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- From: habs@acf3.nyu.edu (Harry A. B. Shapiro)
- Subject: Extropians Welcome Message
- Message-ID: <BzsKqJ.29s@cmcl2.nyu.edu>
- Summary: FYI, a copy of the lastest Extropians Welcome msg
- Keywords: ExI Extropy Welcome FYI
- Sender: notes@cmcl2.nyu.edu (Notes Person)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: acf3.nyu.edu
- Organization: New York University
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 1992 01:42:18 GMT
- Lines: 661
-
- For those on bit.listserv.xtropy-l who are intersted in keeping
- current with the extropian@gnu.ai.mit.edu mailing list, I
- am in this post, forwarding a copy of our current welcome message.
-
- This message is copyleft and maybe free distributed. It contains
- a bit about the list, our rules, Max's 2.01 version of the ExI
- Prin. and a suggested reading list.
-
- Thanks for your time,
- /Harry
- --begin welcome--
- In response to your request, your address has been added to the
- Extropians mailing list. Welcome! I hope you will find the
- information you receive through the list to be useful and
- enlightening, or at least amusing and harmless.
-
- The unifying characteristic of the list recipients is their interest
- in libertarian politics, and techniques of life extension (including
- cryonics), the technological extension of human intelligence and
- perception, nanotechnology, spontaneous orders, memetics, and a number
- of other related ideas. We are also interested in the relationship
- between the previous ideas. If these topics seem to you to be
- naturally related and mutually consistent, you might already be an
- Extropian.
-
- This list is considered private. That means that we have a number of
- rules about how you may use material you get from your membership to
- the list, and how you interact with the list. Your continued
- subscription indicates your acceptance of these rules. In Extropian
- terms, this list is governed by a poly-centric legal code [Or a
- Privately Produced Law (PPL). While the having such detailed rules may
- seem odd or even strange to you, the code/rules are used here for
- three (3) reasons.
-
- 1) I believe in testing Extropian Theory. The use of a poly-centric
- legal code for this list is such a test.
-
- 2) Various Extropians place different property values on what they
- write. Some wish to retain all rights to the material, others wish to
- make their posts freely available. The rules will hopefully insure
- that everyone's material will be treated in the manner they desire.
-
- 3) People time is valuable and to keep as many people active and
- reading the list as possible, we need to respect them by keeping
- the signal to noise ratio as high as possible.
-
- I suggest you read the postings for a while before you begin to post.
- In that way you will have a better idea of how the list works. Also
- topics vary from week to week, and month to month; sometimes we are
- very technical other times very political.
-
- Please note, again, that communication to the Extropian mailing list
- is *private*. It must *not* be forwarded to third parties and each
- reader of the list must have an active subscription or be registered
- with the list administrator. You are welcome to keep archival copies
- of list traffic you receive for personal use.
-
- 1) Formal complaints and administrative requests MUST be sent to:
-
- Extropians-request@gnu.ai.mit.edu
-
- To join or discontinue the digest version send a request to:
-
- exi-daily-request@gnu.ai.mit.edu
-
- To join or discontinue the real time version send a request to:
-
- Extropians-request@gnu.ai.mit.edu
-
- 1a) Please allow up to 3 to 5 business days for your requests to
- be processed. Please note most requests are handled with 12 to 32
- hours. The handling of requests on the days just prior to and after
- holidays maybe completely deferred or greatly delayed.
-
- 2a) Mail to the list should be sent to:
-
- extropians@gnu.ai.mit.edu
-
- 2b) The software that processes traffic on the list alters the mail headers
- so that all correctly working mail readers will automatically address
- replies BACK to the LIST. [reply-to: extropians@gnu.ai.mit.edu]
-
- 2c) If you want to reply to an individual poster you should manually address
- a reply. If the post does not have a signature line, viewing the message
- in a text editor should help you determine the senderâ•’s address.
-
- 2d) It is strongly recommend but not required that all list members use a
- signature file containing their e-mail address.
-
- 3) Due to the volume of list traffic and the cost of disk
- storage, please restrain yourself also from over-quoting
- previous posts -- just a couple of lines to re-cap for those
- who weren't paying attention is usually sufficient.
