June 25, 2010
"

“If we can create philosophies, art and science, then this tells us that thought is productive. If we understand the power that drives this production, then we will be able to maximize our creativity, our life and our future.

Science may give consistent descriptions of the actual world, such as the things we observe as ‘facts’ or ‘states of affairs,’ but philosophy has the power to understand the virtual world. This is not the world as it is, but the world beyond any scientific observation or experience: the very possibility of life…Life is difference, the power to think differently, to become different and to create differences.

If we want to know what something (such as art, science, or philosophy) is, then we can ask how it serves life…The problem today is that when we ask what art or philosophy are, we tend to feel they should serve some everyday function: making us better managers or communicators. We fail to see that the purpose and force of art and philosophy goes beyond what life is to what it might become.”

"

- Gilles Deleuze

via wildcat2030 + NomadicGeek

June 6, 2010

May 29, 2010
Creative minds 'mimic schizophrenia'

/via @trixl

May 24, 2010
Science 2.0 Pioneers > SEED

“From open-access journals to research-review blogs, networked knowledge has made science more accessible to more people around the globe than we could have imagined 20 years ago.” /via @endlesscities

May 22, 2010
wildcat2030:

The New Tree of Life
How will we classify what is natural or unnatural when life is built from scratch? Synthetic Biology is turning to the living kingdoms for its materials library. No more petrochemicals: instead, pick a feature from an existing organism, locate its DNA code and insert it into a biological chassis. From DIY hacked bacteria to entirely artificial, corporate life-forms, engineered life will compute, produce energy, clean up pollution, make self-healing materials, kill pathogens and even do the housework. Manufacturers will transcend biomimicry, engineering bacteria to secrete keratin for sustainable vacuum cleaner casings; synthesise biodegradable gaskets from abalone shell proteins and fill photocopier toner cartridges with photosensitive E. coli. Meanwhile, we’ll have to add an extra branch to the Tree of Life. The Synthetic Kingdom is part of our new nature. Biotech promises us control over the natural world, but living machines need controlling. Biology doesn’t respect boundaries or patents. And in simplifying life to its molecular interactions, might we accidentally degrade our sense of self? Are promises of sustainability and unparalleled good health seductive enough to accept such compromise? (via Alexandra DAISY Ginsberg)

wildcat2030:

The New Tree of Life

How will we classify what is natural or unnatural when life is built from scratch? Synthetic Biology is turning to the living kingdoms for its materials library. No more petrochemicals: instead, pick a feature from an existing organism, locate its DNA code and insert it into a biological chassis. From DIY hacked bacteria to entirely artificial, corporate life-forms, engineered life will compute, produce energy, clean up pollution, make self-healing materials, kill pathogens and even do the housework. Manufacturers will transcend biomimicry, engineering bacteria to secrete keratin for sustainable vacuum cleaner casings; synthesise biodegradable gaskets from abalone shell proteins and fill photocopier toner cartridges with photosensitive E. coli. Meanwhile, we’ll have to add an extra branch to the Tree of Life. The Synthetic Kingdom is part of our new nature. Biotech promises us control over the natural world, but living machines need controlling. Biology doesn’t respect boundaries or patents. And in simplifying life to its molecular interactions, might we accidentally degrade our sense of self? Are promises of sustainability and unparalleled good health seductive enough to accept such compromise? (via Alexandra DAISY Ginsberg)

