Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGerard Young Modified over 9 years ago
1
The Ethics of Imagination: The Space Between Your Ears Wrye Sententia, Ph.D. Director, CCLE Terasem 2006 Neuro-nanotechnology and the Preservation of Human Consciousness
2
Ethics without Imagination is Dogma; Imagination without Ethics is Dangerous.
3
“It is inner space, not outer, that needs to be explored.” J.G. Ballard (1962)
4
Empathy vs. Sympathy Empathy: “The power of projecting one's personality into the object of contemplation" Oxford English Dictionary “The capacity to understand what another person is experiencing from within the other’s frame of reference” (Gary Bravo 2001)
5
Sympathy / Sameness Empathy / Difference
6
What is Ethics? compassion fairness honesty respect responsibility Institute for Global Ethics http://www.globalethics.org/about/faq.htm#whatethics
7
Virgil Ulam
8
Ulam’s experiment Phase1: Basic Health Benefits
9
Ulam’s experiment Phase 2: Enhancement
10
(1985)
11
“If you're trying to project the long-term future, and what you get sounds like science fiction, you might be wrong. But if it doesn't sound like science fiction, it's definitely wrong.” Chris Peterson
12
“For real science to proceed, nanotechnologists ought to distance themselves from the giggle factor”— Steven M. Block (Lecture “What is Nanotechnology,” presented at NIH conference “Nanoscience & Nanotechnology: Shaping Biomedical Research (June 25, 2000)
13
THE REALITY FACTOR
14
Phase 3: Conversion Ulam’s experiment
15
Phase 3: Conversion Ulam’s experiment
16
Joachim Schummer (April 2006)
17
Neuro-nanofiction: Horror or Harmony? “Greg Bear’s Blood Music takes the horror of exponentially self- replicating, intelligent nanomachines to its ultimate extreme—the termination of the natural world”—Dan Dinello Technophobia: Science Fiction Visions of Posthuman Technology (2005)
18
Lynn Hunt. "The Paradoxical Origins of Human Rights," in Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom, Lynn Hunt, and Marilyn Young, eds., Human Rights and Revolutions (Lanham, Md., 2000) 3–17. Human Rights Narratives in the 18th Century
19
21st Century Narratives: Inner Space Technologies Science Fiction; Meditation; Art; Neuropharmaceuticals; Full-Immersion VR/Games Future Brain/Machine Symbiosis Neuro-nano Interfaces
20
Accelerating Rights & Ethics in the 21st Century Imagination=Neuroethics Cognitive Liberty Cognitive Security
21
Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.” Albert Einstein
23
Nanomandala (UCLA) wrye@cognitiveliberty.org * www.cognitiveliberty.org
25
“To see a world in a grain of sand and heaven in a wild flower Hold infinity in the palms of your hand and eternity in an hour.” Auguries of Innocence, William Blake
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.