Lextropicon
Neologisms of Extropy
collected by
Max More
Chair, Extropy Institute
more@extropy.org
Revised January 2003
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I originally compiled this collection of neologisms of interest to
transhumanists and futurists in the early 1990s. The last major
update was in August of 1994. This version draws on the previous
one, with plenty of new additions, plus numerous inclusions from
Anders
Sandberg's lexicon (which was itself based on the early
Lextropicon). Submissions for new terms are always welcome. Please
send them to me
with a note about the first known usage and coiner of the term.
_______________________
- Adhocracy
-
A non-bureaucratic networked organization.
"This form is already common in organizations such as law firms,
consulting companies and research universities. Such organizations
and institutions must continually readjust to a changing array of
projects, each requiring somewhat different combinations of skills
and other resources. These organizations depend on many rapidly
shifting project teams and much lateral communication among these
relatively autonomous, entrepreneurial groups." [Scientific
American, Sept. 1991, p.133. Alvin Toffler,
Future Shock, 1970]
- Aeonomics
-
(from aeon and economics) The study of the
economic problems of immortal existence. [Mark Plus, Aug 1991]
- Affective Computing
-
An emerging computer science niche devoted to
the design of smart devices that can sense and adapt to a user's
moods and interests.
- AI
-
Artificial Intelligence. See the
Artificial Intelligence Resources for more information.
- AI-Complete
-
(In analogy with NP-complete) A problem where
the the solution presupposes a solution to the 'strong AI problem'
(that is, the synthesis of a human-level intelligence).
[Definition from the
Jargon File]
- Aleph
-
A point or state where an infinite amount of
information is stored and processed (As in the Omega Point).
[Mitchell Porter]
- Algernon
-
Any human who, via artificial or natural means,
has some type of mental enhancement which carries a price. [Eliezer
S. Yudkowsky, 1996; term based on the novel
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes]
- A-Life
-
Artificial life: The modeling of complex,
life-like behavior in computer programs. A-Life forms can evolve
and produce behaviors not contained within rules set by the
programmers.
- Amortalist
-
A person who opposes death.
- Arachniography
-
A bibliography of web pages. [Andrew J. Butrica]
- Arch-Anarchy
-
The view that we should seek to void all limits
on our freedom, including those imposed by the laws of nature. [T.O.
Morrow, 1990]
- Arcology
-
Arcology is a termed coined by Italian
architect
Paolo Soleri in 1959 to describe the concept of Architecture
and Ecology working as an integral system. Arcology designs are
fully 3-dimensional mega-structure cities which can
(theoretically) achieve much greater efficiencies, and promote
more social interaction than 2-dimensional cities, while using far
less land and consuming fewer resources. See also the
FAQ of Arcosanti. [Definition by Nathan Koren]
- Arrow Impossibility Theorem
-
The theorem in economics, due to Kenneth Arrow,
which says that you can't construct a "social preference function"
(ranking the desirability of various social arrangements) out of
individual preferences, while retaining a particular set of
features ("nondictatorship" - the social preference function can't
be just one person's individual preferences; consistency - the
social preference function can't rank A above B, B above C, and C
above A; "positive relation" between individual and social
preference - if the social preference function ranks A above B,
and some person's individual preference changes from "B above A"
to "A above B", that shouldn't cause the social preference to
switch to "B above A"; and an "irrelevance" assumption which I
don't quite remember, but is something like this, that if an
individual changes their mind about the relative worth of C and D,
it shouldn't affect the social preference standings of A and B.)
- Artilect
-
An ultra-intelligent machines (from "artificial
intellect"). [Hugo de Garis,
Cosmism: Nano Electronics and 21st Century Global Ideological
Warfare].
- Asex
-
A person who has been physically and mentally
altered so that ve no longer is male or female [Greg Egan,
Distress]
- Asimort
-
(a) A dead science fiction writer. (b) A dead
secular humanist. (c) Any person who believes it to be their duty
to die to "make room" for future generations. [Mark Plus, Apr
1992]
- Asimov
-
An AI that has been constrained in some way to
serve human interests. [Rudy Rucker,
Wetware, 1988. Based on
Isaac Asimov's three laws of robotics]
- Assembler
-
A molecular machine that can be programmed to
build virtually any molecular structure or device from simpler
chemical building blocks. Analogous to a computer-driven machine
shop. [K. Eric Drexler,
Engines of
Creation, 1986]
- Athanasia
-
The act of preventing death. [W.
T. Quick, 1988]
- Athanophy
-
A philosophical system that offers a possible
means of overcoming death scientifically. [Michael Perry, 1991]
- Atheosis
-
The process of recovering from belief in a God.
[Mark Plus, August 1991]
- Atomtronics
-
Just as electrons are used in electronics and
photons in photonics, atomtronics is the emerging technology where
cold, neutral atoms are manipulated on or near an atom chip.
- Augment
-
A person whose physical or cognitive abilities
have been technologically expanded beyond the range of natural
humans. [David Brin,
The Postman]
- Autoevolution
-
Evolution directed by intelligent beings
instead of natural selection.
- Autoevolutionist
-
Someone who regards autoevolution as desirable;
the opposite of a biological fundamentalist.
- Automated Engineering
-
The use of computers to perform engineering
design, ultimately generating detailed designs from broad
specifications with little or no human help. Automated engineering
is a specialized form of artificial intelligence. [K. Eric
Drexler,
Engines of
Creation, 1986]
- Automorph
-
To shape oneself, using all forms of
technology, in accordance with personal values. This includes
self-sculpting the physical, emotional, cognitive, and spiritual
aspects of oneself. [Max More/Natasha Vita-More]
- Automorph Art
-
An art style within the genre of Extropic Art
which artist's greatest work is his/her own being.
- Autopotent
-
A system having complete power and knowledge
over itself. [Nicholas Bostrom, 1996,
Predictions from Philosophy?]
- Autoscient
-
A system having complete knowledge of its inner
workings. [Mitchell Porter, originally in the form
auto-omniscient, Jan 1998]
- Avatar
-
A computer-generated representation of a human
user.
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Baby Universe
-
See 'basement universe'.
- Basement Universe
-
A small artificially created universe linked to
the old universe by a wormhole. This could then be used for living
space, computing or as an escape from a decaying universe. "Baby
Universes" has been postulated by some theories about black holes
(see
This Week's Finds in Mathematical Physics, Week 31 by John
Baez) and inflation cosmology.
- Bean Dip Catastrophe
-
(humorous) A potential disaster at the far edge
party: if it gets big enough the bean dip will form a black hole.
[Keith Henson, 1987; explained in this
exerpt from
Great Mambo Chicken and the Transhuman Condition by Ed
Regis]
- Beanstalk
-
A strong cable lowered from a geosynchronous
satellite and anchored to the ground (often with a small asteroid
at the outer end to provide some extra tension and stability).
This would provide cheap and simple access to space using
elevators. Also called an orbital tower. (See The Orbital Tower by
Jerome D. Rosen and sky hooks) [This is an old idea in science
fiction and probably first discussed by Yuri Artsutanov, although
it was popularized by Arthur C Clarke's
The Fountains of Paradise (1979). The term Beanstalk was
spread by the roleplaying game
2300AD by GDW]
- Bekenstein Bound
-
The Bekenstein Bound is an upper bound of the
amount of information inside a spherical region with a given
energy. Information in this context is to be understood as
distinguishable (quantum) states. Due to the uncertainty relations
it is possible to derive a bound of the form
I <= (2 Pi E R)/(hbar c ln2)
where I is the information, E is the energy, R is the radius, hbar
Plank's constant, c the speed of light. It can also be written as
I <= k M R
Where M the mass in the region and k a constant having the value
~2.57686*10^43 bits/(m kg). This bound was derived by J. D.
Bekenstein in another but equivalent form, relating the entropy of
black holes to their area (S = A/(4 hbar G), where A is the area
of the event horizon).
- Berserker
-
A self-reproducing machine programmed to
destroy (intelligent) life. The existence of berserkers is one
possible explanation for the Fermi paradox. [Fred Saberhagen,
several
science fiction novels]
- Betelgeuse-Brain
-
A jupiter-brain so large that it has to be
supported by its own radiation pressure to avoid collapsing.
[Mitchell Porter, 1995]
- Big Crunch
-
Opposite of the Big Bang: the singularity at
the end of time, in a collapsing universe.
- Binerator
-
(Binary system plus generator) A megascale
electrical engineering device built around the interstellar plasma
flow between unequal size stars in a binary system. The hollow
tube-like device uses charged plasma particles flowing through it
to produce electricity. [Steve Burns]
- Biochauvinism
-
The prejudice that biological systems have an
intrinsic superiority that will always give them a monopoly on
self-reproduction and intelligence. [K. Eric Drexler,
Engines of
Creation, 1986]
- Bioinformatics
-
Uses a cluster of mathematical techniques to
uncover information about biological function.
- Biological Fundamentalism
-
A new conservatism that resists asexual
reproduction, genetic engineering, altering the human anatomy,
overcoming death. A resistance to the evolution from the human to
the posthuman. [FM-2030]
- Biomarkers
-
Molecular biomarkers are biological indicators
that signal a changed physiological state, stress, or injury due
to disease or the environment. As used in anti-aging medicine and
"age management" programs, biomarkers are well-studied
physiological indicators of functional rather than chronological
age. Examples: Blood fats, reaction times, skin elasticity,
cardiovascular function, grip strength, balance.
- Bionics
-
(a) The science of connecting biological
systems to artificial organs, or other systems. (b) An attempt to
develop better machines through understanding of biological design
principles or imitation of biology. The first use is most common
among transhumanists and science fiction fans, the other is most
common among cyberneticists. [Origin uncertain, although it seems
to have been popularized by
The Six
Million Dollar Man]
- Bionomics
-
Literally, the merger of biological and
economic theory. In its more figurative sense, the merger of the
world of the made and the world of the born. Bionomics will
flourish as an academic discipline because as the two worlds
merge, economic systems will assume the properties of biological
ones. [Michael Rothschild]
- Biophiliac
-
Someone who values life of all kinds for its
own sake.
- B-Life
-
Biological Life (as opposed to A-Life).
- Biostasis
-
Broader than "cryonic suspension"; suspension
of all biological activity, by infusing the patient with
cryoprotective chemicals and freezing or vitrifying (cryonic
suspension), or by chemically bonding cellular components in
place. [K. Eric Drexler,
Engines of
Creation, 1986]
- Blight
-
A malign infomorph that uses perversion attacks
to increase its own power. Like a computer virus, but with
intelligence. [First used by Vernor Vinge in
A Fire Upon the Deep, 1992].
