www.pal-v.com/.
Aside of that, I don't think flying cars will become a replacement for the current cars. There's zero infrastructure to manage so many flying cars and I'm not sure it's even possible for so many vehicles. The price is also a huge hurdle although those can drop fast. The link I gave already has a second flying car developed that will go for around €299,000. Compared to the price of a small helicopter pretty cheap and it takes you from door-to-door like a normal car. The current trend for electrification could turn out to become a new problem.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Keet

You didn't bother to look at the link I gave

Yes, I did. It's not a flying car. It's a helicopter that you can drive on a road. You would have to have a pilots license to fly it.

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@Dominions Son

Yes, I did. It's not a flying car. It's a helicopter that you can drive on a road. You would have to have a pilots license to fly it.

And a drivers license :)

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Keet

And a drivers license :)

To drive it on public roads yes, but you couldn't legally fly it without a pilots license.

Keet 🚫

@Dominions Son

What happened to flying cars?

Wanna buy one? Pre-order for around €499,000:
https://www.pal-v.com/

Replies:   Dominions Son  DBActive
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@Keet

Wanna buy one? Pre-order for around €499,000:

https://www.pal-v.com/

It's not a flying car. It's a roadable aircraft (on the insistence of both US and EU regulators). In terms of operational regulations, when it's in the air, it's treated like any other aircraft.

Even if I had the money, under existing regulations, if I wanted to fly it, I would have to have a pilot's license, not just a driver's license and a pilot's license is much harder and more expensive to get.

DBActive 🚫

@Keet

That type of "flying car" has been around for almost 75 years.
https://www.historylink.org/File/20930

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@DBActive

That type of "flying car" has been around for almost 75 years.
https://www.historylink.org/File/20930

The problem with the "flying car" idea isn't the technology, it's government.

The regulators insist on treating it like an aircraft that can drive on the roads, rather than like a car that can fly.

It has to meet all normal aircraft regulations in the air, and that means, among other things, that the operator has to be a licensed pilot.

And it has to meet all relevant regulations for cars when driven on public roads. The US regulators, and I thought the EU regulators as well, have been insisting that they be called roadable aircraft rather than "flying cars".

Unfortunately, no amount of technological progress can solve the government regulation problem.

Replies:   DBActive  StarFleet Carl
DBActive 🚫

@Dominions Son

Once you put it in the air it is an aircraft. It should be treated that way.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@DBActive

Once you put it in the air it is an aircraft. It should be treated that way.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not suggesting that's an unreasonable position.

However, the idea of a "flying car" from science fiction is something you can drive in the air the way you would drive a car.

If your car/aircraft hybrid isn't that, it isn't a "flying car" as that idea was created by science fiction.

The flying car idea met real world government and died a horrible death.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

no amount of technological progress can solve the

problem with electric cars, either.

Yeah, I said it. The electric car is the next best thing - and always will be.

DBActive 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

1. We have no real idea how the brain actually stores information, much less how to copy it from one brain to another. I see no reason to expect that will change anytime in the next century or two.

Um - yeah, we do. Neuron connections. Now, at this particular juncture in the space-time continuum, we don't have an actual completely accurate map and model of the procedure it uses, but that is something being researched and will probably be figured out within that century or two.

No. There are a lot of different theories about the way the brain functions and how information is stored and retrieved: none of them are much more than guesses.

An example. My daughter had an extremely severe TBI that largely destroyed her left temporal lobe. We were confidently told that, if she survived, she would never be able to communicate or understand any communication. This was from neurologists and neurosurgeons at a major university medical center. We were asked for consent to harvest her organs. We got new doctors.

They were completely wrong and within six months she was speaking fluidly, beginning to read and write again. She has zero speech or comprehension difficulties.

After reading (because of this problem) vast amounts of scientific papers and speaking with world renowned medical doctors in this field, the one thing is clear is that we simply do not know how the brain works.

Joe Long 🚫

@Dominions Son

That gets into the "Caprica" prequel where first they created augmented virtually reality that connect directly to each person's neural cortex when they wore the game visor. Once they'd found how to insert data directly into the brain they worked on copying info from. The last step was to move from a digital avatar to a physical body augmented with tech that had the thoughts and memories of an original person inserted. From the original models, they made many copies.

joyR 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

If you replace parts with those grown from your own clone, then you CAN live indefinitely.

New heart, hip etc, sure, no problem. Surviving the operation to replace your spinal cord? Those who postulate don't seem to want to explain how survivable such operations might be.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@joyR

@StarFleet Carl

If you replace parts with those grown from your own clone, then you CAN live indefinitely.

New heart, hip etc, sure, no problem. Surviving the operation to replace your spinal cord? Those who postulate don't seem to want to explain how survivable such operations might be.

Spinal cord? He suggested replacing the brain.

Replies:   joyR
joyR 🚫
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Spinal cord? He suggested replacing the brain.

