Moderators: Azrael, Moderators General, Prelates
LE4dGOLEM wrote:your ability to tell things from things remains one of your skills.
Weeks wrote:Not only can you tell things from things, you can recognize when a thing is a thing
The Mighty Thesaurus wrote:Simple: he is vitterfolk (a troll with a human-like appearance).
Rook wrote:On the other hand, I don't think anyone saw iPods coming. I didn't even notice until recently; they just sort of snuck in there. Oh, there was hype around the release, but a solid state music player craze that would have huge numbers of people walking the streets 'plugged in' was not (that I know of) a predicted scenario, at least, not a popular one.
Gadren wrote:Then I suggest you go out and try it. Seriously. Start honing your skills, meet a couple other people who advocate the destruction of technology, and actually go out into the wild and try to live that way, eschewing any technology past the Agricultural Revolution. Don't just idolize a world you've never experienced, sitting in a comfy chair talking about it on the Internet. Live it -- live it with the intent of never returning. And I'm not saying that I want to get rid of you, just to understand the perspective this requires, the fact that this isn't just camping.
Don't be like the head of PETA, which demonizes scientists who do animal testing, then depend on medicines which use such testing, rationalizing it by saying that "getting the message out is more important." Actually live your ideology.
Gadren wrote:You talk of freedom, but I don't see how having to think every day how to not starve, having a life expectancy that of the Upper Paleolithic (the era before agriculture) -- somewhere from 20 to 33 years -- can be freedom in any sense.
How do you know that tendencies to agriculture aren't "natural?" If people in your ideal society start to farm, will you use force to stop them? Will you go against people's natural desires to live longer and better? Doesn't sound like freedom to me.
At least with our idea of the future, we won't stop people from living their own lives as primitively as they want. After all, we don't need to force you. We just need to outlive you.
Gadren wrote:They're also what lead to thought, ideas, philosophies. They're what give you the time to even dedicate your thoughts to how great living as a hunter-gatherer is.
And it's not as if there was never inequality or dependency. The gender gap, for example, was always there in hunter-gatherer societies. Men were the hunters, women were the caretakers. If anything, a primitive society is more beholden to inequalities, having no way to rise beyond them.
Gadren wrote:If you really cared about the dangers of specialization, you would get off the Internet. The digital divide is one of the biggest issues in the modern world, and by spending your time posting here, you are contributing to it.
Belial wrote:No. All biological life, currently, ages and dies. Except sharks. And Carp. They live until something kills them.
Why? Because it's a pretty good evolutionary mechanism. The old genome dies and makes room for the new genome to possibly improve on it.
If we can improve our own genome, that is totally unnecessary.
Belial wrote:
Yeah. There are two ways of doing that: try to dismantle society, or try to make society *even more efficient* until it no longer hurts the environment.
Let's examine the first option.
If *everyone on earth* reverted to a hunter gatherer lifestyle tomorrow, two things would happen. First, half the population would die in short order. People won't let that happen. It is not natural to go willingly into death. Nearly every animal on earth will do everything in their power to stay alive. Choosing to undermine your sources of food and shelter (which is what we would be doing if we dismantled farms and cities) is an extremely "unnatural" act. So there's a problem there.
Second, the remaining percentage of the population would quickly strip the planet bare. Right now, our desire for food only touches the environment in remote ways: our fertilizer runoff, our displaced wilderness, and so on. The animals and plants we eat aren't part of any natural ecosystem, so it doesn't matter how many of them we kill, it just matters how much space they occupy. If the entire human population just started eating wild plants and wild animals exclusively, we'd eat *everything* in about a year flat. The extinctions would be *monumental*.
The only reason hunter gatherers were "sustainable" back in the day was because there weren't very many of them
Now, the other way.
If we can *isolate* or *improve* our food, energy and shelter processes, so that they don't damage the environment, then we can live as we do now without hurting our support system (the earth). This requires making *more* advances, not fewer.
Belial wrote:Okay. That's neat for you. Go do that. No one is going to stop you. But why does what you consider fun dictate what is natural or good? Why is having a knowledge base that consists of "how to eat" better than one that is more complex and varied?
Furthermore, what gives you the idea that *choosing* to give up advantages and go live like that is natural? Like I said, it's not natural to shorten your lifespan, give up advantages, and intentionally hobble yourself. No animal does this. An animal in a state of nature will grasp at any advantage it can perceive, use any resources it can access, and do anything it has to to keep itself and its own alive.
Yakk wrote:No, they are not. First, we have the mass extinction of large "game" animals done by hunter-gatherer societies.
Second, the environment includes asteroids slamming into the planet with enough force that every animal on the planet larger than a squirrel dies. As hunter-gatherer societies cannot survive such an impact, they are not sustainable in the environment of "planet earth". Sure, in the short term, then can sustain themselves. But anything can sustain itself in the short term, that's not that impressive.