- Blind Uploading
-
To upload somebody by scanning their neural
patterns and simulating them directly with little or no changes
(also called brute force uploading) [Anton Sherwood, Dec 1994]
- Blue Goo
-
Nanomachines used as protection against 'Grey
Goo' and other destructive nanomachines, possibly even used for
law-enforcement (see 'Nanarchy'). According to the entry in the
Jargon File, it is sometimes used to denote any form of benign
nanotechnology in the environment. [Alan Lovejoy]
- Bogosity Filter
-
A mechanism for detecting bogus ideas and
propositions.
- Borganism
-
1) An organization of formerly autonomous
beings who have merged their individual wills to create one,
collectively conscious being; 2) The social and political theory
that advocates the creation of borganisms. [T. O. Morrow,
>H Humor: Borganism in the media]
- Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC)
-
A BEC is a group of atoms that have the same
quantum wavefunction. See the
BEC Homepage for more information. [Predicted 1924, created
1995]
- Breakeven Point
-
As medicine and life extension advances, the
life expectancy of the population increases somewhat each year,
and this process may accelerate given new technologies or new
knowledge. The longer you live, the more medical advances will
occur during your lifetime which extend your life expectancy.
During this extra time more medical advances can occur, and so on.
If the increase of life expectancy becomes larger than one year
longer life/year lived the breakeven point is reached (after the
fusion physics term for the point where more energy is produced
than is used to drive the reactor) and individuals have a finite
chance of living indefinitely. Quite naturally, the breakeven
point presupposes that medical advances never run into any firm
barriers, and that they can be developed fast enough, which is of
course very speculative. [Anders Sandberg, 1997]
- Broadcatching
-
"Catching television and other media
selectively so that the sum of the collected parts is
personalized." (Quote by Nicholas P. Negroponte, Scientific
American, September 1991, p.112.) [Stewart Brand, The Media Lab,
1987]
- Brute Force Uploading
-
To upload somebody by scanning their neural
patterns and simulating them directly with little or no changes,
and no attempts to refine the patterns (also called blind
uploading). This is often used as a benchmark in discussions about
what capabilities are needed for full uploading.
- Bush Robot
-
A flexible robot structure, where each
manipulator branches off into smaller copies of itself, forming a
fractal tree over many scales (possibly down to the nanoscale).
Each branch would contain a distributed system to calculate
movement and minimize central processing [Hans Moravec,
Mind Children].
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- Calcutta Syndrome
-
The condition in which the ratio of available
mass to population falls below the minimum level necessary to
support a given quality of life (M/P < mC). [David Krieger, Nov
1991]
- Calm Technology
-
Technology that recedes into the background of
our lives. [Likely Mark Weiser and John Seely Brown at Xerox PARC.
See
The coming age of calm technology]
- Calorie Restriction
-
A reduction in caloric-intake for the purposes
of slowing one's rate of aging as well as preventing disease or
the morbidity/mortality associated with disease. So far this is
the most promising (if somewhat cumbersome) life extension method;
animal experiments have shown definite positive results with a
low-calorie diet. See also the
Calorie Restriction FAQ.
- Casimir Effect
-
A small attractive force which acts between two
close parallel uncharged conducting plates. It is due to quantum
vacuum fluctuations of the electromagnetic field, which creates a
lower energy density of the vacuum between the plates than outside
them. The effect was predicted by Hendrick Casimir in 1948 and
verified in 1996 by Steven Lamoreaux. See
What Is The Casimir Effect? for more information.
- Cerebrosthesis
-
(from cerebral and prosthesis) An electronic
device interfaced with the brain to overcome a neurological
deficiency, such as normal human intelligence. (Cf.
neuroprosthesis - see Extropy #7). [Mark Plus, Aug 1991]
- Chinese Room
-
A thought experiment due to John Searle
attacking the strong AI postulate. A person in a locked room
carries on a dialogue with us by way of Chinese written on paper
passed back and forth under the door. The person in the room
responds according to instructions stored in a vast library of
rule-books, and does not understand Chinese. Since the person
doesn't understand the language and the rule-books obviously lack
understanding, Searle claims that there is no real language
knowledge involved. Searle likens dialogue with a computer to this
situation, and hopes that it makes it clear why he says that
computers are not aware. The scenario has been widely debated, but
proponents of strong AI point out that the system room + person
could be said to possess knowledge of Chinese, in just the same
way as the neurons in a human brain (which themselves lack
knowledge about Chinese) can form a system that can know the
language. See
The Chinese Room Argument for more information.
- Chrononauts
-
Those who travel through time, either by
biostasis or through possible loopholes in physical laws as
currently understood.
- Church-Turing Thesis
-
The proposition that there is no way to compute
the answer to any question that is beyond the powers of a
universal Turing machine. See
The Church-Turing Thesis for more information.
- Cobots
-
Collaborative robots designed to work alongside
human operators. Prototype cobots are being used on automobile
assembly lines to help guide heavy components like seats and
dashboards into cars so they don't damage auto body parts as
workers install them. [Wired
5.07 Jargon Watch, Jul 1997]
- Compuform
-
To turn matter into computronium. [Charlie
Stross, Dec 1999]
- Computronium
-
Matter that has been transformed from its
natural state into a computer of the maximum physically achievable
efficiency. (An Extropian might argue that this is matter's
"natural state".) What constitutes "computronium" varies with the
level of postulated technology; a rod-logic nanocomputer is
probably too primitive, since the basic elements consist of
hundreds or thousands of atoms. More likely forms of computronium
include three-dimensional quantum cellular automata, or exotic
forms of matter such as neutronium, Higgsium, and monopolium.
[Definition by Eliezer Yudkowsky]
- Concentrated Intelligence
-
An intelligent entity (esp. a Jupiter-Brain)
which is spatially concentrated into a single volume, as dense as
possible, to reduce communications lag. This arrangement is not as
flexible as a distributed intelligence, but probably more
efficient.
- Connectionism
-
The approach to cognitive science that gives a
fundamental explanatory role to neuron-like interconnections
rather than to formal or explicit rules of thought.
- Consilience
-
From William Whewell, who in his 1840 synthesis
The Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences spoke of
consilience as a "jumping together" of knowledge by linking facts
and theory across disciplines to create a common groundwork of
explanation.
- Contelligence
-
(from consciousness and intelligence) The
combination of awareness and computational power required in an
Artificially Intelligent network before we could, without loss of
anything essential, upload ourselves into them. [Timothy Leary]
- Continuity Identity Theory
-
The theory that "I" am the same person as
various future and past selves with whom I am physically and
temporally continuous. (Cf pattern identity theory).
- Cosmythology
-
Non-scientific usage of loosely understood
scientific ideas (often filled with catch-phrases and buzzwords
like "quantum", "chaos" and "emergent") to explain or "prove"
pseudoscience or mysticism. Typical examples are claims that
quantum mechanics proves that consciousness has an essential role
in physics or that the "butterfly effect" shows that magic is
possible. [Vic
Stenger,
The Unconscious Quantum, 1995]
- Cryo
-
Exceedingly cool, as in "That's so cool, it's
cryo!". [Natasha Vita-More]
- Cryobiology
-
The study of the effect of low temperatures
(below the freezing point of water) on biological systems. A
primary goal of this field is the preservation and long term
storage of organ systems such as hearts, kidneys, etc. for use in
transplantation. This goal has not yet been reached and currently
only individual cells and organisms consisting of only a very few
cells (such as embryos) can be successfully treated, stored, and
revived.
- Cryocrastinate
-
To put off making arrangements for cryonic
suspension. [Mark Plus, Aug 1991]
- Cryogenics
-
The study of materials at very low temperatures
(near absolute zero). Cryogenics is a branch of physics.
- Cryonics
-
The practice of suspending people and animals
at extremely low temperatures, partially protected from freezing
damage with cryoprotectants, on the basis that there is a
significant possibility that more advanced medical technology in
the future will be able to revive them.
- Cryonized / Cryonization
-
New terms for "cryonics" and "cryopreservation"
introduced in the 2001 movie
Vanilla
Sky.
- Cryopreservation / Cryonic Suspension
-
See 'Cryonics'.
- Cryp
-
Cryptographic currency, digital cash. Payment
by electronic means where the seller is guaranteed payment, but
the buyer can remain anonymous. [Eli Brandt, Nov 11, 1992, on the
Extropians email list]
- Crypto Anarchy
-
The economic and political system after the
deployment of encryption, untraceable e-mail, digital pseudonyms,
cryptographic voting, and digital cash. A pun on "crypto," meaning
"hidden," and as when Gore Vidal called William F. Buckley a
"crypto fascist."
- Cryptocosmology
-
The study of possible reasons we haven't found
any evidence for other intelligent life in the universe (the Fermi
paradox), especially looking at reasons why advanced intelligence
would blend in with their environment. An adaptation of the word
cryptozoology, the search for unknown or imaginary animals.
- Cybercide
-
The killing of a person's projected virtual
persona in cyberspace. This may be part of a VR game, or may be an
act of vandalism. [Max More, Aug 1991]
- Cyberfiction
-
Science fiction embodying the technological
ideas of cyberpunk, without necessarily embodying cyberpunk's
amoralism or nihilism. [Max More, May 1991]
- Cybergnosticism
-
The belief that the physical world is impure or
inefficient, and that existence in the form of "pure information"
is better and should be pursued.
- Cyberian
-
A person belonging to the Timothy
Leary/Mondo2000 psychedelic side of the transhumanist movement.
- Cybernate / Cybernize
-
To automate a process using computers and
robots.
- Cyberspace / Cybermatrix
-
The informational and computational space
existing in and between computers.
- Cybrarian
-
Computer Net-oriented information specialist.
[Jean Armour Polly, 1992]
- Cypherpunk
-
One interested in the uses of encryption using
electronic cyphers for enhancing personal privacy and guarding
against tyranny by centralized, authoritarian power structures,
especially government.
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- Deanimalize
-
Replace our animal organs and body parts with
durable, pain-free non-flesh prostheses. [FM-2030]
- Death Forward
-
Automorphing so fast and profoundly that
individual continuity is lost. (In analogy to fast forward)
[Alexander Chislenko, 1996,
Networking in the Mind Age]
- Deathism
-
The set of beliefs and attitudes which
glorifies or accepts death and rejects or despises immortality.
- Deep Anarchy
-
The view that "the State" has no real
existence; states can be abolished only by changing beliefs and
behavior. [Max More, 1989,
Deep Anarchy - An Eliminativist View Of "The State", Extropy
#5]
- Deflesh
-
To replace flesh with non-flesh. [FM-2030]
- Designer Personality
-
Part of automorphing, a designer personality is
a human personality that has been shaped by that individual
according to their own evolving values, using all types of
technology, rather than leaving the personality to the accident of
birth and environment.
