Join the conversation on Discord!
May 14, 2024

S6E7 - The Future of Humanity: Prelude

Wanna chat about the episode? Or just hang out?   --- To be what you want to be: isn't this the essence of being human? - David Zindell   Chris and Kayla take the next steps on the path of the unfolding season...and the unfolding of...

Wanna chat about the episode? Or just hang out?

Come join us on discord!

 

---

To be what you want to be: isn't this the essence of being human?
- David Zindell

 

Chris and Kayla take the next steps on the path of the unfolding season...and the unfolding of humanity's future.

 

---

*Search Categories*

Science / Pseudoscience; Common interest / Fandom

 

---

*Topic Spoiler*

Transhumanism

 

---

Further Reading

https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/social-sciences/transhumanism#:~:text=Transhumanism%20is%20the%20position%20that,capacities%20beyond%20current%20biological%20constraints.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transhumanism

https://www.humanityplus.org/transhumanism

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_More

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FM-2030

https://organicmachinecmp.home.blog/2019/04/10/transhumanism/

https://nickbostrom.com/papers/history.pdf

https://www.amazon.com/Singularity-Near-Humans-Transcend-Biology/dp/0670033847

 

---

*Patreon Credits*

Michaela Evans, Heather Aunspach, Alyssa Ottum, David Whiteside, Jade A, amy sarah marshall, Martina Dobson, Eillie Anzilotti, Lewis Brown, Kelly Smith Upton, Wild Hunt Alex, Niklas Brock

<<>>

Jenny Lamb, Matthew Walden, Rebecca Kirsch, Pam Westergard, Ryan Quinn, Paul Sweeney, Erin Bratu, Liz T, Lianne Cole, Samantha Bayliff, Katie Larimer, Fio H, Jessica Senk, Proper Gander, Nancy Carlson, Carly Westergard-Dobson, banana, Megan Blackburn, Instantly Joy, Athena of CaveSystem, John Grelish, Rose Kerchinske, Annika Ramen, Alicia Smith, Kevin, Velm, Dan Malmud, tiny, Dom, Tribe Label - Panda - Austin, Noelle Hoover, Tesa Hamilton, Nicole Carter, Paige, Brian Lancaster, tiny

Transcript
1
00:00:00,440 --> 00:00:34,030
Kayla: We use technology like, that's what. That's what makes us human. That's what separates us, quote unquote, from other animals. Most other animals do not develop with technology in this way. They can use rudimentary technology, like the crows with the sticks or whatever, but they're not doing what we're doing. Welcome to Cult or. Just. I'm Kayla. I'm a writer.

2
00:00:34,370 --> 00:00:40,946
Chris: I'm Chris. I'm a game designer and data scientist. And after last episode, I guess I'm terrified of death now. Thanks, Kayla.

3
00:00:41,018 --> 00:00:44,850
Kayla: In my notes, I put as your voice, I'm Chris. I'm a butt.

4
00:00:45,010 --> 00:00:46,050
Chris: So I'm a butt.

5
00:00:46,090 --> 00:00:46,682
Kayla: I'm a butt.

6
00:00:46,746 --> 00:00:47,946
Chris: Why did you put that in your notes?

7
00:00:48,018 --> 00:00:49,030
Kayla: It was funny.

8
00:00:49,890 --> 00:00:53,434
Chris: Okay, so on a script that nobody was gonna see unless you said something.

9
00:00:53,522 --> 00:00:55,282
Kayla: Well, usually we share it with our Patreon.

10
00:00:55,346 --> 00:00:57,538
Chris: Oh, that's true. Was this a lead into.

11
00:00:57,674 --> 00:01:07,292
Kayla: It wasn't, but now it's. If you would like to see the screen where I called Chris a butt in his own voice, you can find us and support the show@patreon.com. Cult or Just Weird.

12
00:01:07,356 --> 00:01:12,540
Chris: Wow, that's gonna be so valuable one day. Even though it's on the cloud and available to anyone that really wants it.

13
00:01:12,580 --> 00:01:21,988
Kayla: Any hackers that want to hack into my Google Drive. If you want to talk to other weirdos about cults and how much of a butt Chris is, you can join us on discord. Links are in the show notes.

14
00:01:22,004 --> 00:01:23,116
Chris: That's not what the discord's for.

15
00:01:23,188 --> 00:01:27,494
Kayla: Discord is now an all butts, all the time place. God damn it.

16
00:01:27,662 --> 00:01:33,690
Chris: So, literally, we made a community where the purpose is to make fun of me. Is that what happened?

17
00:01:34,150 --> 00:01:37,094
Kayla: I mean, if I'm involved, yeah, I.

18
00:01:37,102 --> 00:01:38,110
Chris: Guess that's what our marriage is.

19
00:01:38,150 --> 00:02:01,652
Kayla: I love you. So, Chris, we are basically kicking off a new topic today. We covered cryonics over a five episode run. We had our. We got waylaid with terror management theory to kind of underpin the rest of the season. And we are about to launch into another slew of episodes on cult or just weird one we've wanted to cover on the show, I think, for a long time.

20
00:02:01,836 --> 00:02:07,932
Chris: I love all your emotion related words waylaid. And now we're gonna launch. It's very dynamic wording.

21
00:02:07,996 --> 00:02:15,044
Kayla: We are launching into transhumanism. But before we get into that, I have a question for you.

22
00:02:15,172 --> 00:02:16,572
Chris: You always have a question for me.

23
00:02:16,636 --> 00:02:27,994
Kayla: Has medical technology ever improved your natural human state? And if so, in what ways? And if you can't think of any, I have let me give you one. Let me start you off. Let me start you off.

24
00:02:28,082 --> 00:02:28,690
Chris: Sure.

25
00:02:28,850 --> 00:02:29,666
Kayla: Braces.

26
00:02:29,858 --> 00:02:31,978
Chris: Yeah. I'm currently wearing a retainer.

27
00:02:32,034 --> 00:02:37,434
Kayla: You have a permanent retainer implanted into your gum line. You have a metal retainer.

28
00:02:37,482 --> 00:02:39,430
Chris: It's in the back of my bottom teeth. Yeah.

29
00:02:40,010 --> 00:02:45,922
Kayla: A metal implant in your mouth to permanently fix your teeth into better placement than the natural position they had before.

30
00:02:46,026 --> 00:02:47,266
Chris: I'm transhuman, bro.

31
00:02:47,338 --> 00:02:50,690
Kayla: I say that's transhuman for myself. I wear glasses in contacts.

32
00:02:50,730 --> 00:02:51,114
Chris: Oh, yeah?

33
00:02:51,162 --> 00:02:54,030
Kayla: Adjusting my naturally poor eyesight with optometric technology.