-
- 4) The list is conceived more as a forum for the exchange of new
- information and techniques, than as a forum for debating the
- basics. We do have our disagreements -- often quite lively
- ones -- but rarely about really basic issues. Arguments in
- favor of socialized medicine or dying a natural death at age
- sixty are, judging by past experience, likely to be
- refuted, and finally ignored.
-
- 5) Traffic on this mailing list can run quite high, sometimes more
- than fifty messages per day. We like to keep the signal-
- to-noise ratio as high as we can, so please restrain the
- impulse to post "me-too" messages or ad hominem flames to the
- list at large. If you cannot resist engaging in such
- discourse, please do so in private e-mail.
-
- 5b) Posts about the list, or its rules, MUST have the pre-fix "meta"
- Post about should have a prefix indicating their contents
- examples include, PHIL, MATH, SCI, CHAT, etc.
-
- 5c) Several times a year ExI may hold on-line pledge drives,
- these posts will have the "PLEDGE" prefix.
-
- 5d) Polls being submitted to list members will have the "POLL"
- prefix.
-
- 5e) Use your imagination and define your own meaningful prefixes.
-
- 5f)Rules about fighting and insulting; fighting and insulting
- are not allowed are not allowed
- 5g) If someone starts a fight with you what should you do ?; we have a
- private legal code set-up to handle such disputes which includes a
- judge (me) and a adjudicator to handle appeals
-
- any of the following)
- 1) Nothing - give no response
- 2) Respond OFF the list
- 5) Make a formal complaint to me asking for
- a judgment against Person X
-
- 5h) What if you just have to respond to "up hold your honor" or to set
- the "facts/record straight," or to tell the entire list why you
- will not be speaking or reading posts or messages from the person who
- offended you.
-
- D O N ' T; we consider such responses flames in their own right and
- you would be taking the law into your own hands; you might also be
- censured
- or removed from the list.
-
-
- Remember
- Don't contribute to or continue a fight once one has started.
- doing so places you in violation of the list rules. That includes
- meta communication, which includes posts with an angry tone, or voice.
-
- 6) However, don't be afraid to ask questions. This is a forum
- for the interchange of information... speak up! Many of the
- answers, though, can be found in just a handful of books:
-
- "Engines of Creation" and "Unbounding the Future" by K.
- Eric Drexler
- "The Machinery of Freedom" by David Friedman
- "Smart Drugs and Nutrients" by John Morgenthaler and Ward
- Dean
- "Maximum Life Span" and "The 120-Year Diet" by Roy Walford
- "Life Extension: A Practical Scientific Approach" by Durk
- Pearson and Sandy Shaw
- "The Selfish Gene," "The Extended Phenotype," and "The Blind
- Watchmaker" by Richard Dawkins
-
- in EXTROPY magazine,
- Rates as of 1/1/93
- Extropy
- P.O. Box 57306,
- Los Angeles, CA 90057-0306.
- Tel: 213-484-6383
-
- Internet: more@usc.edu
- SUBSCRIPTION RATES for a year/three issues:
- USA: $13.50 ($30 institutions)
- Canada and Mexico: $15 (Institutions $33)
- Overseas: $22 (airmail) $16 (surface) (Institutions $45)
- BACK ISSUES: #9, 8, 7, $4.50; #6: #1, 2, 4,, 5, 6: $4.
-
- and in our Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) list, which will be
- available eventually.
-
- With regard to "required reading," list member Hal Finney makes
- the following worthwhile points:
-
- "I disagree that familiarity with Eric Drexler's books on
- nanotechnology is necessary before beginning discussions on this list.
-
- "Extropianism is a philosophy of life. Max More, editor of Extropy
- the journal of transhuman thought, has identified five Extropian
- principles:
-
- - Boundless Expansion
- - Self Transformation
- - Dynamic Optimism
- - Intelligent Technology
- - Spontaneous Order
-
- You should join the Extropy Institute at $30 per year (Students $25),
- $40 (overseas) which includes a subscription to Extropy.
-
- "But I think you can see that the basic point is a belief that the
- future will allow virtually unlimited expansion in the possibilities
- for our own personal lives. Extropians reject limits imposed by
- outsiders on what we can do and what we can become. We embrace the
- future, with all of its awe-inspiring possibilities.
