Showing posts with label george dvorsky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label george dvorsky. Show all posts
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Singularity Podcast interview now available
I was recently interviewed by Nikola Danaylov for the Singularity Podcast. You can listen to it here.
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Monday, July 12, 2010
Latest piece: Observation Selection Effect [art]
Thursday, June 24, 2010
FastForward Radio interview
In case you missed it, here's the podcast of my recent appearance on FastForward Radio where I reviewed the recent Humanity+ Summit at Harvard.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
On Skeptically Speaking this Friday

While the show will be broadcast live over the air on CJSR 88.5 in Edmonton, it will also be made available live over the internet (and eventually distributed to over 22 radio stations across North America). It's also a call-in show, so feel free to call me during the broadcast.
Friday, June 4, 2010
Speaking at the H+ Summit at Harvard, June 11-12

Tickets are still available, so register now.
Weaving in futurism, technoprogressivism and transhumanism, the H+ Summit is part of a larger cultural conversation about what it means to be human and, ultimately, more than human. This issue lies at the heart of the transhumanist movement -- and a common topic on this blog.
Key speakers include Ray Kurzweil, Aubrey de Gray, Stephen Wolfram and Ronald Bailey.
Oh, and little old me.
Here's the title and abstract of my talk:
When the Turing Test is not enough: Towards a functionalist determination of personhood and the advent of an authentic machine ethics
Abstract: Empirical research that works to identify those characteristics requisite for the identification of nonhuman persons are proving increasingly insufficient, particularly as neuroscientists further refine functionalist models of cognition. To say that an agent "appears" to have awareness or intelligence is inadequate. Rather, what is required is the discovery and understanding of those processes in the brain that are responsible for capacities such as self-awareness, empathy and emotion. Subsequently, the shift to a neurobiological basis for personhood will have implications for those hoping to develop self-aware artificial intelligence and brain emulations. The Turing Test alone cannot identify machine consciousness; instead, computer scientists will need to work off the functionalist model and be mindful of those processes that produce awareness. Because the potential to do harm is significant, an effective and accountable machine ethics needs to be considered. Ultimately, it is our responsibility as citizen-scientists to develop a rigorous understanding of personhood so that we can identify and work with machine minds in the most compassionate and considerate manner possible.
See you there!
Monday, September 21, 2009
On FastForward Radio, Tuesday September 22
I will be on FastForward Radio this coming Tuesday September 22 at 10:30 PM EST. Phil Bowermaster and Stephen Gordon will be talking to me about the future of human enhancement and the mystery of whether there is intelligent life elsewhere in the universe.
Link.
Link.
Friday, September 18, 2009
TransAlchemy video on postgenderism
Been meaning to post this for a while:
On the whole this video is quite good. It's packed with plenty of of pop-cultural references and supported by historic and cultural anecdotes (though the video takes some weird turns at times, including the questionable discussion of alchemy in the third part).
Much of the video is based on the whitepaper I co-authored with James Hughes, Postgenderism: Beyond the Gender Binary and my article, Overcoming Gender.
Also, be sure to check out the TransAlchemy interview with James Hughes.
On the whole this video is quite good. It's packed with plenty of of pop-cultural references and supported by historic and cultural anecdotes (though the video takes some weird turns at times, including the questionable discussion of alchemy in the third part).
Much of the video is based on the whitepaper I co-authored with James Hughes, Postgenderism: Beyond the Gender Binary and my article, Overcoming Gender.
Also, be sure to check out the TransAlchemy interview with James Hughes.
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Humanist Canada debate: The Evolution of Ethics

Are ethics divinely-inspired or man-made? Are there absolute morals? Although scientists and philosophers have debated the nature of ethics for hundreds of years, developments in genetic research have unleashed a firestorm of issues concerning human control of creation and its impact on our future. Given that society ideals change over time, how can we determine what is morally right or wrong?
Join Humanist Canada for a lively and thought-provoking debate on the nature of ethics. Five prominent speakers, from both the Christian and Humanist communities, will discuss and debate some of the hottest topics today including abortion, gender, homosexuality, and biotechnology. Our panel of speakers includes: Christopher diCarlo (celebrated professor of Philosophy of Science and Bioethics; founder of "We Are All African" Campaign); Michael Coren (outspoken Christian writer; radio and TV host); George Dvorsky (popular transhumanist; animal rights activist); Tony Costa (recognized public speaker for Campus for Christ); and Jean Saindon (award-winning professor of Natural Science and Technology). Speaker profiles below.
Tickets: $15 Humanist Canada members; $25 general admission; $10 students (with school ID). Appetizers, desserts and drinks included. Purchase tickets by April 15 for best seats. Click HERE for the printable registration form or click on ticket choices below.
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
C-Realm Podcast interview
I was recently interviewed by KMO for the C-Realm Podcast.
In this episode KMO speaks to Bill McKibben and gets his insight into the "transhumanist agenda" and what it means to remain human in an engineered age. I provide the counterpoint and discuss the ethical and sociological implications of transhumanism.
In this episode KMO speaks to Bill McKibben and gets his insight into the "transhumanist agenda" and what it means to remain human in an engineered age. I provide the counterpoint and discuss the ethical and sociological implications of transhumanism.
Sunday, July 29, 2007
Photos from TransVision 2007

Saturday, July 14, 2007
A pair of mentions in the press this week
I was quoted in a pair of unrelated articles this past week.
MSN put out an article about how Facebook might be a fraudsters' paradise, and the Scotsman discussed the ethics and implications of Oscar Pistorius's upcoming race: Why 'Blade Runner' has sport on edge of a moral dilemma.
MSN put out an article about how Facebook might be a fraudsters' paradise, and the Scotsman discussed the ethics and implications of Oscar Pistorius's upcoming race: Why 'Blade Runner' has sport on edge of a moral dilemma.
Sunday, May 27, 2007
My Longevity Symposium and TransVision 2007 presentations

This coming July I will be giving presentations at the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies' Longevity Symposium and the World Transhumanist Association's TransVision 2007 conference.
For the Longevity Symposium, an event titled "Securing the Longevity Dividend: Building the Campaign for Anti-Aging Science," I will be addressing and reconciling the most popular arguments both for and against radical life extension. Other speakers at this event will include S. Jay Olshansky, David O. Meltzer, Aubrey de Grey, James Hughes, Nick Bostrom, Ronald Bailey, and Anders Sandberg.
For TransVision 2007 I will making the case for postgenderism -- the idea that gender should be eliminated in the next iteration of the human species. My presentation is tentatively titled, "The Best of Both Worlds," and I will argue that posthumans should not abandon all gendered traits, but integrate the best that males and females have to offer. This will be my first opportunity to present these ideas in public and I'm very much looking forward to it.
Other speakers at TV07 will include Ray Kurzweil, William Shatner, and Max More.
Register now for TV07 and look for me there.
Friday, May 18, 2007
Interviewed by Radio Free Europe

We talked about the future of enhancement in sport and the enhanced human of the future. I'll post a link should anything come out of the interview.
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
IEET featured in NY Times article on disabled sprinter

"A sobering question was posed recently on the Web site of the Connecticut-based Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. 'Given the arms race nature of competition,' will technological advantages cause "athletes to do something as seemingly radical as having their healthy natural limbs replaced by artificial ones?" wrote George Dvorsky, a member of the institute's board of directors. 'Is it self-mutilation when you're getting a better limb?'"The quote was sourced from my article, "Is the world ready for cyborg athletes?"
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