- Diamondoid
-
Like diamond; chemical structures or systems
(especially 'nanomachines' as envisioned by K. Eric Drexler) based
on diamond derivatives or stiff carbon bonds.
- Digital Pseudonym
-
Basically, a "crypto identity." A way for
individuals to set up accounts with various organizations without
revealing more information than they wish. Users may have several
digital pseudonyms, some used only once, some used over the course
of many years. Ideally, the pseudonyms can be linked only at the
will of the holder. In the simplest form, a public key can serve
as a digital pseudonym and need not be linked to a physical
identity.
- Directed Evolution
-
While this can refer simply to selective
breeding, in current use it refers to biochemical methods that
generate numerous potential substances from which the most
promising can be culled and recombined leading to better drugs.
- Disassembler
-
A system of nanomachines able to take an object
apart a few atoms at a time, while recording its structure at the
molecular level. This could be used for 'uploading', copying
objects (with an 'assembler'), a dissolving agent or a weapon. [K.
Eric Drexler,
Engines of
Creation, 1986]
- Disasterbation
-
Idly fantasizing about possible catastrophes
(ecological collapse, full-blown totalitarianism) without
considering their likelihood or considering their possible
solutions and preventions. [David Krieger, 1993]
- Discovery Science
-
Converging sciences and technologies plus
multi-level study and integration, in biology combining
information technology and biotechnology. In biology: All the
elements in the biological system being studied are defined (as
the genome and proteome projects are doing). Then the system is
perturbed in an attempt to discover the relationships of the
elements to one another. Finally, systems approaches integrate
diverse measurements and data to enable graphical displays and
computational models that describe structure and function. [Leroy
Hood]
- Distributed Information Architectures
-
Information structures and processes which are
spread over geographically separate physical processors. This
includes distributed deep Net searches and decentralized content
management.
- Distributed Intelligence
-
An intelligent entity which is distributed over
a large volume (or inside another system, like a computer network)
with no distinct center. This is the opposite to the strategy of
Concentrated intelligences. Distributed intelligences have much
longer communications lags, but are more flexible in their
structure and can survive damage to their parts.
- Divergent Track Hypothesis
-
Cultures tend to converge towards a few
attractor states (for example borganisms), while the attractor
states diverge from each other. A rival to the strong convergence
hypothesis [Nicholas Bostrom, 1996,
Predictions from Philosophy?]
- Diversity IQ
-
A basic measure of the capacity to survive and
prosper in the Age of Access. Diversity IQ is built on the ability
to move freely and tolerantly among people of various races,
cultures, backgrounds, and beliefs. [The
500-Year Delta, Jim Taylor and Watts Wacker, 1997]
- Dividuals
-
A copy of a personality surviving in more than
one body. Example: "Keith Henson wishes to become a collection of
such dividuals so that he-plural can explore the galaxy in
parallel." (See the 'Far Edge Party') [Mark Plus, 1992]
- Doomsday Argument
-
If humanity is assumed to grow exponentially
until it ends at some point in time ("doomsday"), then it is more
likely to find a randomly selected human near the end of history
than at the beginning. Hence, since we are alive today we can
deduce that we are close to the end of history and use Bayesian
reasoning to estimate the expected remaining time. The argument
(which can be applied to many other things, such as the remaining
time the Earth is inhabitable) is hotly debated, and involves many
subtle assumptions of probability. [The argument originated by
Brandon Carter, and was published by John Leslie in
The End of the World (Routledge 1996)] See
A Primer on the Doomsday Argument by Nick Bostrom.
- Download
-
To transfer an mind from one computational
matrix to another, especially a slower one. See 'Upload'.
- Dryware
-
An artificial part of a cyborg (usage similar
to hardware, software, and wetware). [Anton Sherwood, 1995]
- Dubifier
-
A word used to make a statement uncertain or
show the limits of its applicability ("The experimental data
appears to fit the model in the parameter range tested",
"I think so", etc). (Based on quantifier, something that
tells how much there is of anything.) [Heath M Rezabek, ca 1992]
- Dyson Sphere
-
A shell built around a star to collect as much
energy as possible, originally proposed by Freeman Dyson (although
he admits to have borrowed the concept from Olaf Stapledon's novel
Star Maker (1937)). In the original proposal the shell
consists of many independent solar collectors and habitats in
separate orbits (also known as a Type I Dyson Sphere), but later
people have discussed rigid shells consisting of only one piece
(called a Type II Dyson Sphere). The latter construction is
unfortunately both unstable (since it will experience no net
attraction of the star), requires super-strong materials and have
no internal gravity. The Dyson Sphere is a classic example of
mega-technology and common in Science Fiction. See also
The Dyson Sphere FAQ.
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- Ecoalypse
-
(from ecological and apocalypse) A projected
ecological catastrophe which would destroy all life on Earth.
[Mark Plus, August 1991]
- Ectogenesis
-
In vitro reproduction; synthetic wombs.
- EI
-
Emergent Intelligence. An intelligent system
that gradually emerges from simpler systems, instead of being
designed top down.
- Embryomeme
-
Suggestion of a new meme to be used in a group
with a shared set of knowledge. Usually made by somebody with an
inflated ego trying to coin the phrase. [Max M. Rasmussen, Jan
1999]
- Embedded Computing
-
Small, inexpensive processors embedded in all
kinds of objects from industrial machinery to household
appliances. These may be used to regulate operations internal to
the equipment and, more interestingly, may have wireless
connections to software in other locations through the OverNet.
- EmNets
-
Networked systems of embedded computers.
- Emulation
-
An absolutely precise simulation of something,
so exact that it is equivalent to the original (for example, many
computers emulate obsolete computers to run their programs).
- Enhanced Reality
-
A personalized view of reality, the result of
filtering, translation and addition of new perceptions (such as
annotations, information or virtual objects). Unlike VR (virtual
reality), which is immersive and only deal with virtual objects,
ER would improve interaction with real objects and situations (in
addition to virtual objects). See
Intelligent Information Filters and Enhanced Reality.
[Alexander Chislenko]
- Envirocapitalism
-
The use of free markets to protect the
environment.
- Ephemeralists
-
Persons who reject immortalist technology and
values (the result of deathist thinking). [Max More, 1990; from
"Ephemeral", Robert A. Heinlein, 1958]
- E-Prime
-
E-Prime is English without the verb "to be" in
its sense of "is of identity". It originated in the tradition of
General Semantics, to avoid many of the pitfalls of natural
languages which confuse the outside world and the observer. For a
more detailed introduction, see
E-Prime: English without the verb "to be".
- Escalatorlogy
-
(derogatory) A fatuous belief in an endless
evolutionary escalator exalting the human race. (referring to
eschatology, the study of final things, and especially the
physical eschatology of Frank J. Tipler). [Mary
Midgley]
- Eternal Life Postulate
-
The assumption that life, once it arises in the
universe, lasts forever (primarily made by Frank J. Tipler in his
'Omega Point Theory').
- Eupsychia
-
A society specifically designed for improving
the self-fulfillment and psychological health of all people. A
culture or sub-culture made up of psychologically healthy or
mature or self-actualizing people. A Eupsychian sub-culture is
"decentralized, voluntary yet coordinated, productive, and with a
powerful and effective code of ethics (which works)." [Abraham
Maslow, 1954]
- Euthenics
-
Improving the current generation, as opposed to
eugenics, which seeks to improve future generations [R. C. W.
Ettinger,
Man Into Superman, 1972].
- Evolutionarily Stable Strategy (ESS)
-
A strategy which is remains the most optimal
even when there are a small number of individuals using other
strategies in the population.
- Evoluture
-
An organism produced through evolution; the
antonym of creature. (semi-serious) [Mark Plus, June 1991]
- Exconomics
-
The study of possible trans- and post-human
economies.
- Exes
-
Ex-humans, posthuman beings. [Hans Moravec,
Mind Age, 1995]
- Exformation
-
Useful and relevant information, not just data.
[The original definition by Tor Norrestranders was the information
which has been abstracted away, and now is implicitly included in
the message]
- Existential Technology
-
(existech) A technological framework for
self-determination and mastery over one's own destiny. [ Steve
Mann,
VibraVest/ThinkTank: Existential Technology of Synthetic
Synesthesia for the Visually Challenged, 1997]
- Exophobia
-
The fear of new, complex and different things;
everything outside normal experience.
- Exoterra
-
In Extropic Art and Transhumanist Art, the
artistic representation and exploration of concepts involving
space beyond the Earth's atmosphere. [Max More]
- Extropia
-
A conception of evolving communities embodying
values of Boundless Expansion, Self-Transformation, Dynamic
Optimism, Intelligent Technology, and Spontaneous Order. May be
instantiated in virtual cultural communities such as those on the
Net, or in future actual communities such as Extropolis or Free
Oceana. [T. O. Morrow, 1991]
- Extropian
-
One who seeks to overcome human limits, live
indefinitely long, become more intelligence, and more
self-creating. A transhumanist who affirms the values and
attitudes codified and expressed in The Extropian Principles. [Max
More, 1988]
- Extropiate
-
1. Any drug that has extropic effects,
including all cognition enhancing and life extending drugs. [David
Krieger, December 1991] 2. a derogatory term for passively
optimistic perversions of the extropian meme like "technology will
make everything better". Extropiates makes believers passively
wait for everything to get better instead of doing something about
it (a kind of rapture of the future) [Gregory Houston, Mar 1997]
- Extropic
-
Any action or process that promotes extropy.
- Extropic Art
-
A genre of the Transhumanist Arts period; see
the
Extropic Art Manifesto. The premiere piece was "A-Life" a
digital arts which evolved into a net.art piece "The Aesthetics of
Memetic Evolution", and later "A-Life Swarm".
- Extropolis
-
A proposed Extropian community located in our
solar system, possiblly at L-4 or L-5 orbits, or the Asteroid
Belt. (Later extended to possible communities in virtual space.)
[Max More, 1991]
- Extropy
-
The extent of a system's intelligence,
information, order, vitality, and capacity for improvement. [T. O.
Morrow, 1988. Definition by Max More]
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- Far Edge Party
-
One of the main problems of exploring the
stellar systems of the galaxy even for very advanced civilizations
is that a serial journey even at the speed of light would take so
long time that most of the stars would have died during the
journey. One solution is to parallelize the problem: the explorer
travels to a new system, creates a number of copies (xoxes) of
himself and sends them to other systems, while he remains behind
exploring the system (this is a variant of exploring the galaxy
using von Neumann machines). After around 10 million years, when
all of the galaxy has been explored, the explorers gather together
at a prearranged place, and exchange or merge their memories ("The
Far Edge Party"). This was proposed by Keith Henson as a possible
method for a single individual to visit all of the galaxy within a
reasonable time.
- Femtotechnology
-
See 'picotechnology'.