-
- "The role of Drexler's books, and other books such as David Friedman's
- "The Machinery of Freedom", is to show that these aren't just idle
- musings and hopes, but are well-grounded expectations about what we
- are going to have to work with in the next century. Without having
- read those books, such common-place Extropian ideas as immortality or
- a world without governments might seem absurd.
-
- "If you haven't read these books but want to ask questions about these
- and other Extropian ideas, the problem is that the answer is usually
- going to be, first read the book. You can't answer a question about
- the possibility for immortality in a page or two, not in any kind of
- convincing way.
-
- "Now, after you've read some of these books, you still may not agree
- that all of these ideas are practical, but at least you can discuss
- them on common ground with other list members. That kind of
- discussion is practical, helpful, and informative. Extropians are not
- dogmatists. If there are practical problems standing in the way of
- the realization of their hopes and ideals, we should be discussing
- them now, so that solutions can be found.
-
- "Of course, some people will be opposed to Extropian ideas not because
- they seem impractical, but because they seem immoral. Re-read the list
- of Extropian principles above. If you don't agree with them, if you
- don't agree that we should attempt to break through all the limits
- that constrain us today, then you probably won't benefit from
- discussion with Extropians.
-
- "The Extropian list is not meant to proselytize, to gain converts.
- Most people either find the ideas instinctively attractive, or they
- find them abhorrent. It's a waste of everyone's time to come on the
- list and to argue that governments are really good for us and that
- death is desirable. Those are the kinds of messages that lead to
- serious flaming, and no one benefits from them.
-
- "To sum up, the Extropians lists welcome members who share an interest
- in the exciting, optimistic, future-oriented philosophy of
- Extropianism. If you're new to these ideas, they can offer
- suggestions to help you find books, authors, and other resources to
- learn more about what we can and will become. If you're more
- experienced, they offer discussion and feedback with a high level of
- quality and responsiveness. The future is coming, and the Extropian
- lists offer you a chance to get ready for the fantastic opportunities
- that await us all."
-
- There are two other "official" Extropian communication activities.
-
- There is now the ExI Essay list. It is dedicated to the presentation
- of essays, monographs, reviews, abstracts and details of current
- research, etc. Posts are expected to be scholarly, academic, or at
- least well thought-out within the frame work of Extropian principles
- (see below) Original research is especially welcome. It is very low
- volume. Subscriptions can be made by sending a request to:
- exi-essay-request@gnu.ai.mit.edu
-
- There is now a private exi conf. on the Well. If you are a member of
- the Well send mail to habs for entry to the conference. This
- conference contains all the posts made to the essay list. It is also
- used for discussing Extropian topics. It is just getting off the
- ground.
-
- End quote. Hope you have a pleasant stay.
-
- Harry Shapiro
- Manager of the Extropian Mailing List
-
- The ExI-Essay mailing list is made possible by the generosity of the
- Free Software Foundation, which is *not* responsible for its content.
-
- ____ Here are the Extropian Principles version 2.01 _____
-
-
- THE EXTROPIAN PRINCIPLES V. 2.01 August 7 1992
-
- Max More Executive Director, Extropy Institute
-
- 1. BOUNDLESS EXPANSION - Seeking more intelligence, wisdom, and
- personal power, an unlimited life span, and removal of natural, social,
- biological, and psychological limits to self-actualization and
- self-realization. Overcoming limits on our personal and social
- progress and possibilities. Expansion into the universe and infinite
- existence.
-
- 2. SELF-TRANSFORMATION - A commitment to continual moral,
- intellectual, and physical self-improvement, using reason and critical
- thinking, personal responsibility, and experimentation. Biological and
- neurological augmentation.
-
- 3. INTELLIGENT TECHNOLOGY - Applying science and technology to
- transcend "natural" limits imposed by our biological heritage and
- environment.
-
- 4. SPONTANEOUS ORDER - Promotion of decentralized, voluntaristic
- social coordination mechanisms. Fostering of tolerance, diversity,
- long-term planning, individual incentives and personal liberties.
-
- 5. DYNAMIC OPTIMISM - Positive expectations to fuel dynamic action.
- Promotion of a positive, empowering attitude towards our individual
- future and that of all intelligent beings. Rejection both of blind
- faith and stagnant pessimism.