34
00:02:54,450 --> 00:03:03,298
Chris: What about the whole, like, we all only, like, we all store our knowledge of phone numbers on our phones. Now, does that count?

35
00:03:03,354 --> 00:03:07,298
Kayla: I'm not ready to have that conversation about how half my brain is in my phone. Kills me.

36
00:03:07,354 --> 00:03:08,082
Chris: I think it counts.

37
00:03:08,146 --> 00:03:17,786
Kayla: You've shared the argument before that forms of birth control are transhuman. And I've used the birth control pill. We've both been fortunate enough to utilize the technology of IVF, which is clearly.

38
00:03:17,858 --> 00:03:19,434
Chris: Yeah, that's for sure.

39
00:03:19,482 --> 00:03:35,634
Kayla: Transhuman can't even make an argument. And I'm sure if we sat here, we could come up with a million more answers to this question. And I'm sure our listeners at home can think of a thing or two of themselves. Like, think cochlear implants or even hearing aids or prosthetic limbs. Like, there are things in the world today.

40
00:03:35,762 --> 00:03:47,280
Chris: Anytime somebody treats some sort of disability, I would argue, yeah, that's transhuman. That's an artificial improvement over, like, whatever the natural state was going to be for that person.

41
00:03:47,400 --> 00:03:50,144
Kayla: Congratulations, Chris. You're transhuman.

42
00:03:50,232 --> 00:03:53,600
Chris: Does that mean my therapy is transhuman? Are my drugs transhuman?

43
00:03:53,640 --> 00:03:55,340
Kayla: I don't know. I don't know.

44
00:03:55,880 --> 00:03:57,456
Chris: Are all drugs transhuman?

45
00:03:57,488 --> 00:04:07,500
Kayla: I mean, by this very liberal definition, then you can make an argument. We're gonna get into the stricter definition of what actually the philosophy covers. But makes you think, right?

46
00:04:08,240 --> 00:04:09,344
Chris: Makes one thing.

47
00:04:09,392 --> 00:04:47,108
Kayla: Makes one think. From PD Hopkins paper on transhumanism in the Encyclopedia of Applied Ethics. Quote, transhumanism is the position that human beings should be permitted to use technology to modify and enhance human cognition and bodily function, expanding abilities and capacities beyond current biological constraints. So under that definition, human cognition is in there. Like, when I take Adderall that is enhancing my natural human cognition, it expands my brain's abilities and capacities beyond its current biological constraints of, like, not being able to utilize dopamine correctly. Whatever the fuck's going on in there.

48
00:04:47,124 --> 00:04:55,708
Chris: Being distracted all the time. Yeah, it kind of feels like. I would say drugs are, but therapy's not. But I don't know why it feels that way.

49
00:04:55,764 --> 00:04:56,760
Kayla: Yeah, I don't know.

50
00:04:57,260 --> 00:05:05,164
Chris: Like one of those things feels artificial and the other one feels like people just talking, but that feels like an arbitrary distinction, too.

51
00:05:05,212 --> 00:05:06,674
Kayla: A little bit of a value judgment as well.

52
00:05:06,772 --> 00:05:09,414
Chris: Yeah. We're just gonna land on, like, nothing is knowable.

53
00:05:09,502 --> 00:05:21,694
Kayla: No, that's. Yeah, no. Okay, look, this is a very liberal definition again. And just because one might check the box of, like, lightly transhuman, that does not necessarily make one a transhumanist. So what's the difference?

54
00:05:21,742 --> 00:05:22,742
Chris: Do I need a card?

55
00:05:22,886 --> 00:05:28,982
Kayla: You need a card. You have to, like, sign a card. And, you know, like those communism cards that you used to sign. It's like that. Yeah.

56
00:05:29,006 --> 00:05:34,650
Chris: I did not used to sign them. It's not that I did not used to sign those. I don't know what you're talking about.

57
00:05:34,960 --> 00:05:46,640
Kayla: Transhumanism is a philosophy, an intellectual movement, a collection of ideas and discussions and shared goals, all with the intent of pushing humanity forward along its technological journey.

58
00:05:46,800 --> 00:05:54,464
Chris: And like other movements and philosophies, that means it's going to be very hard to evaluate on the show when we do the criteria.

59
00:05:54,552 --> 00:05:55,520
Kayla: But we will.

60
00:05:55,560 --> 00:05:56,736
Chris: But we'll do it anyway.

61
00:05:56,848 --> 00:06:34,190
Kayla: Humanity, plus an organization we'll talk about a little bit more, a little bit later, describes transhumanism thusly. One, the intellectual and cultural movement that affirms the possibility and desirability of fundamentally improving the human condition through applied reason, especially by developing and making widely available technologies to eliminate aging and to greatly enhance human intellectual, physical, and psychological capacities. Two, the studies of the ramifications, promises, and potential dangers of technologies that will enable us to overcome fundamental human limitations and the related study of the ethical matters involved in developing and using such technologies.

62
00:06:35,370 --> 00:06:47,938
Chris: Yeah. My impression from doing the research for these upcoming episodes is that it's like transhumanism is artificially improving human lives, but mostly we mean anti aging.

63
00:06:48,114 --> 00:07:10,078
Kayla: Yeah, yeah. And it's not that's wrong, and it's not that those things aren't, like, going together, but the fact that specifically anti aging and longevity is so the forefront, rather than, like, I don't know, fucking. Can I get cybernetic legs that can make me be able to dunk?

64
00:07:10,134 --> 00:07:15,814
Chris: Kayla, if only we had a theory, a management theory to help us explain.

65
00:07:15,982 --> 00:07:26,010
Kayla: Okay. I think that having six cybernetic legs that allow me to dunk would better manage my terror of death than just, like, living to 110.

66
00:07:26,130 --> 00:07:30,058
Chris: So do you still have your regular arms, you just have six. Is it three on each side? Is that the idea?

67
00:07:30,114 --> 00:07:31,322
Kayla: Sick legs.

68
00:07:31,506 --> 00:07:37,394
Chris: Oh, I think you said six, and I was, like, picturing him, like, okay, why not just have two really strong.

69
00:07:37,442 --> 00:07:41,298
Kayla: No, no. What I mean is, like. Like legs on top of legs. So it's not like.

70
00:07:41,394 --> 00:07:42,362
Chris: So it's not even like a spider.

71
00:07:42,426 --> 00:07:44,682
Kayla: It's like, I have six legs stacked.

72
00:07:44,746 --> 00:07:50,920
Chris: So on the bottom of the feet of your first leg, start the thighs of the next set of legs.

73
00:07:51,090 --> 00:07:52,748
Kayla: That's what transhumanism is all about.

74
00:07:52,764 --> 00:07:53,660
Chris: That would certainly work.