- Fermi Paradox
-
"If there are other intelligent beings in the
Universe, why aren't they here?". Since it appears to be quite
possible for a technological species to spread across the galaxy
in less than 10 million years (using von Neumann machines) or
otherwise change things on such a large scale that it would be
very visible (see Kardaschev types), the lack of such evidence is
puzzling or implies that other technological civilizations doesn't
exist. There have been many attempts to explain this, for example
the "Wildlife Preserve" idea (the aliens doesn't want to interfere
with younger civilizations), that they transcend and become
incomprehensible, that they hide or that they are actually here,
hidden on the nanoscale, but the problem with these attempts is
that most of them just explain why some aliens would not be
apparent. See
The Fermi Paradox for more information. [E. Fermi]
- Flatlander
-
Mildly derogatory term for someone who has
never been off a planetary surface, i.e. into space. Resonant with
the term used in Edwin A. Abbot's classic mathematical fantasy
Flatland: a Romance of Many Dimensions to describe
two-dimensional creatures unaware of the third dimension of space.
[from Larry Niven's
Known Space stories]
- Fluidentity
-
Pun on fluid identity and/or fluid entity. A
state in which traditional boundaries of identity are completely
in flux while immersed in a superliquid economy, cyberspace
anarchy and/or distributed Super-Intelligence matrix (see
functional soup). [Paul Hughes, May 1998]
- Foglet
-
A mesoscale machine that is a part of an
utility fog. [J. S. Hall, 1994]
- Fork
-
To use a nondestructive form of uploading to
create an infomorph version of youself while still keeping the old
biological version. See the 'Practical Mind Uploading Approach'.
[Adam Foust, Dec 1995]
- Fredkin's Paradox
-
The more equally attractive two alternatives
seem, the harder it can be to choose between them - no matter
that, to the same degree, the choice can only matter less. [Marvin
Minsky, 1985,
The Society of Mind].
- Friendly AI
-
An AI which is, broadly speaking, one of the
good guys; an AI which operates roughly within humanity's moral
frame of reference; an AI which has the potential and the will to
become at least as philosophically enlightened, from our
perspective, as intelligence derived from a human or group of
humans; an AI sufficiently advanced to engage in independent
real-world planning, which makes human-benefiting, non-human
harming decisions. See
What Is
Friendly AI?. [Eliezer Yudkowsky, 2000]
- Functional Soup
-
A possible posthuman state where knowledge,
mental modules and access to physical bodies can be shared between
distributed infomorphs largely independent of the physical
substrate of their world. Terms such as individuality become
diffuse, and are replaced with teleological threads. [Alexander
Chislenko,
Technology as extension of human functional architecture,
1997]
- Futique
-
Stylishly futuristic.
- Future Shock
-
"A sense of shock felt by those who were not
paying attention." [Michael Flynn,
Analog, Jan 1990. Coined by Alvin Toffler, 1970,
Future Shock]
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- Galaxy Brain
-
The ultimate (?) distributed intelligence, an
intelligent being with parts spread across an entire galaxy. The
internal communication lags would be on the order of tens of
thousands years, making the top level very slow (but subminds
could be much faster). The parts could be jupiter brains or other
intelligent superobjects.
- Gaussian
-
People whose characteristics (like intelligence
or length) are normally distributed (the Gauss distribution);
normal people in both senses of the word. Used to refer to
unaugmented people, since augmented people could have a radically
different distribution of characteristics.
- Genegeneering
-
Genetic engineering.
- Gene's Law
-
This postulates that the electricity needed to
run a computer circuit will decline exponentially because of
advances in battery technology, better power management, and
because circuits consume less power as they shrink.
- Genetic Algorithm
-
Any algorithm which seeks to solve a problem by
considering numerous possibilities at once, ranking them according
to some standard of fitness, and then combining ("breeding") the
fittest in some way. In other words, any algorithm which imitates
natural selection. See the
Genetic Algorithms FAQ.
- Genie
-
An AI combined with an assembler or other
universal constructor, programmed to build anything the owner
wishes. Sometimes called a Santa Machine. This assumes a very high
level of AI and nanotechnology.
- Godel's Theorem
-
(Godel's incompleteness theorem) Any proposed
axiom set for arithmetic is either consistent (no contradictions
can be derived) or complete (it will say yes or no to every
arithmetic proposition). In other words, any axiom set strong
enough to include arithmetic which is complete will be
inconsistent (it will say yes and no to at least one question).
See
What is Godel's theorem?.
- Golden Goo
-
Another member of the grey goo family of
nanotechnology disaster scenarios. The idea is to use nanomachines
to filter gold from seawater. If this process got out of control
we would get piles of golden goo (the "Wizard's Apprentice
Problem"). This scenario demonstrates the need of keeping
populations of self-replicating machines under control; it is much
more likely than grey goo, but also more manageable. [MCH/JoSH,
sci.nanotech, Jul 16, 1996]
- Guy Fawkes Scenario
-
If nanotechnology becomes widely available, it
might become trivial for anyone to committ acts of terrorism (such
as making nanomachines build a large amount of explosives under
government buildings a la Guy Fawkes). This would either force
strict control over nanotechnology (hard) or a decentralized mode
of organization.
- Great Filter
-
The Great Filter refers to the hypothetical
mechanism(s) or principle(s) by which the great number of
potentially life-bearing planets get filtered out before they have
produced intelligent life forms that expand into cosmos. See also
the 'Fermi paradox'.
- Green Goo
-
Nanomachines or bio-engineered organisms used
for population control of humans, either by governments or
eco-terrorist groups. Would most probably work by sterilizing
people through otherwise harmless infections. See Nick Szabo's
essay
Green Goo -- Life in the Era of Humane Genocide. [1993]
- Grey Goo
-
Out-of-control replicating nanotechnology; some
calculations indicate that the entire ecosphere could be
consumed within weeks or days. One of the primary risks
threatening the complete destruction of humanity. [K. Eric
Drexler,
Engines of
Creation, 1986] Perhaps an even more dangerous variant is
"red goo", or military nanotechnology.
- Grok
-
To fully understand, see, get it, dig, etc.
[From Robert A. Heinlein,
Stranger in a Strange Land, 1961]
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- Hallucinomemic
-
An idea that induces hallucinations ("Some
things have to be believed to be seen") [John McPherson, July
1993]
- Haptic Interface
-
A virtual reality interface that adds a sense
of touch, using force feedback or other techniques. Already
commonly used in a crude form in computer gaming, such as car
racing games and jet fighter simulators.
- Hard Takeoff
-
A Singularity occurring with extreme speed and
rapidity, over the course of hours or weeks rather than months or
decades. Most hard takeoff scenarios involve Artificial
Intelligence because of the probable ability of an AI to rapidly
absorb enormous amounts of computing power, run on basic computing
elements with limiting serial speeds of 2GHz (as opposed to 200Hz
neurons), and recursively self-improve by rewriting one's own
source code; however, it is also conceivable that a hard takeoff
scenario could develop out of brain-computer interfaces.
[Definition by Eliezer Yudkowsky]
- Heat Death
-
A cosmological end state of universal
thermodynamic equilibrium - ie the same temperature everywhere,
meaning there's no energy for anything except reversible
interactions.
- Hive Computing
-
Using unused computing resources in a network
to speed up calculations or distribute parallel programs.
[Probable origin:
Hive Computing: working together for the common good by Steve
G. Steinberg,
Wired 3.11, Nov 1995]
- Homorph
-
A transhuman or posthuman with a humanoid body
[Greg Bear,
Eon, 1985]
- HPLD
-
Highest Possible Level of Development. This is
a concept (and abbreviation) from a Stanslaw Lem story. The idea
is that there is an end-state of technological evolution, when it
is possible to carry out everything consistent with physical law,
and that this end-state is essentially unique. Because of the
uniqueness of this state, it is possible to theorize usefully
about it, while the paths between here and there are shrouded by
mind-boggling complexity (AKA the 'Singularity'). [definition by
Carl Feynman. The original story is "Altruizine, or A True Account
of How Bonhomius the Hermetic Hermit Tried to Bring About
Universal Happiness, and What Came of It", in
The Cyberiad]
- Hubris
-
A collection of Extropians, as in "A school of
fish, a hubris of Extropians".
- Hypertext
-
Massively interconnected database providing the
ability to track information in all directions, notify you of
updated information, etc. [Ted Nelson]
- Hyponeiria
-
Lack of dreaming, a pathological deficiency of
imagination. [Dean Shomshak, Jan 1996]
- Hypotech
-
Hypothetical technology. [Michael M. Butler]
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- IA
-
Intelligence Amplification. Technologies
seeking to increase the cognitive abilities of people.
- Ideal Identity
-
An internal model of our personality as we wish
it to be; the person we seek to become [Max More, Extropy #10].
- Immortalist
-
A person who believes in the possibility of,
and who seeks to attain, physical immortality [Max More, Extropy
#10].
- Immortechnics
-
Collectively, the technologies which are
applied to attempt radical life extension, such as
calorie-restricted dieting, cryonics, uploading, etc. [Mark Plus,
July 1991]
- Imp
-
Electronic implant, especially in the brain.
[Ron Hale Evans]
- Inactivate
-
Non-living but not dead (in the latter's
permanent sense). A person in biostasis, or one subsisting in data
storage, awaiting downloading. [Max More, 1989]
- Infoglut
-
A state of voraciously gathering information,
with little or no care for its quality or relevance. Often
infoglut develops when an information starved person finds a dense
source of information, like the Internet. Closely related to
information overload, but more insidious since the victims think
they actually profit from it.
- Infomorph
-
A uploaded intelligence, or information entity,
which resides in a computer. See Charles Platt,
The Silicon Man, p.109. [1991]
- Information-Theoretical Death
-
A person has reached information-theoretic
death if a healthy state of that person could not possibly be
deduced from the current state. The exact timing of
information-theoretic death depends on presently unknown details
of how the brain works. The current best estimates put it several
hours after clinical death. Definition from the glossary in the
Cryonic FAQ by Tim Freeman.
- Inline Universities
-
(as opposed to online universities),
nanocomputer implants serving to increase intelligence and
education of their owners, essentially turning them into walking
universities. [Max M. Rasmussen]
- In Silico Biology
-
Thorough computer modeling of biological
processes that obviate the need for slow biological trials and
tests.
- Interfacer
-
A person who acts as an interface between
virtual corporations or other net-based organizations, and the
physical world and its local economic rules. [Robert Ingdahl, Dec
1995]
- Internalnet
-
An information network inside a living body,
for example between nanochondria, bionic implants, or external
wearable computers. [Ken Clements, 1996]
- Internet Ontology
-
A standardized classification of Internet
content enabling computers to "understand" the content they are
processing. See 'Semantic Web'.
