Cyborg Man – Half man, Half machine – Kevin Warwick


August 12, 2009

Something straight out of the pages of Ghost in the Shell, Kevin Warwick experiments on himself and connects his nerves to a computer that outputs his actions to a robot thousands of miles away.

The University of Reading cybernetics professor had successfully wired the nerves of his forearm to a computer in New York City’s Columbia University and networked them to a robotic system back in his Reading, England, lab. “My body was effectively extended over the Internet,” Warwick says.

He hopes to have a sensor implanted in his brain by 2015 that will allow him to send signals across a computer network. Of course, a Brown University team has already moved the goalposts much closer: In 2006 researchers reported that a 25-year-old quadriplegic man had guided a computer cursor and moved a prosthetic arm via a brain implant. Warwick may have trouble finding a doctor to implant a similar device without a compelling medical reason, points out Charles Higgins, an associate professor of electrical engineering and neurobiology at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

Warwick’s experiments haven’t been on a lot of mainstream websites. He probably flies under the radar because he is doing these experiments on himself without grants and such. Very remarkable what he is doing. It is similar to surgeons in one continent doing operations in another. But the level of intricacies with the sense of touch is stellar. I hope more people follow suit – not necessarily in the self experimenting path, but the cybernetic nano technology way. I think cybernetics with nanochips are overall better for humanity than artificial intelligence.

Original article from Scientific America

I saw Kevin Warwick in his documentary that I saw in passing months ago and now, thankfully, I’ve stumbled upon him and it again. He talks in depth about his belief about where cybernetics is going in the future. His documentary “Building Gods” (you MUST see this) he talks about how nanochips will lead the way to improving on human design. I won’t even try to sum it up – you have to see it. Notice how stone-cold serious his demeanor is about this. Warrick the Cyborg

I’m going to try to find Warwick’s Building Gods documentary and post it. Check back soon.

Cyborg Man – Half man, Half machine – Kevin Warwick


Engineering a 6th Sense


July 22, 2009

Pattie Maes & Pranav Mistry have worked to create this, that they call Sixth Sense. The hand motion looks a lot like the Xbox 360’s Project but the seamless internet integration far exceeds expectations. This is very reminiscent of Minority Report and the way Ghost In the Shell characters instantly access information. Related articles by Zemanta Gates States Windows Will Get Gesture Control (lockergnome.com) Gates Wants to Bring Natal Tech to PC [Clips] (kotaku.com)


Theseus' Paradox


July 14, 2009

Theseus’ Paradox: Does an object that has its individual components replace remain fundamentally the same? Ghost in the Shell is a cyber punk manga anime and film that deals with very heady, adult themes. The anime is very flashy and cool visually and help to put better pictures on philosophical ideas that have been asked for centuries.  John Locke and George Washington are two among many that have engaged in discourse about this very paradox.

This is especially relevant to us today because as we make advances in sciences, we will gain the ability to substitute individual components of our body for better ones. Just in the latter part of the past century with plastic surgery being as popular as it is, we have to wonder when does a person who has had complete facial reconstruction cease being who they were before?

Heady stuff, right? More to come. Not only are we headed towards this type of cybernization, society at large, as the net expands and becomes more involved in our daily lives, will have to morph to accomodate life on the net. With this will come ideas like internet sovereignty. More on that to come also.  I will use Ghost in the Shell as the vehicle to express where I think we are headed because GIS as a series covers in a lot of depth the philosophy and ideology that we will face as we head towards web 3.0.  I hope to write some pieces on this for archives.