-
- These principles are further explicated below. In depth treatments can
- be found in various issues of EXTROPY: The Journal of Transhumanist
- Thought. (Spontaneous Order in #7, Dynamic Optimism in #8, and
- Self-Transformation in the forthcoming #10.)
-
-
- 1. BOUNDLESS EXPANSION
- Beginning as mindless matter, parts of nature developed in a
- slow evolutionary advance which produced progressively more powerful
- brains. Chemical reactions generated tropistic behavior, which was
- superseded by instinctual and Skinnerian stimulus-response behavior,
- and then by conscious learning and experimentation. With the advent of
- the conceptual consciousness of humankind, the rate of advancement
- sharply accelerated as intelligence, technology, and the scientific
- method could be applied to our condition. Extropians seek the
- continuation and fostering of this process, transcending biological
- and psychological limits as we proceed into posthumanity.
- In aspiring to transhumanity, and beyond to posthumanity, we
- reject natural and traditional limitations on our possibilities. We
- champion the rational use of science and technology to void limits on
- life span, intelligence, personal power, freedom, and experience. We
- are immortalists because we recognize the absurdity of accepting
- "natural" limits to our lives. For many the future will bring an
- exodus from Earth - the womb of human and transhuman intelligence -
- expanding the frontiers of humanity (and posthumanity) to include
- space habitats, other planets and this solar system, neighboring
- systems, and beyond. By the end of the 21st Century, more people may
- be living off-planet than on Earth
- Resource limits are not immutable. The market price system
- encourages conservation, substitution and innovation, preventing any
- need for a brake on growth and progress. Expansion into space will
- vastly expand the energy and resources for our civilization. Living
- extended transhuman lifespans will foster intelligent use of resources
- and environment. Extropians affirm a rational, market-mediated
- environmentalism aimed at maintaining and enhancing our biospheres
- (whether terrestrial or extra-terrestrial). We oppose apocalyptic
- environmentalism, which hallucinates catastrophes, issues a stream of
- doomsday predictions, and attempts to strangle our continued
- evolution.
- No mysteries are sacrosanct, no limits unquestionable; the
- unknown must yield to the intelligent mind. We seek to understand and
- to master reality up to and beyond any currently foreseen limits.
-
-
- 2. SELF-TRANSFORMATION
-
- We affirm reason, critical inquiry, intellectual independence,
- and intellectual honesty. We reject blind faith and passive,
- comfortable thinking that leads to dogmatism, religion, and
- conformity. A commitment to positive self-transformation requires us
- to critically analyze our current beliefs, behaviors, and strategies.
- Extropians therefore choose to place their self-value in continued
- development rather than "being right". We prefer analytical thought to
- fuzzy but comfortable delusion, empiricism to mysticism, and
- independent evaluation to conformity. Extropians affirm a philosophy
- of life but distance themselves from religious thinking because of its
- blind faith, debasement of human dignity, and systematized
- irrationality.
- Perpetual self-improvement - physical, intellectual,
- psychological, and ethical - requires us to continually re-examine our
- lives. Extropians seek to better themselves, yet without denying their
- current worth. The desire to improve should not be confused with the
- belief that one is lacking in current value. But valuing oneself in
- the present cannot mean self-satisfaction, since an intelligent and
- probing mind can always envisage a superior self in the future.
- Extropians are committed to expanding wisdom, fine-tuning
- understanding of rational behavior, and enhancing physical and
- intellectual capacities.
- Extropians are neophiles and experimentalists. We are
- neophiles because we track the latest research for more efficient
- means of achieving our goals. We are experimentalists because we are
- willing to explore and test the novel means of self-transformation
- that we uncover. In our quest for advancement to the tranhuman stage,
- we rely on our own judgment, seek our own path, and reject both blind
- conformity and mindless rebellion. Extropians frequently diverge from
- the mainstream because they do not allow themselves to be chained by
- dogmas, whether religious, political, or social. Extropians choose
- their values and behavior reflexively, standing firm when required
- but responding flexibly to novel conditions.
- Personal responsibility and self-determination goes
- hand-in-hand with neophilic self-experimentation. Extropians take
- responsibility for the consequences of our choices, refusing to blame
- others for the risks involved in our free choices. Experimentation and
- self-transformation require risks; Extropians wish to be free to
- evaluate the risks and potential benefits for ourselves, applying our
- own judgment and wisdom, and assuming responsibility for the outcome.