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- Jupiter-Brain
-
A posthuman being of extremely high
computational power and size. This is the archetypal concentrated
intelligence. The term originated due to an idea by Keith Henson
that nanomachines could be used to turn the mass of Jupiter into
computers running an upgraded version of himself.
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- Khaki Goo
-
Military nanotechnology; see 'grey goo'.
- Kardaschev Types
-
A classification of possible civilizations
after energy usage. Type I civilizations control all available
energy on a single planet. Type II civilizations control all
available energy in a solar system (for example, using Dyson
spheres). Type III civilizations control use all available energy
in an entire galaxy. (Mitch Porter suggested that a Type IV
civilization controls all available energy in the entire universe)
We are currently moving towards a Type I civilization. [Nikolai
Kardaschev, 1964].
- Knowbots
-
Knowledge robots, first developed Vinton G.
Cref and Robert E. Kahn for National Research Initiatives.
Knowbots are programmed by users to scan networks for various
kinds of related information, regardless of the language or form
in which it expressed. "Knowbots support parallel computations at
different sites. They communicate with one another, and with
various servers in the network and with users." [Scientific
American, September 1991, p.74]
- Kolmogorov Complexity
-
The Kolmogorov complexity of a string of bits
is the length of the smallest Turing machine program which
produces the bit string as output. (It is therefore somewhat
dependent on one's choice of Turing machine, but since every
Turing machine can be emulated by an universal Turing machine with
a constant increase in program length this doesn't matter much).
See
An Introduction to Kolmogorov Complexity and Its Applications
for more information.
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- Leonardo da Vinci Syndrome
-
Creative people often get more ideas and
visions faster than they can implement them, making them unable to
complete a project before rushing off to the next (like Leonardo
da Vinci).
- Linde Scenario
-
A scenario for indefinite survival of
intelligent life. It assumes it is possible to either create
basement universes connected to the original universe with a
wormhole or the existence of other cosmological domains.
Intelligent life continually migrates to the new domains as the
old grow too entropic to sustain life. [Mitch Porter,
The Linde scenario, v0.01, 1997. The name refers to Linde's
chaotic inflation cosmology, where new universes are continually
spawned]
- Liquidentity
-
See 'fluidentity'.
- Lofstrom Loop
-
An beanstalk-like megaconstruction based on a
stream of magnetically accelerated bars linked together. The
stream is sent into space, where a station rides it using magnetic
hooks, redirects it horizontally to another station, which sends
it downwards to a receiving station on the ground. From this
station the stream is then sent back to the launch station (a
purely vertical version is called a space fountain). This
structure would contain a large amount of kinetic energy but could
be built gradually and would only require enough energy to
compensate for losses when finished. Elevators could be run along
the streams, and geostationary installations could be placed along
the horizontal top. [Named after Keith Lofstrom, who did the first
detailed calculations on it in: Lofstrom, Keith H., "The launch
loop -- a low cost Earth-to-high orbit launch system," AIAA
Paper 85-1368, 1985].
- Longevist
-
A person who seeks to extend their life beyond
current norms (but who may not wish to live forever) [Max More,
Extropy #10].
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- MASPAR
-
Shorthand for MASsively PARalell computers,
computers using many simple processors at the same time.
- Mataglap
-
"Mataglap is an Indonesian word meaning 'dark
eye' or, probably, 'dilated eye'. It is an indication that someone
is about to go berserk and start killing people at random. I
applied the word in Aristoi to a berserk form of nanotechnology
that devoured the planet." (From the
Walter John Williams FAQ). See also 'grey goo'. [First used in
the nanotech sense in
Aristoi, 1992].
- Megatechnology / Megascale Engineering
-
Technology using energies, scales or methods
far beyond the current levels (but still bound by physical law).
Typical examples are ground-to-orbit beanstalks, Lofstrom loops,
terraforming, Dyson spheres, stellar husbandry and Tipler
cylinders. See
Megastructures for more information.
- Megatrends
-
The major forces shaping societies and
economies over the coming decade or so. See the book
Megatrends, by John and Patricia Naisbitt.
- Mehum
-
Derogatory term for "mere human". [from the
Illuminatus Trilogy by Wilson and Shea].
- Meme
-
Self-reproducing idea or other information
pattern which is propagated in ways similar to that of a gene. See
the
Alt.Memetics FAQ for more information. [Richard Dawkins, 1976]
- Memetics
-
The study of memes. [Douglas R. Hofstadter]
- Memie
-
(after genie) a thought which, once out of the
mouth, does anything it damn well pleases [Bob Arter, July 1993]
- Memius
-
An effective spreader of ideas [John McPherson,
July 1993]
- Memotype
-
1. The actual information-content of a meme, as
distinct from its sociotype. 2. A class of similar memes. [Glenn
M. Grant]
- Memoid / Memeoid
-
True believer in a meme and willing to die for
it. [Keith Henson, 1985]
- Merchancy
-
A proprietary, commerce-oriented quasi-state
which claims sovereignty over its land and property but not the
allegiance of its citizens/clients; e.g. Mr Lee's Greater Hong
Kong in
Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson. [Anton Sherwood, 1994]
- Merkle's Wager
-
Based on
Pascal's Wager, Ralph Merkle's argument for the rationality of
making arrangements for cryopreservation. It consists of a matrix
of four choices: Sign up and it works; sign up and it doesn't
work; don't sign up and it works; don't sign up and it doesn't
work. Merkle concludes that signing up for suspension is the only
sensible option. [Max More]
- Mesoscale
-
A device or structure larger than the nanoscale
(10^-9 m) and smaller than the megascale; the exact size depends
heavily on the context and usually ranges between very large
nanodevices (10^-7 m) and the human scale (1 m).
- Metatrends
-
Technological and economic trends formed from
the convergence of several trends or megatrends; also trends on
top of trends, such as when the exponential growth of a technology
forms just part of a larger trend that is itself growing
exponentially. This kind of "acceleration of acceleration" is the
simplest form of metatrend. [Max More]
- Metcalfe's Law
-
Metcalfe's Law says that the potential value of
a network is proportional to the square of the number of nodes in
the network. Metcalfe's Law is v=xn2,
where v=value, n=nodes on the network and x is a constant value.
See
Metcalfe's Law and Legacy for more information. [1970]
- Micromachines
-
This includes all devices operating on a
microscopic level such as micromirrors used in optical switches,
tiny accelerometers which deploy airbags, and bioMEMs which can
internally monitor a patient and release accurate doses of
medication on time.
- Mindkind
-
All intelligent beings.
- Molmac
-
Molecular machine [Kilian, Gryphon]
- Morphological Freedom
-
The ability to alter bodily form at will
through technologies such as surgery, genetic engineering,
nanotechnology, uploading. [Max More, Apr 1992]
- Mutual Reality
-
Multi-user virtual reality. [Benjamin Jay
Britton, 1996]
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- Nanarchist
-
Someone who circumvents government control to
use nanotechnology, or someone who advocates this. [Eli Brandt,
Oct 1991]
- Nanarchy
-
The use of automatic law-enforcement by
nanomachines or robots, without any human control. [Mark S.
Miller]
- Nanite
-
Slang term for a nanomachine (see
nanotechnology), esp. a machine able to replicate itself.
[Popularized by the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Evolution",
Sep 1989]
- Nanobiotechnology
-
The use of nanotechnology in biotechnology,
examining the intersection and cross-fertilization of the two
fields. Related to nanomedicine.
- Nanobot
-
A molecular-scale robot created using
nanotechnology.
- Nanochondria
-
Nanomachines existing inside living cells,
participating in their biochemistry (like mitochondria) and/or
assembling various structures. See also nanosome. [Ken Clements,
1996]
- Nanocomputer
-
A computer built using nanotechnology
(manufacturing to molecular specifications). A lower bound on
nanocomputing speeds has been set by calculating the speed of an
acoustic computer using "rod logics" and messages that travel at
the speed of sound; a one-kilogram rod logic, occupying one cubic
centimeter, can contain 10^12 CPUs each operating at 1000 MIPS for
a total of ten thousand billion billion operations per second.
Note that rod logics are the nanotech equivalent of vacuum tubes;
electronic nanocomputers would be substantially faster. [K. Eric
Drexler,
Engines of
Creation, 1986]
- Nanofacture
-
The fabrication of goods using nanotechnology
[Geoff Dale, 1995].
- Nanomedicine
-
The use of molecular-scale devices
(nanotechnology) to repair damage and boost the immune system. For
some applications, see
Nanotechnology and Medicine by Ralph C. Merkle. [Max More,
Extropy #10, 1993].
- Nanosome
-
Nanodevices existing symbiotically inside
biological cells, doing mechanosynthesis and disassembly for it
and replicating with the cell. Similar to nanochondria. [Anders
Sandberg, Jan 1998]
- Nanotech
-
Slang for nanotechnology.
- Nanotechnology
-
As used by venture capitalists, technology
which operates in the nanometer (billionth of a meter) scale. As
used by transhumanists, technology which uses precise positional
control of reactants to mechanically synthesize large-scale
structures to exact molecular specifications - "positional
chemistry" or "mechanosynthesis". Molecular nanotechnology is
distinguished by the observation that in theory, it can produce
virtually any material object, including a duplicate of itself,
and can moreover operate on a scale that is small relative to
human biology - allowing medical technology verging on total
control of biology, including the halting or reversal of aging.
[K. Eric Drexler,
Engines of
Creation, 1986]
- Neg
-
Someone who typically complains, moans, and
whines, Someone practicing the opposite of practical optimism.
- NEMs
-
NEMs are nanoelectromechanical systems. The
term was coined as an extension of the thousandfold larger MEMs (microelectromechanical
systems).
- Neomorph
-
A transhuman or posthuman with a non-humanoid
body. [Greg Bear,
Eon, 1985]
- Neophile
-
One who welcomes the future and who enjoys
change and evolution.
- Neophobe
-
One who fears change and wants to abort
technological and social transformation.
- Neurocomputation
-
The study of how natural and artificial neural
networks process information.
- Neurohack
-
A broad term covering most forms of
biologically based intelligence enhancement, including
brain-computer interfaces, genetic engineering for higher
intelligence, addition of extra brain tissue, various proposed
neurosurgical methods, et cetera; may also be used to refer to a
sufficiently unusual and extreme natural perturbation to cognitive
processing. [Eliezer Yudkowsky, 1998]
- Neuroinformatics
-
The use of information technology to understand
the human brain. Also, the study of the key principles by which
brains work with the goal of implementing these in artificial
systems that interact intelligently with the real world.
- Neuronaut
-
A person who explores their own neural
functioning and internal mentational processes by various means,
including deep introspection and meditation, psychoactive drugs,
mind machines, and neuroscientific understanding.
