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Archive for the ‘futurism’ category: Page 1052
Jan 22, 2017
What Is A Biosimilar Drug?
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, futurism
Jan 21, 2017
How Microsoft’s Cortana will compete with Alexa
Posted by Sean Brazell in category: futurism
Tech Correspondent Samuel Burke sits down with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella to discuss the company’s plans for its digital assistant Cortana.
Jan 21, 2017
The point of rebutting objections to rejuvenation
Posted by Nicola Bagalà in categories: futurism, life extension
This is, in my opinion, the real point of rebutting objections to rejuvenation.
If you’ve hung around here long enough, you probably know I have two pet peeves: ageing and money. If we assume the saying ‘Only two things are certain in life: death and taxes’ is true, then we’re forced to conclude that I advocate for the (indirect) elimination of the only two certainties in life. So, if you came here looking for certainties, I’m afraid you’re in the wrong place.
I’m (mostly) not joking. Lately I’ve been working a lot on the Answers to objections section, which together with a few discussions I’ve had on the Internet, got me thinking about the point of rebutting objections to rejuvenation. Generally, when I discuss the subject with somebody who’s not at all sold on the idea of rejuvenating people, I get the feeling they expect me to prove beyond doubt that nothing can possibly go wrong, either along the way between here and an ageless world or once that world has been reached. If my feeling is correct, opposers to rejuvenation may expect that my rebuttals are meant to prove that neither a post-ageing world, nor the journey to it, will present any problems or challenges.
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Jan 20, 2017
China Hosts World’s Brightest Vacuum Ultra Violet Laser Facility
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: futurism
The world’s brightest vacuum ultra violet light free electron laser research facility can be found in China.
Jan 19, 2017
Is the Default Mode of the Brain to Suffer?
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: futurism, neuroscience
It underscores the fact that not all minds that wander are lost. University of British Columbia philosopher Evan Thompson, author of Waking, Dreaming, Being: Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience, Meditation, and Philosophy, says the DMN’s mental meanderings are “the baseline state of you as a cognitive system.” It’s tremendously pragmatic: being able to remember the past, plan for the future, and happen upon creative insights are all essential tools for navigating life. While he was hesitant to mix the word “suffering,” which is so loaded in ancient Asian religious traditions, with the “default mode,” which is of a contemporary neural vintage, the two connect in the way that suffering arises when people concretize the fleeting swirls of thought, especially around conceptions of self. Still, he says, there’s “particular kind of stickiness” that can come when DMN activity grows overly self-centered.
Default-mode content involves an image of self, one that’s easy to become attached to. These self-conceptions are “affectively charged,” he says; they carry lots of emotional weight. “We constantly think that it’s not just another thought, that [the image of self] is something real, not just an mental image.”