- We neither wish others to force standards upon us through legal
- regulation, nor do we wish to force others to follow our path.
- Personal-responsibility and self-determination are incompatible with
- authoritarian centralized control, which stifles the free choices and
- spontaneous ordering of autonomous persons.
- External coercion, whether for the purported "good of the
- whole" or the paternalistic protection of the individual, is
- unacceptable to us. Compulsion breeds ignorance and weakens the
- connection between personal choice and personal outcome, thereby
- destroying personal responsibility. The proliferation of outrageous
- liability lawsuits, governmental safety regulations, and the
- rights-destroying drug war result from ignoring these facts of life.
- Extropians are rational individualists, living by their own judgment,
- making critical, informed, and free choices, and accepting
- responsibility for those choices.
- As neophiles, Extropians study advanced, emerging, and future
- technologies for their self-transformative potential in enhancing our
- abilities and freedom. We support biomedical research with the goal of
- understanding and controlling the aging process. We are interested in
- any plausible means of conquering death, including interim measures
- like biostasis/cryonics, and long-term possibilities such as migration
- out of biological bodies into superior vehicles ("uploading").
- We practice and plan for biological and neurological
- augmentation through means such as effective cognitive enhancers or
- "smart drugs", computers and electronic networks, General Semantics
- and other guides to effective thinking, meditation and visualization
- techniques, accelerated learning strategies, and applied cognitive
- psychology, and soon neural-computer integration. We do not accept the
- limits imposed on us by our natural heritage, instead we apply the
- evolutionary gift of our rational, empirical intelligence in order to
- surpass human limits and enter the transhuman and posthuman stages of
- the future.
-
-
- 3. INTELLIGENT TECHNOLOGY
- Extropians do not denigrate technology, no matter how
- radically different from historical norms, as "unnatural". The term
- `natural' is largely devoid of meaning. We might say that any
- technological means of altering the environment or the human body is
- unnatural since it changes the previously existing state of nature.
- But we can also say that applying our intelligence through technology
- is natural to humans, and so changing both outside nature and our own
- biological nature can be regarded as natural.
- Extropians affirm the necessity and desirability of science
- and technology. Practical means should be used to promote our goals of
- immortality, expanding intelligence, and greater physical abilities,
- rather than the wishful thinking, ignorant mysticism, and credulity,
- so common to the New Agers. Science and technology, as disciplined
- forms of intelligence, should be fostered, and we should seek to
- employ them in eradicating the limits to our Extropian visions.
- We do not share common cultural fears of technology, such as
- those embodied in the story of Frankenstein and the myth of the Tower
- of Babel. We favor careful and cautious development of powerful
- technologies, but refuse to attempt to stifle development on the basis
- of fear of the unknown. Extropians therefore oppose the anti-human
- "Back to the Pleistocene", anti-civilization rhetoric of the extreme
- environmentalists. Going backwards means death for billions and
- stagnation and oppression for the rest. Intelligent use of
- biotechnology, nanotechnology, space and other technologies, in
- conjunction with a market system, can remove resource constraints and
- discharge environmental pressures.
- We see technological development not as an end in itself, but
- as a means to the achievement and development of our values, ideals
- and visions. We seek to employ science and technology to remove limits
- to growth, and to radically transform both the internal and external
- conditions of existence.
- We see the coming years and decades as being a time of
- enormous changes, changes which will vastly expand our opportunities,
- our freedom, and our abilities. Genetic engineering, interventive
- gerontology (life extension), space migration, smart drugs, more
- powerful computers and smarter programming, neural-computer
- interfaces, virtual reality, swift electronic communications,
- artificial intelligence, neural networks, artificial life,
- neuroscience, and nanotechnology will contribute to accelerating
- change.