- Neuron Star
-
A neutron star used as a basis for a densely
packed mind (similar to a jupiter brain or a omegon) exploiting
neutronium or quark matter for computation [Damien Broderick,
1996]
- Neuroprosthesis
-
Implanted cybernetic brain augmentation.
- Neurosuspension
-
Cryonically suspending only the head or brain
of a person.
- Nootropic
-
A cognition-enhancing drug that has no
significant side-effects. (cf. extropiate) [C. Giurgea]
- Now Shock
-
Being shocked or confused by the rapid changes
that has already taken place, a kind of future shock before the
present. [Michael Rothschild, "Cornucopia
Or Black Hole?",
Upside,
Oct 1995]
- Nutraceutical
-
A foodstuff or parts of foodstuff that offers
medical or health benefits related to the prevention and treatment
of disease.
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- Offloading
-
Removing the cognitive load by various means,
such as enhanced reality, knowbots, graphical user interfaces,
hypertext or information screening. [Felix Ungman, 1995]
- Omega Point
-
A possible future state when intelligence
controls the Universe totally, and the amount of information
processed and stored goes asymptotically towards infinity. See the
Omega Point Page. [Origin:
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin,
The Phenomenon of Man, 1955. See also Frank J. Tipler's
The Physics of Immortality for a more modern definition]
- Omegon
-
An intelligence turning itself into a neutron
star, black hole or even a baby-universe in order to increase its
computing speed or to evolve towards a Omega Point. [Vic Stenger,
1995]
- Omnescience
-
The widespread lack of understanding and
knowledge of science. [Raymond Tallis,
Newton's Sleep, 1995]
- O'Neill Cylinders
-
A pair of cylindrical space colonies that
rotate around their respective axis to produce simulated gravity
(one rotates clockwise and the other counterclockwise to minimize
torques). [Named after
Gerard K. O'Neill, who described them]
- O'Neill Colony
-
A rotating space colony, especially large ones
with internal ecosystems, such as O'Neill cylinders or Bernal
spheres. [Named after
Gerard K. O'Neill]
- Ontological Conservatives
-
"Basement reality dwellers", people who regard
physical reality as fundamentally important and simulated/emulated
realities as bad, due to fear of the unknown elements or the
effects of such simulated realities. They regard solid state
civilizations as a bad idea. [Natasha Vita-More, Nov 1997]
- Optimal Persona
-
An imagined model of the ideal person we want
to become. The Optimal Persona is the ideal self, the higher (and
continually developing) individual much like Nietzsche's
conception of the Ubermensch but applied to the individual. [Max
More, 1993; same name but different conception from that used by
Bruce Sterling in
Islands in the Net]
- Orbital Tower
-
See 'beanstalk'.
- Overnet
-
The emerging communications and computation
network including the Internet as well as mobile wireless devices,
telematic devices, private networks, and billions of embedded
chips with wireless connections. [Max More, Nov 2001]
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- Pancritical Rationalism
-
A nonjustificationist epistemology in which
every statement is subject to criticism. See
Pancritical Rationalism: An Extropic Metacontext for Memetic
Progress by Max More for more information.
- Partial
-
A computer simulation of part of a person's
personality, created in order to carry out a task not requiring
the entire person. [Greg Bear,
Eon, 1985]
- Partialate
-
A partial personality used as a personality
surrogate. [Max More, July 1991]
- Pattern Identity Theory
-
The theory that "I" am the same individual as
any other whose physical constitution forms the same or a similar
pattern to mine. (Cf continuity identity theory).
- Pericomputer
-
Any small portable device such as a laptop
computer or PDA (personal digital assistant). [Lawrence G. Tesler]
- Perimelasma
-
The closest approach on an orbit around a black
hole, similar to the words perigee for the Earth, perihelion for
the sun, periastron for a star, etc) [Geoffrey Landis]
- Perversion Attack
-
Infiltrating somebody's computer systems in
order to use them against their owner. [Vernor Vinge,
A Fire Upon the Deep, 1992]
- Pharming
-
Short for pharmaceutical farming. The process
of genetically engineering crops to protect them or their
consumers from disease. For example, researchers at Texas A&M and
Tulane University have genetically altered potatoes to include
antigenic material from E. coli bacteria, one cause of diarrhea.
Theoretically, such potatoes could both feed people in developing
countries and vaccinate them against E. coli. [Gareth Branwyn in
Jargon Watch,
Wired 4.01, Jan 1996]
- Phyle
-
A race or tribe; a body united by ties of blood
and descent, a clan. Used in Neal Stephenson's
The Diamond Age to denote non-nation based cultures and
societies.
- Physical Eschatology
-
A branch of theoretical applied science
studying how intelligent life could affect and survive in the
remote future. The field was opened by Freeman Dyson by his paper
Time Without End: Physics and Biology in an Open Universe.
[1976]
- Picotechnology
-
Technology using objects on the pico- and femto-scale
(as nanotechnology would use nanoscale objects). This would
involve nucleons and other elementary particles doing useful work,
involving quantum effects. Unlike nanotechnology, picotechnology
has no feasibility proofs and remains pure speculation. Also
called femtotechnology.
- Pidgin Brain
-
An artificial part of a posthuman brain
designed so that activity, memories and skills stored in it can
easily be transferred to other pidgin brains, a "neural ligua
franca". [Michael M. Butler]
- Pink Goo
-
(humorous) Humans (in analogy with grey goo).
"Pink Goo to refer to Old Testament apes who see their purpose as
being fruitful and multiplying, filling up of the cosmos with lots
more such apes, unmodified." [Eric Watt Forste, Aug 1997]
- Plexure
-
"The ability to see knowledge as through
different lenses, that is, through different epistemological
systems, to enter and hold different worldviews." [David Zindell,
The Broken God, 1993]
- Pome
-
A computer-generated poem.
- Posthuman
-
Posthuman" is a term used by transhumanists to
refer to what humans could become if we succeed in using
technology to remove the limitations of the human condition. No
one can be certain exactly what posthumans would be like (there
may be many differing types, and they may continuing changing) but
we can understand the term by contrasting it with "human":
Posthumans would be those who have overcome the biological,
neurological, and psychological constraints built into humans by
the evolutionary process. Posthumans would have a far greater
ability to reconfigure and sculpt their physical form and
function; they would have an expanded range of refined emotional
responses, and would possess intellectual and perceptual abilities
enhanced beyond the purely human range. Posthumans would not be
subject to biological aging or degeneration. It would be
unrealistic to expect posthumans to be "perfect" by our standards.
What we can reasonably say is that posthumans would have
greater potential for good or bad, just as humans have
greater potential than other primate species.
- Postjudice
-
A negative opinion based on exposure. [Perry E.
Metzger, 1997]
- Power
-
A posthuman entity of tremendous intelligence
and capability, possibly the result of transcending [Vernor Vinge,
A Fire Upon the Deep, 1992]
- Powershift
-
A transfer of power involving a change in the
nature of power, from violence to wealth, or from wealth to
knowlege. [Alvin Toffler,
Powershift, 1990]
- Prisoner's Dilemma
-
A two-player non-zero sum game where each
player can choose between cooperation and defection. The pay-off
matrix is (cooperate=C, defect=D):
|
C |
D |
C |
(3,3) |
(0,5 |
D |
(5,0) |
(1,1) |
If both players cooperate, they get 3 points each. If they both
defect they earn just one each. If one defects and the other
cooperates the defector will gain 5 points and the cooperator
nothing. If the players will play the game only once, it is
rational to defect, but if they will continue to play it several
times (the iterated prisoner's dilemma) different strategies
become possible. In this case mutual cooperation gives a high
pay-off, but defectors can exploit naive cooperators. But since
mutual defection does worse than cooperation cooperators can come
do dominate the population as long as they are not too vulnerable
to defectors.
The game is a standard model in game theory, and has been widely
modelled in theoretical sociology, theoretical biology and
economics. It seems to capture some of the tensions between
selfishness and altruism, which has led to a great interest in
what strategies are evolutionarily stable in the iterated dilemma.
The name derives from a scenario where two prisoners have to
independently decide if too testify against each other or not. See
also Principia
Cybernetica's
article on the dilemma.
- Privacy Management
-
Critical in the Age of Access and one of the
next great growth sectors. As connectivity spreads, privacy
management will become the ultimate status tool. [The
500-Year Delta, Jim Taylor and Watts Wacker, 1997]
- Prolongevity
-
The idea that human lifespan can and should be
extended. [Gerald J. Gruman, 1955]
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- Quantum Computing
-
Computing using quantum effects, especially to
solve untractable problems (like factorization or breaking
cryptosystems). See the
Centre for Quantum
Computation for more information.
- Quantum Cryptography
-
A system based on quantum-mechanical
principles. Eavesdroppers alter the quantum state of the system
and so are detected. Developed by Brassard and Bennett, only small
laboratory demonstrations have been made. See
What Is Quantum Cryptography? for more information.
- Quasispecies
-
A fuzzy distributions of genotypes
characterizing a population of quickly mutating organisms or
molecules. [Manfred Eigen]
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- Rapture Of The Future
-
Naive optimism that everything will be all
right in the future and that future technology can solve every
concievable problem.
- Red Goo
-
Deliberately designed and released destructive
nanotechnology, as opposed to accidentally created grey goo.
- Red Queen Principle
-
(based on
Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll, where the Red
Queen points out "in this place it takes all the running you can
do, to keep in the same place.") In evolution the principle says
that for an evolutionary system, continuing development is needed
just in order to maintain its (relative) fitness. See
The Red Queen Principle in
Principia
Cybernetica. [L. van Valen, 1973]
- Red Queened
-
To be outrun by evolution or change. See the
'red queen principle'. [Damien Broderick, June 1997]
- Refined Emotions
-
One result of automorphing:
transhuman/posthuman emotions that have been self-sculpted to
remove unhealthy evolutionary baggage (where "health" is
understood as contextually effective in bringing about survival
and flourishing).
- Regenerative Medicine
-
A collection of applied biotechnologies which
aims to repair human tissues and replace or regenerate organs.
Includes fields investigating stem cells, tissue engineering or
organogeneis, telomerase, biomaterials, and therapeutic cloning.
- Remembrance Agent
-
A software agent that augments human memory by
watching the current context (for example what is written in an
editor) and displays a list of documents which may be relevant.
This is a simple but workable form of intelligence amplification,
likely suited for wearable computers. See
Remembrance Agent: A continuously running automated information
retrieval system. [Thad Starner, 1995]
- Reversible
-
A process that can occur in both directions,
i.e. A->B and B->A. Reversible processes do not produce any
entropy.