75
00:07:53,740 --> 00:07:54,140
Kayla: Yeah.

76
00:07:54,220 --> 00:07:54,844
Chris: Yeah.

77
00:07:55,012 --> 00:07:58,700
Kayla: I think somebody needs to call up humanity plus and tell them that we've got the next big thing.

78
00:07:58,820 --> 00:08:01,280
Chris: I think we need to call our lawyers so they don't steal it.

79
00:08:03,300 --> 00:08:04,548
Kayla: Yeah, the anti aging thing.

80
00:08:04,604 --> 00:08:06,980
Chris: I'm assuming it's mostly that.

81
00:08:07,100 --> 00:08:07,804
Kayla: We'll get to that.

82
00:08:07,852 --> 00:08:09,076
Chris: Yeah, we'll get to that.

83
00:08:09,148 --> 00:08:23,230
Kayla: Transhumanists are generally very pro existing technologies, like stem cell therapies, genetic engineering, cryonics, neotropics, you know, pharmaceuticals enhancing cognition. But, like, neotropics doesn't refer to, like, Adderall. It refers to, I think, like.

84
00:08:23,690 --> 00:08:24,802
Chris: Like psychedelics.

85
00:08:24,906 --> 00:08:37,929
Kayla: Not psychedelics, but, like, micro dosing. Like those fucking pills you get advertised, like the. The, that limitless pill. The pill in limitless where it's like, ooh, you take this pill, it's gonna, like, make your brain more than 10%.

86
00:08:38,010 --> 00:08:48,306
Chris: Gives you super brain. Right. Okay. I. You know, I've always been, like, a little tiny bit confused about the word neutral, like, what nootropics means. I guess comparing it to that movie makes sense.

87
00:08:48,498 --> 00:08:58,690
Kayla: Umbrella. Yeah, that's my understanding of it. Pharmaceuticals that enhance cognition, but, like, neurotropics, I think, is kind of like, this is cutting edge. This isn't necessarily, like, mainstream pharmaceutical medication.

88
00:08:58,850 --> 00:09:06,466
Chris: It's. It's. God, it's pretty damning that these guys think of the. I don't want to start criticizing yet, but I am.

89
00:09:06,538 --> 00:09:07,690
Kayla: I'm not saying they're wrong.

90
00:09:07,770 --> 00:09:13,090
Chris: I. It's pretty damning that, like, well, actually is the 10% brain thing like them.

91
00:09:13,170 --> 00:09:14,172
Kayla: No, that's from limitless.

92
00:09:14,266 --> 00:09:14,984
Chris: That's from limitless.

93
00:09:15,032 --> 00:09:15,736
Kayla: That's from limitless.

94
00:09:15,808 --> 00:09:22,968
Chris: Okay, so it's just the writers. Just for context. Just for context. That is a myth.

95
00:09:23,024 --> 00:09:23,672
Kayla: It's a myth.

96
00:09:23,776 --> 00:09:27,800
Chris: We don't use 10% of our brains, and there's, like, 90% of unused capacity.

97
00:09:27,840 --> 00:09:28,640
Kayla: That's how it works.

98
00:09:28,720 --> 00:09:41,648
Chris: Knew how to use it. We would all become protoss and, like, psychologically, like, psychically bend spoons. And whatnot. It's just that our brains are. Every region of our brain isn't always, like, maximally active with electrical activity.

99
00:09:41,744 --> 00:09:46,216
Kayla: That said, the limitless tv show was really good. I really liked it.

100
00:09:46,248 --> 00:09:47,088
Chris: There was a tv show?

101
00:09:47,144 --> 00:09:50,784
Kayla: Yeah, I never saw the movie, but I saw the tv show, and I really liked the tv show, and it was really good.

102
00:09:50,832 --> 00:09:51,384
Chris: Oh, snap.

103
00:09:51,432 --> 00:10:17,414
Kayla: Yeah. It was like a procedural. Okay, so we're talking stem cell therapies, genetic engineering, smart prosthetics, hormone therapies, wearable tech, like even Google glasses, biomonitors, things like this. They're very. They're pro AI, they're pro. A lot of this stuff that we actually do utilize in modern, like, in modern day society. Not like just thinking about the future. And they're very pro. Kind of like these cutting edge things or speculative or proto science things. Like cryonics.

104
00:10:17,582 --> 00:10:18,054
Chris: Right.

105
00:10:18,142 --> 00:10:25,582
Kayla: Especially because cryonics will allow people to live into a future theoretically where they.

106
00:10:25,606 --> 00:10:30,638
Chris: Can then live forever, where several of these said technologies will be available to bring them back.

107
00:10:30,774 --> 00:10:37,414
Kayla: Transhumanism is not just a philosophical endeavor around tech. It also revolves around things like politics and ethics as well.

108
00:10:37,542 --> 00:10:38,166
Chris: Interesting.

109
00:10:38,238 --> 00:10:45,114
Kayla: For example, many transhumanists seek to protect humanity from existential risks. So things like climate change or nuclear war.

110
00:10:45,282 --> 00:10:46,058
Chris: That sounds good.

111
00:10:46,114 --> 00:10:49,266
Kayla: That's political. Another example, transhumanism.

112
00:10:49,298 --> 00:10:57,938
Chris: Don't bring this politics into the podcast, Kayla, where you're like, anti climate nuclear devastation. Okay? Like, there's both sides to that argument.

113
00:10:57,994 --> 00:10:59,610
Kayla: I'm watching fallout. I know there's both sides.

114
00:10:59,650 --> 00:11:02,874
Chris: That's true. Fallout is a pretty pro nuclear devastation. No, it's not.

115
00:11:03,002 --> 00:11:22,850
Kayla: Another example. Transhumanists generally believe that all people should have the inherent right to utilize technology to alter, improve, or enhance their bodies and minds however they like, as long as it does not interfere on another person's rights. So bodily autonomy and where that starts and ends is a huge part of it. That's ethical, that's political. It's all of it, right?

116
00:11:22,890 --> 00:11:29,830
Chris: Okay. I mean, I can get behind that. That's like some general sort of, like, good bits of libertarian kind of stuff.

117
00:11:30,690 --> 00:11:37,282
Kayla: The libertarians. I know they are. I went down some weird fucking Twitter rabbit holes.

118
00:11:37,466 --> 00:11:38,250
Chris: Same guy.

119
00:11:38,330 --> 00:11:41,434
Kayla: Do not come up in this episode, in this topic.

120
00:11:41,522 --> 00:11:47,996
Chris: Maybe we'll do a bonus episode or something. But, man, no, there's a lot to come.

121
00:11:48,028 --> 00:12:07,316
Kayla: You guys, I read a Twitter thread that was. I don't know if this is gonna be in the show or not. That was all about. And this was a Twitter thread coming from somebody who is like very techno futurist. I don't know what the right words are. Effective altruistic futurism. Like that kind of spirit.