He actually suggested it would be feasible to replace any part of the body. If that were truly possible which part would be most challenging? The spinal cord is probably high on that list.

Swapping a dying brain for a fresh one sounds easy unless the problems connecting it up are included.

Current artificial limbs can be taught to operate from muscle movement etc, but that is one limb at a time. trying to teach/learn to control every limb and at the same time keep the heart beating, lungs working...

THAT requires oceans of handwavium.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@joyR

Swapping a dying brain for a fresh one sounds easy unless the problems connecting it up are included.

The hard parts are where do you get the replacement brain and copying the personality/memories into the replacement brain.

Otherwise you are transplanting the original owner of the replacement brain into a new body rather than preserving the life of the person whose brain was dying.

Replies:   StarFleet Carl
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

preserving the life of the person whose brain was dying

That's why having a clone is important. Alien tissue rejection - as mentioned in THIS book. Also by Heinlein.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

That's why having a clone is important.

Having a clone available (in a non-evil way) requires half a dozen technologies that don't exist and can't be developed in parallel.

When you factor ethics/morals into this, alien tissue rejection isn't the biggest problem.

For that matter, if you have the capability to copy the brain and a clone, why transplant the brain at all? Transfer the patient's mind into the clone and be done with it.

Again, you are drastically underestimating the gap between current knowledge/technology and what would be needed to accomplish what you are suggesting.

Replies:   StarFleet Carl
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Dominions Son

Transfer the patient's mind into the clone

That presumes the brain wasn't grown in a lab environment. I realize this is technology we don't have at this moment, but given the way research is going, I wouldn't be too surprised if we didn't have it in a few decades.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

That presumes the brain wasn't grown in a lab environment.

Current research on lab grown organs couldn't handle the brain. They haven't even yet successfully produced a heart or a liver. In a decade or two we might see successful heart or liver transplants with lab grown replacement organs. Brains, no.

Again, you are drastically underestimating the gap between current knowledge and what would be needed to achieve what you imagine.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

It's simply not rational to believe that people could live indefinitely if parts could only be treated and/or replaced indefinitely.

The brain is obviously the weak link with our current state of knowledge.

Other than that, various bits of the body wear out at different rates. Scientists reckon that with our current knowledge, humans who keep lifelong good care of their bodies should be viable to at least 120. Some parts could continue to function to at least 200.

Who knows what age we could live to if we could keep the brain in working order, bearing in mind the current progress in developing replacement organs?

AJ

Joe Long 🚫

@awnlee jawking

A complication of factors incident to old age.

*I read too many death certificates

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

Seriously, her son/heir is in his 70s.

Note that the chump is now older than Elisabeth was when he started pressuring her to stand aside so he could have the top job.

What's up with the chump anyway? Can't remember things, violent mood swings, impaired dexterity. Dementia? Parkinson's? No doubt he'll keep his black-spidery claws hooked into the throne as long as he is able :-(

AJ

Replies:   Jack Green
Jack Green 🚫

@awnlee jawking

What's up with the chump anyway? Can't remember things, violent mood swings, impaired dexterity. Dementia? Parkinson's?

I'm sure His Majesty holds you in equal high regard; as do we all on SOL of course.

Jack G

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Jack Green

I'm sure His Majesty holds you in equal high regard; as do we all on SOL of course.

Thank you.

I've never promised to go into exile in Switzerland if I was banned from using hounds to rip wild mammals apart.

And I've never promised to go into exile in France if the UK left the EU.

And I'm pretty sure I've never claimed sea levels rose 10 metres last century.

QEII had her limitations, but she knew wen to maintain a tactful silence in public.

AJ

Marius-6 🚫

@Justin Case

Not political, but a matter of Context.

I think that in the quote

But hey if they are gay why should people care.

"Care" is intended to mean: = Matter. As in "no one should care if they are green, purple, or plaid." Furthermore that government should be colorblind.

I don't think that Care was = "Compassion" in the OP.

This is one of the reasons I am concerned about the meaning and understanding of Words.

As far as I can tell, ALL OF US HAVE COMPASSION FOR INDIVIDUALS, NO MATTER THEIR SEXUAL ORIENTATION.

However, we might disagree on the matter of government preferences or restrictions upon individuals based upon professed orientation. Some may believe that government should be a "watchdog" or redress historical prejudices. Others believe government should be colorblind as it were.

If we shared an understanding of Care in the OP means, then I think we would not be disagreeing.

I have Compassion for nearly everyone, but few of their characteristics matter to me.

Cheers!

ystokes 🚫

@Justin Case

I was the one that wrote that line although it is taken out of context. I was responding to someone that it should be like before where kids didn't come out as gay as that was a right thing to do. They didn't come out as gay because they knew they would get their ass kicked if not killed. Back then not many cared if they were beaten up or killed because being gay was going against God's will.

