Posted in Articles and Links

Dream a Little Lucid Dream


Dreams Communication using the Internet

Daniel Oldis, whose seminal work in the science of lucid dreams is widely quoted in academic circles writes an introduction to his acclaimed Lucid Dream Manifesto in which he suggests that a lucid dreamer can signal another dreamer using dream masks and the internet.

Check out”Sleep Stream Online” a sleep lab that is studying sleep patterns with the goal of identifying when lucid dreaming is in progress. “Brian” an engineering student at Cornell, is using “Zeo” an easily worn device that records sleep patterns and sends the data to the sleepstream program. The goal is to synchronize lucid dreamers and explore ways to communicate dreamer to dreamer. This study is inspired by Oldis’ writings. Here’s the link:

http://www.sleepstreamonline.com/

The Science of Lucid Dreams

http://www.amazon.com/Inception-Conscious-Lucid-Dreams-ebook/dp/B003VD21RS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&m=AG56TWVU5XWC2&s=books&qid=1279766830&sr=1-1

Posted in Articles and Links

Mind Uploading and Mind Children


Brainwaves
Published: July 1, 2009 | View more articles in: * Virtual Reality

There are two major questions surrounding the concept of mind uploading. There is the question of feasibility: Can we build a model of a brain complete enough to allow a conscious mind to emerge? The other question is concerned with identity. Some people argue that, if a copy of a conscious mind is identical by all measures (ignoring the fact that one is biological and the other is neuromorphic software/hardware) it should be thought of as a continuation of the mind that was mapped and uploaded. Others argue that a copy cannot be considered the same as the original, so the newly awakened consciousness must be another person.

Various attempts have been made to imagine the benefits of mind uploading. Assuming continuation of the mind, these benefits include indefinite lifespans and upgrading the mind. When your current brain no longer works well enough or not at all, you transfer your conscious mind to another (perhaps better) artificial brain. None of these benefits are tempting to those who see uploads as different people. In The Spike, Damien Broderick declared “copies are not you” and asked, “Would you be prepared to die (sacrifice your current embodiment) in order that an exact copy of yourself be reconstructed elsewhere, or on a different substrate?” He goes on to argue that this is not a procedure he would be willing to undertake. Let’s assume Broderick is right and a copy is indeed “not you.” Does it then follow that mind uploading offers no benefits?http://www.hplusmagazine.com/articles/virtual-reality/mind-uploading-and-mind-children

Gunter prepares to welcome the leader of the “Herd People,”  a holo porn king who plans to come as a god–a cigar-smoking llama.