122
00:12:07,348 --> 00:12:07,812
Chris: Yep. Yep.

123
00:12:07,876 --> 00:12:37,138
Kayla: It was somebody who was explaining, like, here's how we need to get more libertarians in the world. And, like, what we need to do, and I don't know if this is a joke or not. Like, what we need to do is we need to, like, start a business where like, oh, God, like, so scared. A business can, like, buy like, a property of land where we can, like, hire a bunch of surrogates and then like, get like, libertarians to like, give their genes, the surrogates, and we can just like, produce all these, like, libertarian babies. And then we have like, libertarian schools there.

124
00:12:37,194 --> 00:12:48,730
Kayla: And then, like, the kids can decide if they want to, like, they go to libertarian school, and then they can decide when they graduate if they want to, like, go to libertarian college or if they want to, like, get money to start a business. Like, that's not having anything to do with this.

125
00:12:48,770 --> 00:12:50,218
Chris: But, like, no, it kind of does, though.

126
00:12:50,274 --> 00:12:52,210
Kayla: You can go crazy.

127
00:12:52,290 --> 00:13:02,178
Chris: It kind of does. Like, there's, let's keep that in the show and maybe we'll reference that conversation at a future episode or something.

128
00:13:02,314 --> 00:13:16,966
Kayla: Okay. Okay. We gotta, before we get into the absolutely batshit out there, we have to start here. So let's talk about some of the proposed or speculative changes to the human body that transhumanists are referencing.

129
00:13:17,158 --> 00:13:17,718
Chris: Braces.

130
00:13:17,814 --> 00:13:27,070
Kayla: And again, these can also get pretty out there. Some people in the movement believe humans will be able to change themselves with the technology so greatly, we will eventually become what's called post human beings.

131
00:13:27,190 --> 00:13:34,604
Chris: Yeah, very cool. They're into post human like. That's like, they're pro post humanity, right? Yeah.

132
00:13:34,772 --> 00:13:52,680
Kayla: Since this is a philosophical and intellectual movement and not a specific scientific undertaking, this arena is still largely speculative, with some interesting not so speculative examples. Keep that in mind. But back to the original question. What technological enhancements to the human mind and body are transhumanists actually advocating for?

133
00:13:53,300 --> 00:13:55,204
Chris: Neuralink? Is that one?

134
00:13:55,252 --> 00:13:56,764
Kayla: Is that the, I put it on.

135
00:13:56,772 --> 00:13:59,388
Chris: Chip, the Elon musk chip in your brain?

136
00:13:59,484 --> 00:14:39,668
Kayla: My first one, though, was anti aging and life extension technologies. Like we said, this is pretty big. Transhumanist, by and large, want to reverse and cure aging and age related diseases and either greatly extend the human lifespan or achieve immortality altogether, which is why many of them are into cryonics, because they don't think that we're going to be able to do that in our lifetime. So they have to go into cryostasis in order to live into a future where we have cured aging. Big thing for them. Using things like neuralink to eventually be able to, I don't know, do whatever neuralink says that you're supposed to be able to do, and then get into, like, digital mind and having that kind of stuff going on. I don't want a neuralink.

137
00:14:39,844 --> 00:14:40,980
Chris: I don't want a neural link either.

138
00:14:41,060 --> 00:14:44,388
Kayla: Look, I would. Maybe neuralink is insane, but I don't want that neuralink. I don't want that guy.

139
00:14:44,444 --> 00:14:47,108
Chris: Sure. Like, give me gen 17.

140
00:14:47,284 --> 00:14:47,692
Kayla: Different.

141
00:14:47,756 --> 00:14:49,988
Chris: I need a different neuralink from a different company.

142
00:14:50,084 --> 00:14:50,996
Kayla: I'd rather it not be a company.

143
00:14:51,028 --> 00:15:08,436
Chris: And then maybe, like, I think it would be totally cool to control things with my brain. That being said, as much as Elon Musk is just an absolute shithield dumbass, the first neuralink chip allowed some, like, was it either paraplegic or quadriplegic? Guy play civilization with his brain.

144
00:15:08,508 --> 00:15:09,588
Kayla: It's fucking cool.

145
00:15:09,764 --> 00:15:15,804
Chris: And I'm like, that's great, man. Like that. Actually, I gotta hand it to you.

146
00:15:15,852 --> 00:15:24,196
Kayla: You know, other things include enhancing the computational or memory capacity of the human brain. So, like, taking that 10% up to 20%. No, I'm kidding.

147
00:15:24,228 --> 00:15:24,684
Chris: Oh, my God.

148
00:15:24,732 --> 00:15:26,076
Kayla: I'm kidding. I'm kidding.

149
00:15:26,268 --> 00:15:28,036
Chris: If you learn one thing from this.

150
00:15:28,068 --> 00:15:50,756
Kayla: Podcast, they're also really big into nanobots. And so, like, a specific thing is, like, nanobots that can enter the human body and, like, bloodstream and, like, wherever they need to go and destroy pathogens, right. Correct DNA errors. Like, those same nanobots. This is. This. This particular thing is from Ray Kurzweil's the singularity is near, which I physically pulled out a book to, like, what, do research for this. For this.

151
00:15:50,788 --> 00:15:54,572
Chris: But you can research by using an actual book? Yeah, paper and bolts.

152
00:15:54,676 --> 00:16:02,112
Kayla: He has a whole thing where, like, oh, we can put nanobots in your brain, and then they can give you full immersion VR on demand.

153
00:16:02,296 --> 00:16:04,088
Chris: And by can, he means will be.

154
00:16:04,144 --> 00:16:12,344
Kayla: Will be, like, once the nanobots are, like, a thing and the singularity has happened. Nanobots in the brain to create full immersion VR on demand.

155
00:16:12,432 --> 00:16:17,112
Chris: Ray Kurzweil is a futurist, which means it's his job to speculate how things might be in the future.

156
00:16:17,176 --> 00:16:27,894
Kayla: Yeah, things like enhanced or fully artificial organs. Very cool. Stronger and self repairing skeletons. Also very cool. Cyborg bodies, obviously, which we already talked about.

157
00:16:27,942 --> 00:16:31,110
Chris: Wait, so the Blade Runner guy is also transhuman, then?

158
00:16:31,190 --> 00:16:31,742
Kayla: Which one?

159
00:16:31,806 --> 00:16:39,054
Chris: The one with the. Not. Not Blade Runner. The movie Blade Runner. The. The Olympic athlete. Is that his name?

160
00:16:39,102 --> 00:16:39,926
Kayla: The one who murdered?