Justin Case 🚫

@Justin Case

To be clear, I was not bashing anyone.
Just typing thoughts to the masses.

Dominions Son 🚫

@Justin Case

Here is the heart of my disagreement with Starfleet Carl over his brain replacement idea.

He thinks the gap between what would be needed and what we know/the technology we have today is relatively small and easily bridged.

I think that in order to do it in a way that is not actively evil, the technology gap is several orders of magnitude larger.

There are bits we would need (accelerated growth cloning) that we don't have predecessor technologies that would be necessary to even start researching.

Again, using accelerated growth cloning as the example, before you can even start researching how that might be done, you have to get to the point where it is possible to go from egg to baby on a normal schedule without a biological host (technology that we don't have and aren't anywhere close to having).

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf 🚫

@Dominions Son

If I had to place a wager on it, I would grudgingly place it on you being right, but I wouldn't be happy about having to place the wager in the first place.

That said, sometimes we do get enormous shifts in knowledge. There are a number of (highly theoretical) technologies which could develop in the next two decades that might completely shift the balance and allow orders-of-magnitude progress.

I wouldn't have thought we were at the point of being able to capture an enormous variety of artistic and photographic styles across thousands of subjects and generate images containing one's choice of model and style, based on natural language requests, in a few minutes on consumer hardware using under six gigabytes of storage for the model, but here we are. Yes, in one sense that's a (very, very cool) parlor trick, but it's also a really good reminder that sometimes things move really quickly.

Whenever anyone confidently guesses at the speed of progress, my natural instinct is to chuckle. We've all heard far too many confident statements that 'X will be solved in the next few years', only for X to take decades, for that to seem likely. Similarly, many of us have heard far too many confident proclamations that X will take decades or centuries, and then someone finds a different angle accomplishes X in only a few years.

The technological leaps we've made in the last eighty years are vast and (in many cases) hard to predict. I'm not in the least confident in guessing where we'll be eighty years from now. We may or may not solve memory, but I'd put fairly high odds on direct, high-bandwidth, highly functional interfaces with the brain becoming routine, personally.

Dominions Son 🚫

@Grey Wolf

That said, sometimes we do get enormous shifts in knowledge.

Yes, but those are impossible to predict and don't occur on any kind of cyclic basis.

The technological leaps we've made in the last eighty years are vast and (in many cases) hard to predict. I'm not in the least confident in guessing where we'll be eighty years from now.

There's some evidence out there that the rate of technological advancement is slowing down.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/despite-what-you-might-think-major-technological-changes-are-coming-more-slowly-than-they-once-did/

https://readwrite.com/is-technological-progress-slowing-down/

https://mattsclancy.substack.com/p/is-technological-progress-slowing

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

There's some evidence out there that the rate of technological advancement is slowing down.

I think they're confusing scientific advancement and technological advancement.

Rather than transforming our lives through major scientific breakthrough, we seem to be stuck in an era of improving existing technology by small increments.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

we seem to be stuck in an era of improving existing technology by small increments.

Which has inherent limits. Improvements to existing technology will necessarily eventually run into a problem with diminishing returns. Some technologies already have.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

Sadly I have to agree with you.

I understand the much vaunted exponential increase in computer speed is rapidly coming to a halt.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

I understand the much vaunted exponential increase in computer speed is rapidly coming to a halt.

My understanding is that it stopped around a decade ago. They are still getting some improvements, but not at the exponential level.

Dominions Son 🚫

@Grey Wolf

Whenever anyone confidently guesses at the speed of progress, my natural instinct is to chuckle.

The reason I put the brain replacement idea in the centuries category is because it isn't one technology, its' 4 or 5 different technologies that need to work together and none of which currently exist.

And to top that off, there are dependencies in the technologies such that B can't develop before A because A is necessary for the development of B.

I'm not in the least confident in guessing where we'll be eighty years from now. We may or may not solve memory, but I'd put fairly high odds on direct, high-bandwidth, highly functional interfaces with the brain becoming routine, personally.

It's a technology I'd love to see. But while necessary for the brain replacement idea, it is well short of what would be needed to copy personality and memory from one brain to another. However the next piece in that chain can't be worked on until that piece is solved.

So if it takes 40 years to get that piece then another 40 years to get the next piece and you still have two or three more pieces to add on before you get to brain copying...

ystokes 🚫

@Justin Case

Am I the only one rolling their eyes at some of these "debates"?

Replies:   helmut_meukel
helmut_meukel 🚫

@ystokes

Am I the only one rolling their eyes at some of these "debates"?

No

HM.

Joe Long 🚫

@Justin Case

I've said "I don't care" not to mean that I don't care about the person or what happens to them, but that their being gay will not make me treat them worse or better. It's irrelevant to me. I think it does more harm than good for people to wrap themselves in identities. We are all unique humans who should be judge by what each of us says and does, not on attributes we have no choice over or what group we are perceived to be members of.

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