- Rif
-
A Rifkinite, or supporter of
Jeremy Rifkin and his anti-genetic engineering, anti-nanotech
crusade; against any and all research or implementation in these
areas. [Glenn Grant, 1990]
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- Sans Ceiling Hypothesis
-
There are no upper limit to what sufficiently
advanced intelligent life can do (as opposed to the view that
there are fundamental limits set by physical law). [Paul Hughes]
- Sapper Meme
-
An offensive (as opposed to benign or
defensive) meme, intelligently-designed to infect a host, reduce
the host's memetic immunity, and prepare the host for infection.
[Keith Elis, Apr 1998]
- Scenario Planning
-
A rigorous method combining creative and
critical thinking for generating alternative plausible futures for
the purpose of testing strategies for their robustness. Originally
invented by the U.S. military, and pioneered in the business world
by Shell Oil, scenario planning is an increasingly common tool in
a business world having to deal with rapid and drastic changes in
competitive conditions, as well as in issues of foundation and
governmental policy.
- Santa Machine
-
See 'genie'.
- Scheme
-
A meme-complex. [Douglas Hofstadter]
- Seed AI
-
An AI designed for recursive self-improvement;
that is, improvement followed by another round of improvement at
that higher level of intelligence. Rather than building a mind
which is superintelligent from the start, the theory holds that
only some bounded level of intelligence need be achieved in order
for the AI to become capable of open-ended improvement of its own
source code. [Eliezer Yudkowsky,
1998,
2000,
2001. Definition by Eliezer Yudkowsky]
- Semantic Web
-
Web architect Tim Berners-Lee's conception of a
future stage of the Internet, where computers would be able to
understand content using semantic layers based on XML, rather than
being limited purely to syntactic manipulation. A Semantic Web
would require several layers on top of XML, with an Internet
Ontology sitting at the top. [Tim Berners-Lee,
The Semantic Web,
Scientific
American, May 2001]
- Sentience Quotient
-
In the article "Xenopsychology" by Robert
Freitas in
Analog of April 1984 there is an interesting index called
"Sentience quotient". It is based on: The sentience of an
intelligence is roughly directly related to the amount of data it
can process per unit time and inversely to the overall mass needed
to do that processing. This would be something like
baud/kilograms. And since that would rapidly turn into a real big
number, base 10 logs are used. The "least sentient" would be one
bit over the lifetime of the universe massing the entire known
universe, or about -70. The "most sentient" is claimed to be +50.
Homo sapiens are around +13, a Cray I is +9, a venus flytrap is a
peak of +1 with plants generally -2.
- Shih
-
"Shih was the opposite of facts and raw
information; shih was the elegance of knowledge, the insight and
skill to organize knowledge into meaningful patterns. As an artist
chooses colours or light to make her pictures, a master of shih
chooses textures of knowledge - various ideas, myths,
abstractions, and theories - to create a way of seeing the world.
The aesthetics and beauty of knowledge - this was shih." [David
Zindell,
The Broken God, 1993]
- Singularity
-
The postulated point or short period in our
future when our self-guided evolutionary development accelerates
enormously (powered by nanotech, neuroscience, AI, and perhaps
uploading) so that nothing beyond that time can reliably be
conceived. [Vernor Vinge,
The Coming Technological Singularity, 1986]
- Singularitarian
-
Originally defined by Mark Plus to mean "one
who believes the concept of a Singularity", this term has since
been redefined to mean "Singularity activist" or "friend of the
Singularity"; that is, one who acts so as to bring about a
Singularity. [Mark Plus, 1991;
Singularitarian Principles, Eliezer Yudkowsky, 2000]
- Sky Hook
-
A long, very strong, cable in orbit around a
planet which rotates around its center of mass in such a way that
when one end is closest to the ground, its relative velocity is
almost zero. It would function as a kind of space elevator;
shuttle craft would anchor to the end and then be lifted into
orbit where they would be released. It is closely related to the
idea of a beanstalk. [Originally described by Y Artsutanov in
1969. The name was propbably coined by Hans Moravec in "A
Non-Synchronous Orbital Skyhoo k," Journal of the Astronautical
Sciences, Vol. 25, No. 4, October-December 1977, pp 307-322 ]
- Smart Contracts
-
A type of secure digital rights management that
essentially enforces contracts using code with no need for legal
authorities to intervene.
- Smart-Faced
-
The condition resulting from social use of
cognition-enhancing drugs: "Let's get smart-faced." [Russell E.
Whitaker, Dec 1991]
- Sociotype
-
1. The social expression of a memotype, as the
body of an organism is the physical expression (phenotype) of the
gene (genotype). Hence, the Protestant Church is one sociotype of
the Bible's memotype. 2. A class of similar social organizations.
[Glenn M. Grant]
- Solid State Civilization
-
A posthuman or alien civilization where most
people have no physical bodies and exist as information inside
computers.
- Space Fountain
-
A vertical stream of magnetically accelerated
pellets reaching out into space, where a station held aloft by its
momentum reverses the direction and directs it towards a receiver
on the ground. Essentially a simpler version of a Lofstrom loop.
[I'm not sure who originated the idea; judging from Robert
Forward's Indistinguishable from Magic it was a collaborative
effort. A paper about the idea can be found in Hyde, Roderick A.,
"Earthbreak: Earth to Space Transportation," Defense Science
2003+ Vol. 4, No. 4, 1985, pp 78-92 ]
- Spike
-
Another term for the singularity, suggested by
Damien Broderick since the growth curves look almost like a spike
as it is approached. [Damien Broderick,
The Spike, 1997]
- Spintronics
-
Based on the magnetic properties of electrons,
could lead to advances such as M-RAM, or magneto resistive memory
which will retain data after power is turned off. Boot-up time
would be eliminated, and processing and storage might be done in
the same chip.
- Spock Meme
-
The idea that transhumans will evolve to the
point there they will have no need for emotion or love. This is
unlikely since emotions are important for cognition; a more likely
development is refined emotions with less evolutionary baggage. [QueeneMUSE,
July 1996]
- Spontaneous Voluntarism
-
A fully free society, with a totally free
market and no institutionalized coercion. [Max More, 1989]
- Star Lifting
-
To remove material from a star for industrial
use or for stellar husbandry. Possible methods would involve
increasing its rotation until material began to drift off the
equator or squeezing it using intense magnetic fields from
particle accelerators. [Dave Criswell]
- Stellar Husbandry
-
To control the evolution and properties of
stars, especially to stabilize them, prolong their lifetimes,
manipulate the stellar wind, lift off useful material or create
new stars. Typical methods would be star lifting or mixing the
stellar core with envelope material to make hydrogen burning last
longer. [Dave Criswell]
- Steward
-
Someone who wants to manage the world as a
precious resource, as opposed to extropians who want to let an
evolution-like process change it (it should be noted that the term
extropian used in this definition doesn't necessarily cover all
people calling themselves extropians). The stewards and extropians
represent divergent philosophies of change: stewards think about
what is already there, while extropians think about how things can
or will evolve. [Jaron Lanier,
Getting Deeper Into The Topspin, Spin Magazine, 1991]
- Strong AI Postulate
-
The assumption that an intelligent machine can
be built, at least in principle. Some versions of the postulate
are more narrow, and say that intelligence is computable on Turing
machines (i.e. the mind is a program). This essentially means that
intelligence is only dependent on pattern, not its material basis.
- Strong Convergence Hypothesis
-
All sufficiently advanced cultures converge
towards the same state. A rival hypothesis is the divergent track
hypothesis. See also 'HPLD'. [Nicholas Bostrom, 1996,
Predictions from Philosophy?]
- Superlongevity
-
The extension of the human lifespan beyond the
genetic limit of approximately 120 years.
- Surge
-
A relatively slow Singularity take-off. Slow
means a few months to a few years rather than in weeks or hours. A
Surge might result from superintelligent AI or augmented
transhuman superintelligence being slower to develop than some
expect, or due to economic, cultural, and political brakes on
technological acceleration. [Max More]
- Suspended Animation
-
This term refers to the ability to start and
stop, at will, a biological system (usually a person) through some
physical means (usually the use of cold temperatures). Suspended
animation does not currently exist.
- Synthespian
-
An artificial actor, for example a 3D model
animated by motion capture from a real actor or a computer
program. See
Synthespian History, Technology, and Future for more
information. [Jeff Kleiser and Diana Walczak, 1985]
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- TAZ / Temporary Autonomous Zone
-
A mobile or transient location free of economic
and social interference by the state. [Hakim Bey,
The Temporary Autonomous Zone - Ontological Anarchy, Poetic
Terrorism, 1985]
- Technocalyps
-
The fusion of utopian dreams and apocalyptic
fears of the millennium. [Michael Grosso]
- Technocyte
-
A nanoscale artificial device (especially a
nanite) in the human bloodstream used for repairs, cancer
protection, as an artificial immune system or for other uses.
[Anders Sandberg, 1995]
- Technosphere
-
An expanding sphere of civilization/technology,
spreading outwards using von Neumann Probes or simple
colonization. Judging from how most life behaves, it will
gradually restructure matter and energy inside itself in various
ways. Due to the finite speed of light it can only spread slower
than lightspeed. [Mitchell Porter]
- Teleological Thread
-
A sequence of goals following each other.
Refers to the possibility of strong morphological freedom, where
individuals can change all their properties and their
configuration; only the general goals may stay the same, and they
may drift forming a teleological thread. [Alexander Chislenko,
Technology as extension of human functional architecture,
1997]
- Terraform
-
To change the properties of a planet to make it
more earthlike, making it possible for humans or other terrestrial
organisms to live unaided on it, for example by changing
atmospheric composition, pressure, temperature or the climate and
introducing a sel f-sustaining ecosystem. This will most probably
be a very long-term project, probably requiring self-replicating
technology and megascale engineering. So far Venus and especially
Mars looks as the most promising candidates for terraforming in
the solar system. See
The Terraforming Information Pages for more information. [Jack
Williamson, 1938]
- Theoretical Applied Science
-
The study of technology that is based on
conservative and contemporary scientific knowledge, but have not
yet been created. Especially it studies what is possible and
impossible according to known physical laws. See
Theoretical Applied Science by Nick Szabo.
- Tithonus Syndrome
-
The consistently negative portrayal of
immortality in fantasy and science fiction. Based on the Greek
myth of Tithonus, who was granted eternal life but forgot to ask
for eternal youth. See
Internet and Greek Mythology for more information. [S. L.