161
00:16:39,998 --> 00:16:56,450
Chris: Yeah. Though he's also a murderer. But you know how, like, you can, like, these guys get these, like, artificial legs and then they're, like, eight still able to compete and in some cases, like, potentially be even compete better. That totally falls under this cyborg body. Yeah.

162
00:16:56,570 --> 00:17:06,002
Kayla: The ability to change what our bodies look like at will or by choice, or the ability to put the mind into different bodies altogether. Be like, I'm gonna have this one today, or I'm gonna have that one.

163
00:17:06,026 --> 00:17:28,824
Chris: Today, you know, a little bit on the head. Cause the name is basically the same, but I feel like transgender community is basically doing that. It's saying, like, I am altering my physical appearance or my biology to closer match what's in my head. That's something that's like an artificial enhancement or an artificial modification. Feels like that falls under that, clearly.

164
00:17:28,912 --> 00:17:54,164
Kayla: And the desire for and political effort towards achieving bodily autonomy, those definitely overlap. One being able to have autonomy over how the body presents. And again, not all trans people choose to undergo changes to the body in order to affirm their gender, but the ones that do that overlap is definitely there.

165
00:17:54,292 --> 00:18:03,140
Chris: Right. And actually, even, like you were mentioning to me the other day, the gender affirming care that cis people get, that non trans people get, I guess, would also fall under that.

166
00:18:03,220 --> 00:18:09,124
Kayla: Some people do talk about, quote unquote plastic surgery or cosmetic surgery as being transhuman.

167
00:18:09,212 --> 00:18:11,384
Chris: Right. I kind of agree.

168
00:18:11,532 --> 00:18:25,752
Kayla: I think it kind of, like, depends because I'm like, I guess. Yes. I also wonder if, like, if I went and got my lips injected, like, is that transhuman or is like. Cause it's not for a function, but I guess the function is gender, especially.

169
00:18:25,776 --> 00:18:28,464
Chris: If you got them overfilled and you had gigantic lips.

170
00:18:28,512 --> 00:18:29,376
Kayla: I do love the way that looks.

171
00:18:29,408 --> 00:18:32,120
Chris: Like all of the participants on love is blind.

172
00:18:32,200 --> 00:18:46,390
Kayla: They know what they're doing. Okay, last one that I'm gonna mention. The ability to travel off planethood, expand the consciousness in mind to extreme scopes, and perhaps become much like the transcended space baby at the end of 2001 A Space Odyssey.

173
00:18:47,530 --> 00:18:49,554
Chris: So I came across the space thing quite a bit.

174
00:18:49,642 --> 00:18:52,994
Kayla: That last one's not really an exaggeration. Like it is, but it's like.

175
00:18:53,042 --> 00:18:53,986
Chris: It is, but it isn't. Yeah.

176
00:18:54,018 --> 00:18:54,186
Kayla: Sorry.

177
00:18:54,218 --> 00:19:15,302
Chris: Well, no, it's kind of like the. Let's make a bunch of, like, libertarian surrogate babies. Like, from what I understand. I think that guy might not be joking, but. But, yeah, like, the space thing is interesting to me because it kind of feels like it doesn't necessarily feel like we are enhancing because we're not enhancing our bodies. It just kind of feels like we also like space.

178
00:19:15,366 --> 00:19:25,174
Kayla: You guys, I think that transhumanism goes like, I don't know if you can be a transhumanist without also being a futurist. I guess you can. But a lot of them are kind of like. Like inextricably linked.

179
00:19:25,222 --> 00:19:33,848
Chris: Right? That's kind of. What if that's why it feels like they're into this thing? Just because it's, you know, it's like, well, I'm into video games, which means, obviously, I'm also into anime, right?

180
00:19:33,904 --> 00:19:34,344
Kayla: Yeah.

181
00:19:34,432 --> 00:19:44,768
Chris: But that being said, I guess they could make the argument that being in space is not, like, our natural state. So anytime we go there, that's a transhumanist endeavor. Question mark.

182
00:19:44,824 --> 00:20:02,078
Kayla: I also think that transhumanism, it's like, again, and futurists, they both dance around with the singularity and the technological singularity kind of not necessitates, but insinuates that, like, we're going off planet, guys.

183
00:20:02,174 --> 00:20:02,526
Chris: Right?

184
00:20:02,598 --> 00:20:07,382
Kayla: So it's just. Yeah, it's all this, like, it's all merged together, right? Space baby, 2001, space baby.

185
00:20:07,406 --> 00:20:08,502
Chris: It's all about the space baby.

186
00:20:08,566 --> 00:20:16,630
Kayla: Transhumanists, like I said, can have extremely out there ideas about the future. But because this is a speculative arena, the sky is the limit. So I think that's another reason.

187
00:20:16,670 --> 00:20:18,290
Chris: Like, oh, so they can't go into space.

188
00:20:19,110 --> 00:20:48,014
Kayla: The. The. The edge of the observable universe is the limit, and then beyond. And of course, transhumanists are individuals. So eventual goals for the human mind and body depend upon the person. These are some generalizations. Now, I mentioned some real life examples. There are transhumanists who are actively incorporating technology into the body in experimental ways that are outside the scope of the mainstream or traditional medicine. You mentioned how neuralink is actually currently being put into people's heads.

189
00:20:48,062 --> 00:20:52,680
Chris: I kind of can't believe that guy was able to actually play civilization. Like, it's kind of insane.

190
00:20:53,060 --> 00:21:08,892
Kayla: Let me give you some more examples. Okay, I got two for you right here. First example is an engineer named Kevin Warwick who once had 100 electrodes surgically implanted into the nerves of his left arm. This linked his central nervous system. And we're talking like, this was like, 2002 or something.

191
00:21:08,996 --> 00:21:10,700
Chris: Holy shit. That's like forever ago.

192
00:21:10,740 --> 00:21:39,188
Kayla: I know. It's like ancient. This linked his central nervous system to a computer, well as to the Internet. And he then was able to control a robot hand using his brain. And he could feel like if he picked something up, he could feel pressure in the hand. What with these electrodes. His wife also had the electrodes implanted and they were able to, like where this is going, communicate with each other's nervous systems via.

193
00:21:39,244 --> 00:21:40,652
Chris: Wait, sorry, what does that mean?

194
00:21:40,796 --> 00:21:51,836
Kayla: They were able to be like, oh, I can. Like, I don't really understand it, but they were able to communicate like their nervous systems were linked together.

195
00:21:52,028 --> 00:22:02,000
Chris: They were able to tell impulses to each other. When his wife was saying, hey, honey, via neurons, just direct neural.

196
00:22:02,300 --> 00:22:03,964
Kayla: He could go like, I don't know.

197
00:22:04,012 --> 00:22:07,508
Chris: Did it feel like more of a zap or more of like a. I.

