To those who are scared ...
Think of folks back 150 or 200 years ago if we tried to explain the world today.
Oh, we have problems today that they never dreamed of back then ... crashed computers, car wrecks, plane crashes, end of life choices in hospitals, media bombardment, over fishing the oceans, high divorce rates ...
But, also think of the problems they had that we don't: Locusts, broken wagon wheels, exploding steam boats, witches (at least they thought so), dying at 35, death by bow and arrow, illiteracy (actually, much of the world is still there), needing to catch fish and whales in a little wooden boat, no need for divorce because the church forbid it (and, anyway, your wife will kick the bucket with TB in a couple of years).
We also share some problems ... racial tensions (although no civil war imminent), diseases (although we have modern hospitals to deal with it except in the third world), crazy leaders (although we have the media to tell us about it), foreign enemies ...
Got my point?
You guys are turning into the "Kids get off my lawn" grandpas and grandmas. We might actually manage to fix more than we make.
The point of my book is to ask how we might actually use some of these technologies to fix some problems (like prisons and repeat violence) that have plagued humanity for thousands of years. I think it more likely than that these tools will be used to imprison us. We might actually find ways to restore the environment, cure some congenital diseases.
Relax. Your kids and their kids might actually have a chance to live 150 or 200 years of lifespan, maybe longer, with the body of a 20 year old. No kidding.
Buddha said that samsara, this crazy world we live in, would never be perfect. However, he never said that we could not make it better.
Gassho, J
STLah
Think of folks back 150 or 200 years ago if we tried to explain the world today.
Oh, we have problems today that they never dreamed of back then ... crashed computers, car wrecks, plane crashes, end of life choices in hospitals, media bombardment, over fishing the oceans, high divorce rates ...
But, also think of the problems they had that we don't: Locusts, broken wagon wheels, exploding steam boats, witches (at least they thought so), dying at 35, death by bow and arrow, illiteracy (actually, much of the world is still there), needing to catch fish and whales in a little wooden boat, no need for divorce because the church forbid it (and, anyway, your wife will kick the bucket with TB in a couple of years).
We also share some problems ... racial tensions (although no civil war imminent), diseases (although we have modern hospitals to deal with it except in the third world), crazy leaders (although we have the media to tell us about it), foreign enemies ...
Got my point?
You guys are turning into the "Kids get off my lawn" grandpas and grandmas. We might actually manage to fix more than we make.
The point of my book is to ask how we might actually use some of these technologies to fix some problems (like prisons and repeat violence) that have plagued humanity for thousands of years. I think it more likely than that these tools will be used to imprison us. We might actually find ways to restore the environment, cure some congenital diseases.
Relax. Your kids and their kids might actually have a chance to live 150 or 200 years of lifespan, maybe longer, with the body of a 20 year old. No kidding.
Buddha said that samsara, this crazy world we live in, would never be perfect. However, he never said that we could not make it better.
Gassho, J
STLah
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