Stephen is still recovering from a major case of the crud — get well soon, buddy! — and I am more than usually busy with the day job right now, as evidenced by the light blogging the last couple of weeks. So no FastForward Radio tonight but we plan to be back up and running next Tuesday.
Monthly Archives: January 2010
FastForward Radio — Making the Future Happen
FastForward Radio — How Real Is the Real World?
Phil Bowermaster and Stephen Gordon welcome author (The Universe: Solved!) and futurist Jim Elvidge back to FastForward Radio. Just how real is the real world, anyway?
The Universe: Solved!, covers a lot of scientific and philosophical ground, including the idea that we live in a computer simulation. If so, are there Easter Eggs in the cosmos?
About Our Guest:
Elvidge is a Cornell-educated entrepreneur and inventor who holds four patents in digital signal processing. His love of music inspired him to develop one of the first PC-based digital music samplers and to co-found RadioAMP, which was the first private-label online streaming radio company. In recent years he has turned his attention to the ultimate question of existence and, drawing on a broad and eclectic base of knowledge and interests, has come up with a unique explanation for…pretty much everything.
We're All Rich
Check this out. The disk isn’t big enough to contain that little, dull picture of it.
Back in the day, a file that size was something of an extravagance — too big to fit on a floppy! Now how many hundreds, thousand of files this size do we all have?
A more important question — how long before the principles that have made us all rich in storage of image files can be applied to material goods? Or is it happening already?
We’re All Rich
Check this out. The disk isn’t big enough to contain that little, dull picture of it.
Back in the day, a file that size was something of an extravagance — too big to fit on a floppy! Now how many hundreds, thousand of files this size do we all have?
A more important question — how long before the principles that have made us all rich in storage of image files can be applied to material goods? Or is it happening already?
Rough Week?
Well, hey, just be glad that you aren’t one of the Seven Most Bizarrely Unlucky People who ever Lived.
Number one on the list is the only human being ever to be nuked twice. Tsutomu Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima in the when the first bomb hit and Nagasaki when the second one hit and lived (until quite recently) to tell the tale. The link to this story comes via Jim Elvidge, who espouses an interesting variation on the Simulation Hypothesis. Per Elvidge, anomalies such as these can be viewed as Easter eggs — little clues that our universe may be, if not an outright practical joke, perhaps an excessively elaborate work of performance art.
I’m not sure that any of these coincidences rise to the bizarreness level required to question the universe around me, but the guy who got struck by lightning seven times is pretty interesting. I can’t quite get my head around the odds against that, as stated in the linked article. It seems that human history could have run many times over without this ever happening.
So it’s an outlier, for sure. But proof that the world is a simulation? I’ll need something even weirder, I’m afraid.
We interviewed Elvidge a while back and are looking to have him back on the podcast soon.
Fast Forward Radio — New Year Edition 2010
Phil and Stephen welcome writer and futurist P. J. Manney back to FastForward Radio to talk about major developments of 2009 and to look forward to the new year.
BONUS: a special holiday edition of “Tales of the Paranormal.”
About Our Guest
| As a frequent guest and occasional co-host — not to mention our official Hollywood correspondent — PJ Manney brings a unique perspective to FastForward Radio. She is a writer and futurist, and a leading voice in the Humanity+ movement. She has written extensively on H+ topics, having previously been involved in motion picture development (Hook, It Could Happen to You, Universal Soldier) and writing for television (Hercules: the Legendary Journeys, Xena: Warrior Princess). | ![]() |
The Smart Ones
The Boskops.
They were here on the planet contemporaneously with us. They had great big heads and cute little faces. They were smarter than us. How much smarter? Well, it says here that we are Homo Erectus to their Homo Sapiens.
Put your head around that one.
We spend a lot of time here at the Speculist pondering the next stage of human evolution. What if that next stage arrived 10,000 years ago and then mysteriously disappeared?