Rosen]
- Tipler Cylinder
-
A theoretical way of time-travel is using the
spacetime warping around a very massive, infinitely long cylinder
rotating near the speed of light around its axis. [Originally
described by Frank Tipler in "Rotating Cylinders and Global
Causality Violation" Physical Review D9, 2203-2206. 1974]
- Tiplerite
-
A person with religious faith in Tipler's Omega
Point Theory (So far very rare, if any). ["The Tiplerite Church"
was mentioned briefly in
The Nanotech Chronicles by Michael Flynn]
- TransArt
-
An art style that represents the
Transhumanist Arts Statement (TransArt) written in 1982. The
premiere piece was 1979 film "Breaking Away" which story line
themes human evolution in breaking away from our biological
restraints. (Filmed at Red Rocks Amphitheater, sponsored by the
University of Colorado Film Department.) [Natasha Vita-More, 1982]
- Transbiomorphosis (Transbiological
Metamorphosis)
-
The transformation of the human body from a
natural, biological organism into a superior, consciously designed
vehicle of personality. [Max More, August 1991]
- Transcend
-
To become vastly superhuman and
incomprehensible for unaugmented beings. [Vernor Vinge,
A Fire Upon the Deep, 1992]
- Transcension
-
The transition between humanity and
posthumanity. [Erik Moeller, June 1996]
- Transcient
-
A very advanced and fast being. [T. O. Morrow,
Apr 1996]
- Transclusion
-
A thing existing in more than one place at
once; virtual copying of information used in hypertext systems,
such as Xanadu. [Ted Nelson,
Byte, Sep
1990]
- Transhuman
-
Someone actively preparing for becoming
posthuman. Someone who is informed enough to see radical future
possibilities and plans ahead for them, and who takes every
current option for self-enhancement.
The Readers Digest Great Encyclopedia Dictionary (1966)
defines "transhuman" as meaning "surpassing; transcending;
beyond". In the Websters New Universal Unabridged Dictionary
(1983), "transhuman" is defined as meaning "superhuman," and
"transhumanize," meaning "to elevate or transform to something
beyond what is human". Yet, these are not a complete and
contemporary meanings.Today, we refer to transhuman as meaning an
evolutionary transition from being biologically human toward our
merger with technology, as set forth by well-known futurist
FM-2030 (f/k/a F.M. Esfandiary), as "a new kind of being
crystallizing from the monumental breakthroughs of the late
twentieth century. ... the earliest manifestations of a new
evolutionary being." [Term: FM-2030,
Are You A Transhuman?. (The word was first used in
"Transhuman 2000" by FM-2030 in Woman in the Year 2000 (Ed.
Maggie Tripp) in the 1970s, and later by Damien Broderick in
The Judas Mandala from 1982 (of which an excerpt called
"Growing Up" was published in Galileo in 1976), and Natasha
Vita-More in the
TranArt "Transhumanist Arts" Statement 1982.)
- Transhumane
-
Transhumans who emphasis on transhumanist
values and concerns, especially kindness and compassion. [Natasha
Vita-More]
- Transhumanism
-
"Philosophies of life (such as the Extropian
philosophy) that seek the continuation and acceleration of the
evolution of intelligent life beyond its currently human form and
human limitations by means of science and technology, guided by
life-promoting values." [Term and Defintion: Max More, 1990]
- Transhumanist
-
Someone actively preparing for becoming
posthuman. Someone who is informed enough to see radical future
possibilities and plans ahead for them, and who takes every
current option for self-enhancement. Term first used in "Extropy
The Journal of Transhumanist Thought" [Max More, 1989]
-
- Transhumanist Arts
-
An art period reflecting creative works of
transhumanity. Just as Modern Art represents much of the arts of
the 20th Century, Transhumanist Arts covers the arts of the late
20th Century into the 21st Century which reflects the vision of
transhumanists. [Natasha Vita-More, 1989]
- Transhumanities
-
Art, literature, and other aesthetic media for
transhumans (or transhumanists). [Mark Plus, 1990]
- Trapdoor Function
-
A function that is easily computable, but whose
inverse is very hard to compute unless an extra bit of information
is provided. The term is used in cryptography.
- Turing Machine
-
An idealized computer consisting of an infinite
tape and a read-write "head" which moves back and forth on the
tape, reading and writing, according to a rule set that refers to
i) what it sees on the tape ii) an internal "memory" state.
- Turing Test
-
Turing's proposed test for whether a machine is
conscious (or intelligent, or aware): we communicate via text with
it and with a hidden human. If we can't tell which of our partners
in dialogue is the human, we say the computer is conscious. See
The Turing Test Page for more information.
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- Ubergoo
-
A related term to grey goo, used (jokingly) to
refer to the mistaken idea that during the singularity powerful
technologies would decimate non-transhumanists, and that some
transhumanists would see this as desirable. [Dale Carrico, 1996]
- Ubiquitous Computing
-
Also known as "embodied virtuality". Computers
that are an integral, invisible part of people's lives. In some
ways the opposite of virtual reality, in which the user is
absorbed into the computational world. With ubiquitous computing,
computers take into account the human world rather than requiring
humans to enter into the computer's methods of working. [See Mark
Weiser, "The
Computer for the 21st Century".
Scientific
American, Sep 1991]
- Universal Constructor
-
A machine capable of constructing anything that
can be constructed. The physical analog of a "universal computer",
which can perform any computation.
- Universal Immortalism
-
The view that the problem of death can be
solved in its entirety (including bringing back those "dead" who
were not placed into biostasis) through a rational, scientific
approach. [R. Michael Perry, 1990]
- Universal Turing Machine
-
A 'Turing machine' with a rule set which allows
it to imitate any other Turing machine (if the rule set and the
input of the machine to be emulated are presented on the tape).
- Uplift
-
To increase the intelligence and help develop a
culture of a previously non- or near-intelligent species. [From
the
Uplift novels by David Brin]
- Uploader
-
1) A person advocating uploading. 2) a person
making an upload.
- Uploading
-
The transfer of a personality (memories,
knowledge, values, desires, etc.) from the biological human brain
to a suitable synthetic computing device in order to allow easier
upgrading of intelligence, self-modification, and backup of the
self in case of accident. See the
Mind Uploading Home Page for more information.
- Utility Fog
-
A collective of nanotechnological devices ("Foglets")
that link together into a complex network in the air, able to work
together to exert force in any direction or transmit information
between each other. This would give users almost complete control
over their environment. See Utility Fog by J. Storrs Hall, Extropy
#13 and #14. [J. Storrs Hall, 1994]
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- Vaccime
-
(pron. vak-seem) Any meta-meme which confers
resistance or immunity to one or more memes, allowing that person
to be exposed without acquiring an active infection. Also called
an 'immuno-meme'. Common immune-conferring memes are "Faith",
"Loyalty", "Skepticism", and "tolerance". See also entry in the
memetic lexicon. (Glenn M. Grant.)
- Vasten
-
To enhance one's mind strongly ("to become
vast"), related to transcending. [David Zindell,
The Broken God, 1993]
- Ve
-
Gender-neutral alternative to 'he' or 'she'.
- Venturism
-
An immortalist transhumanism founded on the
principles (1) to do what is right, understood as implying the
benefiting of intelligent life and the reduction or elimination of
abuses to the same; and (2) the advocacy and promotion of the
worldwide conquest of death through technological means. See
The Society
For Venturism. [David Pizer, 1986]
- Viewquake
-
Insights which dramatically change one's world
view. [Robin D. Hanson]
- Virion
-
1) The infectious unit of a virus. 2)
(capitalized) A carrier of the Virus meme-complex. [Duane Hewitt]
- Virtual Community
-
A community of persons not located in close
physical proximity but forming a cultural community across
computer networks.
- Virtual Retinal Displays (VRDs)
-
These are now (Jan 2002) moving from the labs
into initial industrial applications and perhaps into consumer
products. VRDs use low-power lasers to "paint" information
directly on the retina, allowing a virtual overlay to give the
appearance of a full-size monitor that could be used with tiny
portable devices. With the move from research to early uses in
medical and engineering applications, VRDs could become an
intimate and portable means of interacting with the informational
world in the next decade.
- Virtual Rights
-
Rights given for convenience to a partial;
these rights are really rights of the person whose partial it is,
rather than of the partial itself. Similar in some respects to
currently existing corporate rights. [Max More, July 1991]
- Vitology
-
The study of any life-like system, including
biology and artificial life. [Max More, Dec 1991]
- Vivisystem
-
A systems with lifelike properties
(adaptability, complexity, evolvability, resilency etc.), such as
ecosystems, alife, economies and minds. [Kevin Kelly,
Out of Control, 1994].
- Von Neumann Machine
-
A machine which is able to build a working copy
of itself using materials in its environment. This is often
proposed as a cheap way to mine or colonize the entire solar
system or galaxy. An early fictional treatment was the short story
"Autofac"
by Philip K. Dick, published in 1955, which actually seems to
precede John von Neumann's original paper about self-reproducing
machines (J. von Neumann, 1966;
The Theory of Self-reproducing Automata, A. Burks, ed.,
Univ. of Illinois Press, Urbana, IL.). See also the
John von Neumann page at Xerox.
- Von Neumann Probe
-
A von Neumann Machine able to move over
interstellar or interplanetary distances and to utilize local
materials to build new copies of itself. Such probes could be used
to set up new colonies, perform megascale engineering or explore
the universe (see the 'Far Edge Party').
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- Wetware
-
Similar to hardware, but denotes a biological
system, most commonly the human nervous system (see also dryware).
[Possible origin:
Vacuum Flowers, Michael Swanwick, 1987].
- Wormhole
-
A postulated topological structure in general
relativity, where a space-time "tunnel" links two distant points
with a shortcut. Whether they can be physically realized is not
known, and they seem to require exotic matter to be stable. If
they can exist, and can be built, they could provide a possible
way to travel faster than light (in a global sense, since locally
the travellers would move slower than light). For more
information, see
Traversable Wormholes: Some Implications, by Michael Clive
Price.
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- Xenobiology
-
The study of (possible) alien lifeforms and
their biology. Other related words are xenopsychology (the study
of alien mental processes), xenotechnology (the study of alien
technologies) and xenosociology (the study of alien societies).
[First use unknown, but the word has been extensively used in
science fiction].
- Xerophilia
-
Not from the Greek root xero, meaning "dry,"
but from the company that turned its dry-copying procedure into a
global trademark. The love of copying, and the ability of
everything to be copied. [The
500-Year Delta, Jim Taylor and Watts Wacker, 1997]
- Xox
-
(from Xerox) An (atomically) identical copy of
a person. A kind of dividual. [Tihamer Toth-Fejel, Dec 1995]
- Xoxer
-
A being who wants to create xoxes of itself. [Tihamer
Toth-Fejel, Dec 1995]
- Xenoevoluture
-
An evoluture from a planet other than Earth.
[Jay Prime Positive, Dec 1991]
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- Zero Knowledge Proof
-
An interactive or probabilistic proof that
demonstrates that one person has a certain pice of information
without revealing it. Very useful in cryptography.
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