198
00:22:07,524 --> 00:22:19,374
Kayla: Think it probably felt like how you feel when you have a he. There's a word that was used and I forget what it is, but like extra sensory, essentially. Like the experience is unlike.

199
00:22:19,502 --> 00:22:19,974
Chris: Whoa.

200
00:22:20,062 --> 00:22:23,290
Kayla: Unlike something that you've had before.

201
00:22:23,590 --> 00:22:27,970
Chris: Oh man, that is crazy. Is this real?

202
00:22:29,510 --> 00:22:30,290
Kayla: Yes.

203
00:22:30,910 --> 00:22:31,690
Chris: Wow.

204
00:22:32,470 --> 00:22:52,824
Kayla: My personal favorite, another example is transhumanist artist Neil Harbison. Harbisson refers to himself as a cyborg because he has antenna permanently implanted in his skull. I've heard of this guy, which allows him to sense colors outside the usual scope that humans are capable of, including ultraviolet and infrared.

205
00:22:52,912 --> 00:22:54,152
Chris: So the antenna has some sort of.

206
00:22:54,216 --> 00:23:14,618
Kayla: Optic receiver that it sends vibrations into his skull. And that can also, including showing him or letting him feel colors or whatever it's doing, he can also like get phone calls and hear music. And it's Wifi enabled, so he can receive signals from satellites from his like, antenna that's in his skull.

207
00:23:14,794 --> 00:23:22,626
Chris: Okay, now are all the tin foil hat wearing guys right now, but just like about this one guy, cuz that sounds.

208
00:23:22,738 --> 00:23:24,410
Kayla: That's a little five g. Five g.

209
00:23:24,490 --> 00:23:32,086
Chris: He's getting the 5g signal that's making him take the vaccine. Yeah, that's actually, that's a really good question. That's a weird man.

210
00:23:32,118 --> 00:23:36,130
Kayla: Are transhumanists pro vaccine? They must be, right?

211
00:23:36,750 --> 00:23:39,942
Chris: Yeah. And I would, now that you're saying it, vaccines are transhuman.

212
00:23:40,086 --> 00:23:47,358
Kayla: Are they? However, they're probably fairly anti vaccine mandate that.

213
00:23:47,414 --> 00:23:59,530
Chris: I don't know. So this goes back into the like, are they libertarians or not? And my understanding, speaking of the bodily autonomy thing, there has been a bit of like a community mitosis on that front in the past decade.

214
00:23:59,570 --> 00:24:00,570
Kayla: Some are and some aren't.

215
00:24:00,610 --> 00:24:24,034
Chris: So now some groups are more liberal, left leaning for lack of a better word, and some are more crazy crypto, bro. Let's make libertarian surrogate babies kind of people. So your mileage may vary, but my understanding is there's different subgroups of transhumanists that makes sense have different sort of beliefs on that front.

216
00:24:24,162 --> 00:24:28,510
Kayla: Okay, but how did transhumanism start? Like, where do we begin?

217
00:24:29,010 --> 00:24:32,642
Chris: Well, since this is cult or just weird, probably, like 2000 BC or something.

218
00:24:32,706 --> 00:24:37,522
Kayla: Yeah. A lot of transhumanists will argue that their history extends back to the beginning of humanity. Like, the first time we.

219
00:24:37,546 --> 00:24:38,514
Chris: Oh, wait, so literally.

220
00:24:38,602 --> 00:24:45,850
Kayla: Yeah. First time we picked up tools, harnessed fire. Like, humans are defined by our ability to use and develop technology.

221
00:24:46,010 --> 00:24:49,986
Chris: Wait, so if we are defined by that, then how is that true transhuman?

222
00:24:50,058 --> 00:24:50,338
Kayla: Well, I think.

223
00:24:50,354 --> 00:24:51,394
Chris: Isn't that just human then?

224
00:24:51,402 --> 00:25:10,282
Kayla: I think that transhumanism is just kind of like the natural next step of how. Of how we engage with technology. I think a lot of transhumanists will argue that we are not pedal to the metal enough with incorporating technology into improving the human body.

225
00:25:10,386 --> 00:25:11,710
Chris: Have they seen the world?

226
00:25:12,290 --> 00:25:17,394
Kayla: I mean, they're like, saying, like, I need to jump off the building and be able to land and my leg's not hurt.

227
00:25:17,482 --> 00:25:29,502
Chris: Okay. To be fair, that's not a thing transhumanists are saying. Some are, and I am now, so. But, like, I certainly. You're right. Like, where the hell are my super dunk legs? Like, I need to be able to dunk a basketball.

228
00:25:29,566 --> 00:25:37,790
Kayla: And also, you can't just. A regular person can't just be like, I think I would like to chop my arm off and stick a robot arm on it. You can't necessarily just go do that.

229
00:25:37,910 --> 00:25:41,558
Chris: Sure I can. It's very dangerous. I'll probably bleed out.

230
00:25:41,614 --> 00:25:45,662
Kayla: You can't go to your doctor and say, like, can you switch my arm out with the cyborg arm?

231
00:25:45,726 --> 00:25:47,030
Chris: Maybe. Doctor Nick Rivera.

232
00:25:47,110 --> 00:26:00,590
Kayla: But if you chopped your arm off, I think a transhumanist may argue that you shouldn't have to resort to such extreme measures of chopping your arm off in your kitchen and being rushed to the ER and forcing them to give you.

233
00:26:00,630 --> 00:26:03,798
Chris: Right. You should be able to do that at Cedar Sinai, not just Doctor Nick.

234
00:26:03,854 --> 00:26:17,200
Kayla: Yeah, exactly. If humans are defined by our ability, then to use and develop technology, is transhumanism simply just the next step of humans harnessing fire to advance our experience as a species?

235
00:26:17,280 --> 00:26:17,744
Chris: Yes.

236
00:26:17,832 --> 00:26:19,672
Kayla: Yes. I don't disagree.

237
00:26:19,856 --> 00:26:24,680
Chris: It feels to me like it's less of a next step and more of, like, this is just a continuous spectrum.

238
00:26:24,760 --> 00:26:53,490
Kayla: I mean, that's how I feel about, like, the fact that half my brain is on my phone. I don't feel bad about it. I don't feel like that's something wrong with me. I just feel like we use technology, like, that's what makes us human. That's what separates us, quote unquote, from other animals. Most other animals do nothing, develop with technology in this way. They can use rudimentary technology, like the crows with the sticks or whatever, but they're not doing what we're doing. We are defined by our relationship to the tech we build.

