Quick Links: Fake Ray Kurzweil, 30 Rock, Avatar

• Don’t miss tweeting alter-Ray Kurzweil: All I’m saying is that if Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof read my books they would know how to write complex hypothetical narratives His bio reads, “While my physical self remains cryogenically preserved in Yucca Mountain, I maintain an active VR life where I blog in...

“The Geek’s Guide To Getting Girls”

H+ Magazine‘s “humorist” Joe Quirk (author of “The Meaning of Life Lies in Its Suckiness,” which we discussed here) has penned another literary triumph. Watch out, Voltaire: It wasn’t until her bikini thong hit me in the face that I recognized her. It was the sophomore from Holy Cross College I’d...

An Ambiguous Utopia

Following up on my last post about artistic depictions of human life post-progress, the gentle reader is directed for his edification to our colleague Alan Jacobs’s New Atlantis essay on the “Culture” novels of Iain M. Banks. The novels are plainly meant first and foremost to be compelling science fiction, and Banks openly...

Transhuman Morality 2.0 (Responding to James Hughes)

I don’t know if I’d take his intellectual history to the bank, but James Hughes is dealing with some serious issues in a series of blog posts about internal tensions within transhumanism as they relate to the Enlightenment ideas out of which he wants to claim it springs. In this post, for example, he notes how transhumanism is torn...

“Transhumanists Have a Problem”

In a post that went up on his blog over the weekend, Michael Anissimov sketched out what he considers a potentially serious problem in transhumanist thinking, and he credits this blog, and particularly an important essay by Professor Rubin, with spurring his thinking. There is much in Mr. Anissimov’s post that we disagree with. There...

Will it Blend?: Apples and Philosophy of Mind

If you’re studying geology, which is all facts, as soon as you get out of school you forget it all. But philosophy, you remember just enough to screw you up for the rest of your life. -Steve Martin Anyone who sticks with a philosophy major long enough to take a philosophy of mind course will be familiar with some of the field’s...

“The Visible Mark of Earthly Imperfection”

A while back, Boing Boing featured photographer Philip Toledano’s portraits of “extreme” plastic surgery, “A New Kind of Beauty.” After posing some stock questions about the nature of beauty in his introduction to his portraits, Mr. Toledano asks, “Perhaps we are creating a new kind of beauty. An amalgam of surgery, art, and...