-
-
- 4. SPONTANEOUS ORDER
- Spontaneous orders are self-generating, organic orders and
- differ from constructed, centrally directed orders. Both types of
- order have their place, but spontaneous orders are vital in our social
- interactions. Spontaneous orders have properties that make them
- especially conducive to Extropian goals and values and spontaneous
- ordering processes can be found at work in many fields. The evolution
- of complex biological forms is one example; others include the
- adjustment of ecosystems, artificial life demonstrations, memetics
- (the study of replicating information patterns), computational markets
- (agoric open systems), brain function and neurocomputation,
- The principle of spontaneous order is embodied in the free
- market system - a system that does not yet exist in a pure form. The
- free market allows complex institutions to develop, encourages
- innovation, rewards individual initiative and reinforces personal
- responsibility, fosters diversity, and safeguards political freedom.
- Market economies ensure the technological and social progress
- essential to the Extropian philosophy. We reject the technocratic idea
- of central control by self-proclaimed experts. No group of experts can
- understand and control the endless complexity of an economy and
- society. Expert knowledge is best harnessed and transmitted through
- the superbly efficient mediation of the free market's price signals -
- signals that embody more information than any person or group could
- ever gather.
- Sustained progress and intelligent, rational decision-making
- requires the diverse sources of information and differing perspectives
- made possible by spontaneous orders. Central direction constrains
- exploration, diversity, freedom, and dissenting opinion. Respecting
- spontaneous order means supporting voluntaristic, autonomy-maximizing
- institutions as opposed to rigidly hierarchical, authoritarian
- groupings with their bureaucratic structure, suppression of innovation
- and diversity, and smothering of individual incentives. Understanding
- spontaneous orders makes us highly suspicious of "authorities" where
- these are imposed on us, and skeptical of coercive leaders,
- unquestioning obedience, and unexamined traditions.
- Making effective use of a spontaneously ordering social system
- requires us to be tolerant and peaceful, allowing others to pursue
- their lives as they see fit, just as we expect to be left to follow
- our own paths. We can best achieve mutual progress by interacting
- cooperatively and benevolently toward all who do not threaten our
- lives, and by supporting diversity of opinion and behavior. Respecting
- diversity and disagreement requires us to maintain control of our
- impulses and to uphold high standards of rational personal behavior.
- Extropians are guided in their actions by studying the fields of
- strategy, decision theory and game theory. These make clear to us the
- benefits of cooperation and encourage the long-term thinking
- appropriate to persons seeking an unlimited life span.
-
-
-
- 5. DYNAMIC OPTIMISM
- We espouse a positive, dynamic, empowering attitude. To
- successfully pursue our values and live our lives we must reject
- gloom, defeatism, and the common cultural focus on negatives. Problems
- - technical, social, psychological, ecological - should be
- acknowledged but not allowed to dominate our thinking and our
- direction. We respond to gloom and nay-saying by exploration and
- promotion of new possibilities. Extropians hold to both short and
- long-term optimism: In the short term we can cultivate our lives and
- enhance ourselves; in the long term the positive potentials for
- intelligent beings are virtually limitless.
- We question limits that others take for granted. We look at
- the acceleration in scientific and technical knowledge, ascending
- standards of living, and social and moral evolution and project
- further advances. More researchers today than in all past history
- strive to understand aging, control disease, upgrade computers, and
- develop biotechnology and nanotechnology. Technological and social
- evolution continue to accelerate, leading, some of us expect, to a
- Singularity - a future time when many of the rules of life will so
- radically diverge from those familiar to us, and progress will be so
- rapid, that we cannot now comprehend that time. Extropians will
- maintain the acceleration of progress and encourage it in beneficial
- directions.
- Adopting dynamic optimism means focusing on possibilities and
- opportunities, and being alert to solutions and potentialities. And it
- means refusing to whine about what cannot be avoided, learning from
- mistakes rather than dwelling on them in a victimizing, punishing
- manner. Dynamic optimism requires us to take the initiative, to jump
- up and plough into our difficulties with an attitude that says we can
- achieve our goals, rather than to sit back and immerse ourselves in
- defeatist thinking.
- Dynamic optimism is not compatible with passive faith. Faith
- in a better future is confidence that an external force, whether God,
- State or society, will solve our problems. Faith, or the Polyanna/Dr.
- Pangloss variety of optimism, breeds passivity by encouraging the
- belief that progress will be effected by others. Faith requires a
- determined belief in external forces and so encourages dogmatism and
- irrational rigidity of belief and behavior. Dynamic optimism fosters
- activity and intelligence, telling us that we are capable of improving
- life through our own efforts. Opportunities and possibilities are
- everywhere, waiting for us to seize them and create new ones. To
- achieve our goals, we must believe in ourselves, work hard, and be
- open to revise our strategies.