The Mighty Thesaurus wrote:Adalwolf is Ásatrú... That's the glorious life you want to recreate?
Nyarlathotep wrote:I'm still not sure why he's sitting on his computer yelling at Transhumanists instead of going out with his spear and bearskins and living this glorious life of his... why not do that, and leave us dreamers to our folly...?
Men and women played complementary roles.
No. The old must always make way for the new, eventually.
Well I think way more than half the population would die. I'd say at least 2/3's would die in a few week. And over the following year I think the many more would die. I'd be surprised if the world can sustain more than 1 billion people (more likely about 500mil or less).
Dismantling society would be great. Its already spiraling out of control. Working to speed up the crash would be admirable. Although I'd like to try reduce its damage to the environment during its last years, through environmental laws, increased conservation efforts, etc.
To your second part. So? Once earth goes, we go. We are part of Earth.

I don't think people are going to abandon civilization willingly. Its going to crash, and the crash will be bad. Really really bad.
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
At least you're honest. Too many primitivists try to gloss over this little point.Adalwolf wrote:Well I think way more than half the population would die. I'd say at least 2/3's would die in a few week. And over the following year I think the many more would die. I'd be surprised if the world can sustain more than 1 billion people (more likely about 500mil or less).
Dismantling society would be great.
Goplat wrote:At least you're honest. Too many primitivists try to gloss over this little point.Adalwolf wrote:Well I think way more than half the population would die. I'd say at least 2/3's would die in a few week. And over the following year I think the many more would die. I'd be surprised if the world can sustain more than 1 billion people (more likely about 500mil or less).
Dismantling society would be great.
Kill 100 people and it's called mass-murder. Kill 1,000,000 people and it's called genocide. What is it called to kill 5,000,000,000 people? "Great"
fyrenwater wrote:Oh dear God, I just imagined this horrible scenario of a psychotic non-people-person running around, trying to steal the people-person section of people-peoples' brains to implant into their own brain.
Adalwolf wrote:I'm not saying they should be killed. I'm saying they are going to die after the crash.
mattmacf wrote:Action precedes motivation.
I mean heck, you can hardly imagine that any advance would be equal can you? If anything, the ability to 'enhance' humans to some undefined level of power would quite probably result in a rather large social schism (between those who could afford the best, those who could not, those who wanted none of it, and those who resented those in power. There may be some overlap possibly), or many, with people of vastly different mental and physical levels becoming increasingly alienated from each other.
Rook wrote:I'm a Christian, and personally I don't see much wrong with the more general transhumanist ideals. After all, creation of God or not, the body is around for what, 100 years at best? (I know it's often less and sometimes more, but roll with it for simplicity's sake) The main focus [of my religion at least] is on the growth of the soul, not changes to the body. Once I'm dead, those changes will be nullified anyway, so the only vice I can see is in focusing on 'upgrades' to the exclusion of everything else.
Rook wrote:And be honest [unnamed fanatic], just because this is a future scenario, and not immediately plausible, does not mean you'd really be OK with someone elevating themselves to a god-like status in terms of mental and physical abilities, any more than you would accept a militaristic warlord setting up camp in your back garden today.
LE4dGOLEM wrote:your ability to tell things from things remains one of your skills.
Weeks wrote:Not only can you tell things from things, you can recognize when a thing is a thing
fyrenwater wrote:Oh dear God, I just imagined this horrible scenario of a psychotic non-people-person running around, trying to steal the people-person section of people-peoples' brains to implant into their own brain.
The Mighty Thesaurus wrote:Rook wrote:And be honest [unnamed fanatic], just because this is a future scenario, and not immediately plausible, does not mean you'd really be OK with someone elevating themselves to a god-like status in terms of mental and physical abilities, any more than you would accept a militaristic warlord setting up camp in your back garden today.
What's wrong with becoming god-like?
Belial wrote:You mean like how I can access boundless information nearly instantly, and have machines to do entire villages worth of work for me, and others have neither?
Nyarlathotep wrote:To take it from a religious standpoint...
If the focus of your religion is on the growth of the soul, not the body, imagine how much more time one has to refine the soul while on this earth (if we consider that perhaps once in the afterlife that's 'it' and you have no more chances to 'improve'.)*
*note that I'm agnostic who thinks that the coolest afterlife would involve reincarnation but who is skeptical about its existence.
But seriously... imagine having centuries in which to contemplate and refine one's spiritual existence.
The Mighty Thesaurus wrote:What's wrong with becoming god-like?
loratwopointone wrote:Seriously though, I can't see a problem with the human race trying to improve itself through means of science. Through science and technology we've evolved from living in caves and hunting to what we are today. Through healthcare and research into illnesses we've added years onto the average life expectancy. What is wrong with taking that a step further?
mattmacf wrote:Action precedes motivation.
