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Mar 16, 2023

Book Review: The Mountain In The Sea

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Harry’s Review of The Mountain In The Sea by Ray Nayler

Ray Nayler’s recent contemplative sci-fi thriller The Mountain In The Sea offers a first contact story which holds a mirror to our notions of intelligence and responsibility.

Following ecologist Dr Ha Nguyen, The Mountain In The Sea centres upon the recent discovery of an octopus species in the remote Vietnamese islands of the Con Dao archipelago. Questions abound: just how intelligent are these octopuses? Corporations and activists alike become interested. DIANIMA-a vast organisation interesting in automation and artificial intelligence hire Dr Nguyen to determine how valuable the octopus species are to their research. Accompanying her for this job is DIANIMA’s own previous attempt at creating a being that can pass the Turing test, a silicon lifeform known as Evrim.

Mar 16, 2023

Uploading your consciousness will never work, a neuroscientist explains

Posted by in categories: materials, neuroscience

1. The mind, brain, and body are inextricably linked

The idea that the mind and brain are separate is usually attributed to the 17th-century French mathematician and philosopher René Descartes, who was what philosophers now call a substance dualist. Descartes believed that the mind and body are made of different substances: the body of a physical substance, and the mind of some mysterious, nonphysical material.

Today, most neuroscientists reject this idea. Modern brain research suggests that the mind is made of matter and emerges from brain activity. Even so, most still study the brain in isolation, without taking the body into consideration.

Mar 16, 2023

Samsung to spend $228 billion on the world’s largest chip facility as part of South Korea tech plan

Posted by in categories: computing, electronics

Samsung Electronics said Wednesday it plans to invest 300 trillion Korean won ($228 billion) in a new semiconductor complex in South Korea.

Mar 16, 2023

People are desperately trying to live forever. Here are the biggest anti-aging trends sweeping the nation

Posted by in category: life extension

Can you really stop aging? It’s unlikely, but people are trying to at least slow down the clock byasting, taking hormones, and jumping into ice cold baths.

Mar 16, 2023

The Century of Artificial Intelligence: ChatGPT & Black Swan Events

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwp1CsWiXXw

Artificial Intelligence is no longer a futuristic concept, it is almost here, in this video we will talk about a lot of things relating to AI and its impact on our society. Please leave a comment down below!

0:00 Introduction.
1:37 Black Swan Events.
3:35 When Machines Create.
5:06 The Mystery of Intelligence.
7:12 Outro.

Thanks for watching!

Mar 16, 2023

New killer CRISPR system is unlike any scientists have seen

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

“It’s poor for that particular cell, but it protects the whole colony of bacteria so that virus doesn’t spread through it,” said Jackson.

CRISPR vs. cancer: The newly published papers detail the structure and function of Cas12a2, but more research is needed to determine how we might be able to harness this system for our benefit.

Continue reading “New killer CRISPR system is unlike any scientists have seen” »

Mar 16, 2023

The Hidden Mathematics of Crowds: How Pedestrians Inadvertently Self-Organize

Posted by in category: mathematics

Mathematical research from the University of Bath in the United Kingdom has shed new light on the formation and behavior of crowds.

Have you ever pondered how people, without having a discussion or even giving it a second thought, instinctively form lanes when walking through a crowded area?

Continue reading “The Hidden Mathematics of Crowds: How Pedestrians Inadvertently Self-Organize” »

Mar 16, 2023

New study shows how mammals have evolved complexity over time

Posted by in category: futurism

Major changes in the spinal columns of mammals have been shaped by their highly variable numbers of vertebrae, according to new evidence from a team of international scientists, including researchers from the Milner Center for Evolution at the University of Bath.

The team unearthed new findings that identify how this column “complexity” in mammals has been shaped by their varying numbers of vertebrae.

The research group from the University of Lincoln, U.K., the University of Bath and Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology, China, conducted a that examined the vertebrae of 1,136 modern species, ranging from blue whales to shrews, to determine how column complexity evolved within major groups over time.

Mar 16, 2023

How Our Brains Model Reality & the True Nature of the World

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Iain McGilchrist explains how we have misunderstood the nature of reality by over-relying on the left-hemisphere with its incomplete models of the world.

Mar 16, 2023

These 3D printed engines can power space-bound rockets—or hypersonic weapons

Posted by in categories: military, space travel

Rockets and their engines have long been of interest for both space exploration and military use—including for powering hypersonic weapons.