May 22, 2010
"Sometimes science reveals distinctions to be false. Time and space were thought to be distinct, separate things, until Einstein showed that they were fundamentally intertwined. Graphite and diamond were thought to be made of distinct substances, until Tennant showed that they would release the same gas when burned. In a similar way, progress in the field of synthetic biology is eroding the longstanding moral and theoretical distinctions we make between life and machinery. The recent breakthrough by Venter’s group proves that life may be built from its component parts, and set into motion, just like inanimate machinery. No divine spark is required, no soul need be blown into the cells. Life no longer even requires a parent or progenitor. One of the most widespread and longstanding moral beliefs is that there is an important difference between living organisms and inanimate machines. Nearly everybody agrees that there are moral boundaries on our treatment of living things. For vegetarians or vegans, this may include a belief that we should never intentionally kill another living being. For others, it may include a belief that we ought never to interfere with the cellular mechanics of a living being, as we do when we produce genetically-modified foods. By contrast, nobody thinks that it is wrong to destroy, create, or tamper with a machine — even if the machine in question is exceedingly complex. This moral distinction is put in crisis by the synthetic biology projects of Venter and others. Going forward, we will need to find a more meaningful moral distinction than the line between the animate and the inanimate. Failing that, we are faced with an unacceptable set of alternatives: either to grant machines the moral status we currently accord to living things, or to treat living things in the manner of machines."

Synthetic biology: eroding the moral distinctions between animate and inanimate /via wildcat2030

April 25, 2010
Neurocriticism and Neurocapitalism > Marginal Utility

“Brain scans seem the expression of a pervasive fantasy to make thought processes transparent and processable as data—to make them texts, but without all that slippery semiology that made the interpretation of texts so notoriously unreliable and problematic to an earlier generation of literary critics. Brain scans are beyond interpretation; scientists can simply translate the glowing areas into their appropriate meanings, and eventually they will be able to devise the appropriate prescriptions for what to stimulate and what to suppress to light up the socially desirable lobes. Maybe we can help people live better lives that way, just as in the past, psychologists had come to the scientific conclusion that lobotomizing people would help them get along. Perhaps more sophisticated brain scanning can better guide the way.”

January 17, 2010
Ahh, Kari..

via bringtheruckuss

Ahh, Kari..

via bringtheruckuss

January 12, 2010
"Consider the real history of Newton’s physics, compared to what might have been the history of Cartesian dualism. Newton’s physics reigned dominant for two hundred years. It gave us false beliefs but many benefits. I don’t think anyone will say ‘It would have been better if Newton had never lived!’ Imagine that Cartesian dualism had not been so conclusively rejected by the late seventeenth century but had also reigned for two hundred years. Would we say that the false beliefs that metaphysics gave us had been but a small price to pay for the ease and intuitive appeal felt in its explanation of the human condition?"

Bas van Fraassen: The Empirical Stance

via fuckyeahphilosophy

November 26, 2009
"You see, one thing is, I can live with doubt and uncertainty and not knowing. I think it’s much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers which might be wrong. I have approximate answers and possible beliefs and different degrees of uncertainty about different things, but I am not absolutely sure of anything and there are many things I don’t know anything about, such as whether it means anything to ask why we’re here … I don’t have to know an answer. I don’t feel frightened not knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any purpose, which is the way it really is as far as I can tell. It doesn’t frighten me."

Richard Feynman

via myserendipities + wildcat2030

November 11, 2009
Synthetica: A Continent of Plastics via @brainpicker

Synthetica: A Continent of Plastics via @brainpicker

November 8, 2009
Ceci n’est pas un neurone..

via wildcat2030 + neurologicalcorrelates.com

Ceci n’est pas un neurone..

via wildcat2030 + neurologicalcorrelates.com

November 6, 2009

“Poets say science takes away from the beauty of the stars — mere globs of gas atoms. Nothing is “mere”. I too can see the stars on a desert night, and feel them. But do I see less or more? The vastness of the heavens stretches my imagination — stuck on this carousel my little eye can catch one-million-year-old light. A vast pattern — of which I am a part… What is the pattern or the meaning or the why? It does not do harm to the mystery to know a little more about it. For far more marvelous is the truth than any artists of the past imagined it. Why do the poets of the present not speak of it? What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia must be silent?”

— Richard Feynman

via wildcat2030 + nihilnoetia + booklover + lastchatwithphontaine

October 15, 2009
Extensive Landscape with View of the Castle of Mariemont ||| via @boingboing

Extensive Landscape with View of the Castle of Mariemont ||| via @boingboing

October 15, 2009
Signs of Character via @boingboing

Signs of Character via @boingboing