239
00:26:53,570 --> 00:27:37,296
Chris: Yeah, I think I've heard terms. I want to say I've heard a term called the human datum. Datome. I don't know. Basically, humans, unlike other species, humans have this sort of. I don't know. I'm going to butcher this, I think. But this intangible, like, meta piece of our species that is like the knowledge and technology that evolves along with us and is inseparable from us. Like, it would be like saying, like, you know, like separating the human datum from humans would be like separating a bear's skull from a bear type of thing. Like, it's just part of our species and it's, like, outside of us, but it's also us, and it also evolves along with us.

240
00:27:37,328 --> 00:27:40,116
Kayla: Yeah, believe that. That makes sense to me.

241
00:27:40,188 --> 00:28:11,508
Chris: I found a, actually, I did find online here a pretty good definition that somebody else said for human data. Ohm. This guy at Columbia University defines it as a deeper way to quantify intelligent life based on the external information that a species generates, utilizes, propagates, and encodes in what we call technology everything from cave paintings and books to flash drives and cloud servers and the structures sustaining them. I think it's a good definition, and it's a useful concept to have around when we're talking about transhumanism.

242
00:28:11,644 --> 00:28:12,196
Kayla: Cool.

243
00:28:12,308 --> 00:28:14,120
Chris: Yeah, it kind of seems like. Well, yeah, duh.

244
00:28:15,380 --> 00:28:51,820
Kayla: And of course, you know, thinkers throughout history have always speculated on our ability to enhance our species with technology. Like back in ancient Rome or whatever. They were probably thinking about, like, ooh. And there was people, philosophers, talking about this stuff. The modern iteration of transhumanism claims to largely spring from the eras of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment. So these were kind of all about major changes in culture and art and philosophy, science, math, economy, literature, scientific method, rational thinking, liberal democracy, humanism. Liberal democracy and humanism are big ones for transhumanists, and they are generally tech utopians.

245
00:28:52,240 --> 00:29:01,016
Chris: Yeah, from what I understand, humanism is sort of like they trace some direct lineage there. They're like, we're better than those guys. But we owe them some stuff.

246
00:29:01,168 --> 00:29:03,652
Kayla: Side note. Did you have a side note?

247
00:29:03,756 --> 00:29:18,404
Chris: No, I was just gonna. I don't have a side note. I was just gonna ask if you think that, like, the ancient Romans, when they picture transhuman, like, cyborgs, is it like robot arms, but, like, they look like doric columns, you know, like, they're made of, like.

248
00:29:18,452 --> 00:29:22,920
Kayla: No, it's like a. It's like Robocop, but he's wearing a centurion outfit.

249
00:29:23,900 --> 00:29:27,964
Chris: Is that, like, not a comic or something? Because that sounds fucking rad as hell.

250
00:29:28,012 --> 00:29:41,600
Kayla: Robocop. Side note. Some of the critics of transhumanism say that their philosophies can butt up pretty quickly to some pretty unsavory ideologies.

251
00:29:42,260 --> 00:29:43,148
Chris: Maybe. I know the.

252
00:29:43,164 --> 00:29:44,380
Kayla: What do you think? What do you think?

253
00:29:44,460 --> 00:29:45,764
Chris: The same one that it always is.

254
00:29:45,812 --> 00:29:47,004
Kayla: It always goes back to.

255
00:29:47,132 --> 00:29:49,236
Chris: Starts with an e and ends with a. Eugenics.

256
00:29:49,268 --> 00:30:33,198
Kayla: Eugenics. Eugenics. Obviously, transhumanists don't agree with this label and simply see themselves as, like, freely choosing to incorporate technology into the overall improvement of humanity rather than selectively weeding out individuals deemed inferior for various reasons. I can see both sides of the argument where. I can totally see where this is a eugenicist project, and I can totally see the argument of. I can see their argument of why it's not. But I think either way, transhumanists probably need to make sure they're constantly keeping this facet of their movement in check. Like, that needs to be a top priority. Like, we already know that slope is pretty slippery.

257
00:30:33,254 --> 00:30:50,576
Kayla: And if they really aren't eugenicists, which I am not convinced that they are not, if they really are not, then, like, they should probably make sure that there are people with disabilities, like, in operational echelon of organizations, and, like, they're constantly talking about this because that shit sucks.

258
00:30:50,648 --> 00:30:54,568
Chris: Yeah. And even if that slope weren't slippery, the spikes at the bottom are very deadly.

259
00:30:54,624 --> 00:30:55,220
Kayla: Right.

260
00:30:55,960 --> 00:31:18,416
Chris: As someone who might claim some, like, yeah, I like transhumanism. I am more than happy willing. Like, I don't think I would claim transhumanism if I weren't. If I didn't agree with, like, yeah, that needs to be, like, something that should be actively defended against. Like, that's. Somebody says, like, why aren't you guys eugenics? It can't be just like, we're not. That's misinformation.

261
00:31:18,488 --> 00:31:18,792
Kayla: Right?

262
00:31:18,856 --> 00:31:23,750
Chris: It has to be like, here are the reasons that it's not that. I've seen some of that.

263
00:31:23,830 --> 00:31:24,334
Kayla: Sure.

264
00:31:24,462 --> 00:31:59,716
Chris: I think there's definitely interpretations that can go either way. There's definitely people who are a little more like the libertarian surrogate Galtz Gulch people that you were talking about. And then I think there are people that are more like, okay, no, here's why. It's not. The two main defenses I've heard, which seem legitimate, but, like you said, need to be also very vigilante, are one. Is that like, well, we're not Nazis, because Nazis were totalitarian government, and we're talking about doing this in liberal democracies. So that'll totally make it okay, you guys. Which I agree is a necessary but not sufficient condition.

265
00:31:59,788 --> 00:32:00,332
Kayla: Right.

266
00:32:00,476 --> 00:32:03,292
Chris: The other condition is as if liberal.

267
00:32:03,356 --> 00:32:05,400
Kayla: Democracies can't be fascist.

268
00:32:06,380 --> 00:32:43,312
Chris: Right. That's. Yeah, that's more of a bonus, actually, if it's a liberal democracy. It's not even really like a. Yeah, I. The other thing I've heard is kind of what you were mentioning is, well, this isn't top down. This is. People are making their own choices. In fact, we'll talk about Nick Bostrom later. One of his big things is, well, if people are able to make their own choice along these lines, then everybody will choose to make people more intelligent. So he starts from choice based. This seems okay. You're just giving parents choice to have their kids not have horrible genetic diseases.

269
00:32:43,376 --> 00:32:51,000
Kayla: They're all really into IVF for everybody. Like, the genetic selecting at the. At the point of, like, conception.

270
00:32:51,080 --> 00:33:08,744
Chris: Right. And that kind of quickly gets into the. Like, it starts. Yeah, it starts with, I just don't want my kid to have diseases. And it kind of quickly gets into the. Like. And then everybody will choose to have ubermensches and, like, the. Like, there's some bad stuff. It, like, well, the scope creep. It's.