Or perhaps not so mysteriously. It’s possible that:
They were a small population that never really caught on. (Those big heads were not doubt hard to deliver, making fecundity problematic.)
Some catastrophe got the better of them.
They were out-competed, or simply wiped out by smaller-brained contemporaries (i.e., us).
That final possibility is a bit chilling. Neanderthals had bigger brains than we do, too. Were they smarter than us? Were smarter strains of humanity nicer than dumber ones? Nah, it couldn’t be that simple. If dumber humans always won out over smarter ones, Homo Erectus would have kicked our Sapien butts. And Erectus was no slouch when it came to the business of survival. They hung in for 1.5 million years — making them by far the most successful (at least in terms of longevity) strain of humanity. No doubt there were many factors in play that determined which strain of humanity became dominant, including luck.
But please note that not everyone agrees that Boskops were a separate strain of humanity. The consensus view is that they were a few outliers within the Homo Sapiens — kind of a big brain high water mark:
To be sure, there has been a reduction in the average brain size in South Africa during the last 10,000 years, and there have been parallel reductions in Europe and China — pretty much everywhere we have decent samples of skeletons, it looks like brains have been shrinking….[It] is hardly a sign that ancient humans had mysterious mental powers — it is probably a matter of energetic efficiency (brains are expensive), developmental time (brains take a long time to mature) and diet (brains require high protein and fat consumption, less and less available to Holocene populations).
What the — brains are shrinking? Now ask yourself this question. Which scenario do you prefer: the one where mean old H. Sapiens wiped out the smarter, more peaceful contemporary humans, or the one where we’re the small-brained descendants of big-brained, smarter ancestors?
Luke McKinney provides much-needed perspective:
The fundamental flaw, the assumption that a bigger brain automatically means increased intelligence, is more suited to Dr Freud than a modern professor – and embarrassingly crude launching point for a discussion of sophisticated mental processes. A sperm whale brain is 6 kilograms of raw neural matter capable of little more than “swim. eat. repeat”, while Albert Einstein’s skullbox was actually a smidgen smaller than average.
The point is not the volume of the brain, but the complexity of the wiring. The critical factor is the number of connections between different neurons, massively enhanced in humans by the distinctive folding pattern which increases the surface area of our brains. Animal brains have far fewer folds, down to the lower species which have no folds at all, just clumps of neurons.
Just like the old saying: “It’s not the size that counts, it’s how you use it to create a massively complicated neural network capable of planning and independent thought”.
Yep, that’s what I always say. So there probably was no big-brained human species, and if there was they probably weren’t all that much smarter than we are.
All of which ought to tell us something. The fact that I can’t say exactly what that is has less to do with the size of my brain than how it’s folded.
Er, right?
Hobbyists to Transform the World…Again
In his book Hackers, Steven Levy tells how a collection of unpaid and underpaid enthusiasts, many amateurs and hobbyists, ushered in a new technological and economic era–namely, the era we live in now. Enjoy reading blogs? Thank a hacker. It’s a little dizzying to consider the impact that an outfit such as the Homebrew Computer Club or (earlier and more implausible-sounding) the Tech Model Railroad Club could have on history. These guys changed the world.
In Cory Doctorow’s new novel Makers (hey, even the name is similar!) history repeats itself as a whole new paradigm for designing, producing, and distributing goods emerges from the efforts of a few dedicated 3D-printer enthusiasts. I’ll be publishing a full review of the book after we’ve had a chance to have Cory on the podcast — we’re hoping for later this month. But ahead of a full review, let me just make a recommendation. If you enjoyed Hackers and have wished for a next edition, give Makers a read. I know — one is history and the other is science fiction, but the one doesn’t read like the former and the other doesn’t read like the latter.
Hope that’s clear enough for you all. If not, let me put it this way: I believe that history and science fiction are merging. What a stupendously wonderful time to be alive.
Anyhow, if you’d like a real-life glimpse of how hobbyists are poised to change the world again — or if you’d like to get in on the action yourself — here’s a great place to start.