In any case, would you mind clarifying that sentence? I detect some degree of sarcasm, but I can't really see what you're getting at.
If someone extended their life nearly indefinitely simply to further their own position, gain power or evade death, I can't say I'd approve. If someone did the same because they felt they needed more time in order to 'put things right' I can't say I wouldn't.
Well, me neither, but like I said, I feel there are limits imposed by good taste. If the shift towards longer and longer life was gradual and general, fine; my only concern lies with the possibility of using directly artificial means (i.e.: robotic bodies) to vastly extend the lives of those who could afford it, while normal humans might still live only a tenth of that time.
Belial wrote:"So you're letting me die for good taste?"
"It's the only civilized thing to do."
"I hate you."
Belial wrote:If someone extended their life nearly indefinitely simply to further their own position, gain power or evade death, I can't say I'd approve. If someone did the same because they felt they needed more time in order to 'put things right' I can't say I wouldn't.
But do you think it's up to you to decide whose use of life extension is "worthy"?
mattmacf wrote:Action precedes motivation.
Gharbad wrote:Really, belial? That's kinda strange.
Personally, I can't understand people who think that humanity is crap and needs to be destroyed. I guess there was a time long ago when I thought I was better than everyone and under my rule things would be better. Then I realized that I was being a egotistical eugenic jerk, and actually realized how awesome humans are.
But, that's my own personal journey.
Aluminus wrote:Because if there are lots of god-like people, then they would just fight each other, trying to prove their omnipotence.
Transformers, deities in disguise
SexyTalon wrote:A pile of shit can call itself a delicious pie, but that doesn't make it true.
As to the last part of your post, I was comparing the merits of a scenario in which longer lifespans were developed slowly against one in which you could suddenly be immortal. A scenario where extreme longevity was developed quickly, then handed out in small doses was never in it.
And there was no need to make the guy you put on my side of the fence sound like a camp fashion designer.

Belial wrote:If you *don't* have the capability, and life extension happens gradually by necessity, then it's not even worth discussing: there's no decision there, just reality.
mattmacf wrote:Action precedes motivation.
Rook wrote:Belial wrote:If you *don't* have the capability, and life extension happens gradually by necessity, then it's not even worth discussing: there's no decision there, just reality.
So you feel reality is not worth discussion?
fyrenwater wrote:Oh dear God, I just imagined this horrible scenario of a psychotic non-people-person running around, trying to steal the people-person section of people-peoples' brains to implant into their own brain.
Belial wrote:I feel that it's not worth discussing "should we develop longevity quickly or slowly" if the only option we *have* in reality is "slowly".
mattmacf wrote:Action precedes motivation.
Rook wrote:Belial wrote:I feel that it's not worth discussing "should we develop longevity quickly or slowly" if the only option we *have* in reality is "slowly".
But that's wasn't what I was discussing; this thread is built on conjecture, so surely [since you are here] you are able to compare the merits of two completely separate possible realities, one where longevity is developed quickly, and one where the only option is slowly. My argument doesn't care which of these happens; what I'm saying is I feel society would benefit from a slow progression of increasing lifespans, as this would be more likely to give everyone a roughly equal footing.
LE4dGOLEM wrote:your ability to tell things from things remains one of your skills.
Weeks wrote:Not only can you tell things from things, you can recognize when a thing is a thing
Yakk wrote:But will everyone 120 or less in 100 years be able to live to 320?
Aren't mathematical singularities fun? If the rate at which we extend human lifespan is faster than the rate people age, you can have infinite expected lifespan without figuring it out all at once.
The Mighty Thesaurus wrote:
If you have the power to let someone live longer, and you choose not to help, are you committing murder?
Something about this statement doesn't sit right with me. A few other people have said things here that seem to be... very dismissive of humans as they are currently. Isn't it possible that some of these 'taints', so to speak, are actually not that bad? I personally, I like certain things about being human. I like the craving for a cup of coffee, or the base desires around sex, or the satiated feeling after eating food. I think it would be a huge loss if these desires were eliminated because we evolved to no longer require food or sex, or that our chemistry was altered to remove addiction.Belial wrote:Our perceptions and our thought processes are limited and tainted by biological idiosyncrasies and the imperfection of evolution
Something about this statement doesn't sit right with me. A few other people have said things here that seem to be... very dismissive of humans as they are currently. Isn't it possible that some of these 'taints', so to speak, are actually not that bad? I personally, I like certain things about being human. I like the craving for a cup of coffee, or the base desires around sex, or the satiated feeling after eating food. I think it would be a huge loss if these desires were eliminated because we evolved to no longer require food or sex, or that our chemistry was altered to remove addiction.
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