- Where others see difficulties, we see challenges. Where others
- give up, we move forward. Where others say enough is enough, we say:
- Forward! Upward! Outward! We espouse personal, social, and
- technological evolution into ever higher forms. Extropians see too far
- and change too rapidly to feel future shock. Let us advance the wave
- of evolutionary progress.
-
-
- Extropianism is a Transhumanist philosophy: Like humanism it
- values reason and sees no ground for believing in supernatural
- external forces controlling our destiny. But transhumanism goes
- further in calling us to push beyond the simply human stage of
- evolution. As physicist Freeman Dyson said: "Humanity looks to me like
- a magnificent beginning but not the final word." Religion has
- traditionally provided a sense of meaning and purpose in life, but it
- also suppressed intelligence and stifled progress. The Extropian
- philosophy provides an inspiring and uplifting meaning and direction
- to our individual and social existence, while remaining flexible and
- firmly founded in science, reason, and the boundless search for
- improvement.
-
- READINGS
- These books are listed because they embody Extropian ideas.
- However, appearance on this list should not be taken to imply full
- agreement of the author with the Extropian Principles, or vice versa.
-
-
- Harry Browne: How I Found Freedom in An Unfree World
- Paul M. Churchland: Matter and Consciousness
- Paul M. Churchland: A Neurocomputational Perspective
- Mike Darwin &
- Brian Wowk: Cryonics: Reaching For Tomorrow
- Richard Dawkins: The Selfish Gene
- The Blind Watchmaker
- The Extended Phenotype
- Ward Dean and
- John Morgenthaler: Smart Drugs and Nutrients
- Freeman Dyson: Infinite in all Directions
- K. Eric Drexler: Engines of Creation
- Nanosystems: Molecular, Machinery,
- Manufacturing, and Computation
- K. Eric Drexler, C. Peterson
- with Gayle Pergamit: Unbounding the Future: The Nanotechnology
- Revolution
- Robert Ettinger: The Prospect of Immortality
- Man Into Superman
- F.M. Esfandiary: Optimism One
- Up-Wingers
- Telespheres
- FM-2030: Are You A Transhuman?
- Grant Fjermedal: The Tomorrow Makers
- David Friedman: The Machinery of Freedom
- David Gauthier: Morals By Agreement
- Alan Harrington: The Immortalist
- Timothy Leary: Info-Psychology
- J.L. Mackie: The Miracle of Theism
- Hans Moravec: Mind Children: The Future of Human and
- Robotic Intelligence
- Jan Narveson: The Libertarian Idea
- Jerry Pournelle: A Step Farther Out
- Ilya Prigogine and
- Isabelle Stengers: Order Out of Chaos
- W. Duncan Reekie: Markets, Entrenpreneurs and Liberty
- Ed Regis: Great Mambo Chicken and the
- Transhuman Condition
-
- Albert Rosenfeld: Prolongevity II
- Julian Simon: The Ultimate Resource
- Julian Simon and
- Herman Kahn (eds): The Resourceful Earth
- Alvin Toffler: Powershift
- Robert Anton Wilson: Prometheus Rising
- The New Inquisition
- Ronald Hamowy The Scottish Enlightenment and the
- Theory of Spontaneous Order
- Michael Rothschild Bionomics
-
- Fiction:
- Roger MacBride Allen: The Modular Man
- Robert Heinlein: Methusaleh's Children
- Time Enough for Love
- James P. Hogan: Voyage To Yesteryear
- Charles Platt: The Silicon Man
- Ayn Rand: Atlas Shrugged
- Robert Shea and
- Robert Anton Wilson: Illuminatus! (3 vols.)
- L. Neil Smith: The Probability Breach
- Bruce Sterling: Schizmatrix
- Marc Stiegler: The Gentle Seduction.
- Vernor Vinge: True Names
- "The Ungoverned" in True Names...
- and Other Dangers
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- --
- habs@acf3.NYU.EDU
- habs@gnu.ai.mit.edu
- habs@well.sf.ca.us
- habs@panix.com
-