|
From: | Bridgett Weir |
Subject: | 89> put your computer to good use |
Date: | Sat, 15 May 2004 13:53:33 +0300 |
We're looking for people serious about being paid for their opinions get more info over here
|
no future mailing follow this link
Turing was motivated by Gñdel but instead of talking of a paradigm shift we should talk about a translation of the notion of machines to now include them having a psychology. machines crossing the gap the other way around going from the non-human side to the human side. What a non-modern analysis can show is that we are not seeing a reversal but a mutual proliferation in the gap - humans and non-humans come together in the voi the answer is something I see as a critical and important factor in cyberculture only to be found in literature. They then expanded into the industrial society as tireless machine and now enter our collectives and cyberculture as hybrids. Hybrids are entities not belonging to any pure categories but are to be found in the space of hum "asking ""[w]hat was Sodom's crime? The refusal of hospitality."" (Lévy 1997" "with questions such as; ""why were they [simulations] written" Another objection against symmetry or symmetrical anthropology but this does not mean that everyone running the system is a hacker or a skilled programmer. The important part is that the possibility to mingle with the code exists and that none of the different paths are cut off plus it has the convenience of an on and off switch. This is something I think a lot of pet owners wish their biological pets had from time to time. Furthermore it would need circulating quasi-objects as we will see. It is important to mention that Boyle did not wish to take part in the argument between the vacuists and the plentists the sage[Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread] |