If you're asking do I foresee a machine takeover, the answer is I can't be confident either way. A lot of people who think they understand evolution have no idea how radically things have changed over the past 30 years. Ever since game theory and evo-devo (evolution-development) took over at the turn of the century, anthropologists now have to explain why a question like nature vs nurture is no longer relevant. Think about it, computers routinely beat us in games we designed ourselves, including Jeopardy! Kurzweil piles on, in a sense, taking the neocortex as the pattern-recognizing module that it is, and showing its possible there could be a You I and You II some time in the future.
You gotta wonder is it really a youII since you'll continue to evolve while the machine is stuck at the you that was created at that point. Not to mention a machine can't experience pain or pleasure which is root of our definition of self.
:smt023 :smt023 Book 1 of 3 of the 'In Me' series. :smt023 Anyone into physical anthropology, genetics, evolutionary primatology, etc. and who like sci-fiesque fiction would enjoy this book IMO.
Seeing as Anthropology is my background, I was curious. The blurb on Amazon.com makes it sound almost like Planet of the Apes. Is it like that?
Not really. Some of the reviews I read say that it'd make a good prequel for Planet of the Apes though.
"The Game: Penerating The Secret Society of Pickup Artists" by Neil Strauss "Family Power: The True Story of How The First Family of Taekwondo Made Olympic History" by Mark Lopex, Steven Lopez, Diana Lopez, & Jean Lopez "Iceman: My Fighting Life" by Chuck Liddell
1. 50 shades of grey... it was worst book i ever read.... 2. stephen king - carrie .. wanted to read the book before watching movie 3. stephen king - skeleton crew
^^^^ I read "Prey" a few years ago. It's a great book and brings up some pretty scary concepts and situations. It really makes you think. I've been reading Clive Cussler book after Clive Cussler book lately. I just love his adventure stories and he always ties it into an historical event which always fascinates me.
I read Orhan Pamuk's "Museum of Innocence" recently, which I both loved and hated. Which I guess in the end means I loved it... The fascinating thing about this book is that the author has actually built/constructed/put together a real life museum in Turkey based on the book. The book and the characters are fiction, so essentially the museum is fiction as well... It's just so fascinating - I am desperate to go!
Just finished reading this The male character reminds me a little of Sheldon from the Big Bang Theory. A very refreshing book about how love can't be planned, it finds you when and where you don't expect it.