271
00:33:08,792 --> 00:33:38,928
Kayla: Yeah, the scope creep of what is defined as, like, an illness or a disease is, like, real. That, you know, because people are talking about, like, okay, well, we can. You know, with IVF, you can do things like, you can test out for severe genetic disorders that will lead to a fetus not developing correctly or, like, you know, having such insufficient development that they will, like, not have a brain and things like that.

272
00:33:38,944 --> 00:33:40,704
Chris: So be stillborn or, like, have.

273
00:33:40,752 --> 00:33:49,984
Kayla: Yeah, you can weed out things like trisomy 18 or things like that. But then you start talking to people who want to try and find, like, an autism gene.

274
00:33:50,152 --> 00:33:50,552
Chris: Right.

275
00:33:50,616 --> 00:33:54,368
Kayla: And weed that out. And that is eugenic.

276
00:33:54,464 --> 00:34:15,348
Chris: Those feel like two pretty easy boundaries on either side. The question is, like, what happens in the middle? Like, where do you draw that line? I don't think that they're like. With all kinds of stuff like this, you can't just draw a line, set it, and forget it. You just have to be constantly vigilant and treat it on a case by case basis. And it's. Yeah, it gets complicated and messy.

277
00:34:15,444 --> 00:34:18,219
Kayla: We'll keep talking about it in future episodes, but.

278
00:34:18,300 --> 00:34:20,212
Chris: Okay, well, just go watch Gattaca, I guess.

279
00:34:20,235 --> 00:34:47,212
Kayla: Oh, God, I really liked that movie. Transhumanism in the modern sense truly emerged in the late 1950s and sixties. So that's when a biologist named Julian Huxley popularized the term in a 1957 essay. And then shortly after, in the 1960s, a professor of futurology began teaching new concepts of the human at the new school and started using the term transhuman to refer to people who were trying to transition to post human states.

280
00:34:47,315 --> 00:34:51,139
Chris: He's a professor of futurology. Yeah, that's not real.

281
00:34:51,219 --> 00:34:59,640
Kayla: Was at the time that professor would eventually change his name to FM 2030, which is badass.

282
00:35:01,380 --> 00:35:04,694
Chris: Yeah, it sounds like. Speaking of Elon Musk, it sounds like his kid.

283
00:35:04,862 --> 00:35:12,022
Kayla: It's cooler than his kid because it was self chosen. Just naming your kid something cool is.

284
00:35:12,046 --> 00:35:14,558
Chris: Like, you're a try hard loser.

285
00:35:14,614 --> 00:35:22,078
Kayla: Yeah. He changed his name to this for two reasons. One, his 100th birthday would be in 2030, and he hoped to live to see it.

286
00:35:22,174 --> 00:35:22,646
Chris: Okay.

287
00:35:22,718 --> 00:35:40,418
Kayla: And two, he viewed naming conventions as a collectivist relic of mankind's historic tribalism. So he wanted an individual's name and believed this signified his belief in the future. Like, we're all individuals. We don't have to be collectivist, which, like, I have a lot of thoughts and feelings about that, but it sounds.

288
00:35:40,434 --> 00:35:42,370
Chris: Like he would land on the libertarian side of the divide.

289
00:35:42,410 --> 00:36:01,600
Kayla: Yeah. Yes. Dope reason to change your name. I would like to have a conversation with him about what collectivism means to him and why one would believe collectivism is like something in humanity's past versus, like, something intrinsic to our humanity or something very much a part of our future.

290
00:36:03,260 --> 00:36:09,880
Chris: From my time in the Ayn Rand community, I can say that libertarians use collectivism as a slur.

291
00:36:10,340 --> 00:36:14,348
Kayla: Well, then if we didn't have that, we never would have gotten to space, so suck my dick.

292
00:36:14,404 --> 00:36:15,252
Chris: I'm just saying.

293
00:36:15,356 --> 00:36:46,528
Kayla: I know, I know. That's what I'm saying. I would like to have that conversation with this person. FM 20. Thirty's work and teachings in the transhumanist and futurist space are some of the most important or influential in laying the ground work for the philosophy of transhumanism. Unfortunately, FM 2030 did not live to see his 100th birthday. He died on July 8, 2000 from pancreatic cancer, man, and was placed in cryonic suspension. A little place called Alcor Life Extension foundation.

294
00:36:46,664 --> 00:36:52,904
Chris: There's a really good podcast that did a series on them. I think it was called Cult or just weirn.

295
00:36:52,992 --> 00:36:58,020
Kayla: He was actually the first person in the world to be vitrified.

296
00:36:58,720 --> 00:36:59,224
Chris: Really?

297
00:36:59,312 --> 00:36:59,856
Kayla: Yeah.

298
00:36:59,968 --> 00:37:01,768
Chris: So before that, were just doing.

299
00:37:01,824 --> 00:37:04,296
Kayla: Regular straight, quote unquote straight freezers, deep.

300
00:37:04,328 --> 00:37:08,008
Chris: Freezing people with whatever, liquid nitrogen with.

301
00:37:08,064 --> 00:37:10,568
Kayla: Yeah. He was the first person to be vitrified.

302
00:37:10,664 --> 00:37:11,200
Chris: Wow.

303
00:37:11,320 --> 00:37:15,488
Kayla: And so we. We went and visited one of those doers he was in.

304
00:37:15,624 --> 00:37:20,232
Chris: Cool. Yeah, man. See, that's why that we're gonna keep going back to the, like, how cool that room was.

305
00:37:20,256 --> 00:37:31,520
Kayla: It was so cool. Like I said, FM 20 thirtys pioneering work around transhumanism was extremely influential. So influential it would eventually reach a man named Max O'Connor.

306
00:37:31,820 --> 00:37:32,444
Chris: Okay.

307
00:37:32,532 --> 00:37:53,306
Kayla: Who would eventually call himself Max Moore. A philosophy student at St. Anne's College, Oxford, Max Moore was so intrigued by FM 2000 thirty's teachings, he went on to define the principles of transhumanism as they exist today, and would serve as the catalyst to organize the greater transhumanist movement from 1990 to what we have now.

308
00:37:53,458 --> 00:37:58,794
Chris: So would you say he's like the father of the modern transhumanist?

309
00:37:58,922 --> 00:38:00,714
Kayla: I would say one could make that argument.

310
00:38:00,802 --> 00:38:01,538
Chris: Okay.

311
00:38:01,714 --> 00:38:08,426
Kayla: Funnily enough, Max Moore would eventually serve as the president and CEO of Alcor life extension itself.

312
00:38:08,498 --> 00:38:08,970
Chris: Oh, God.

313
00:38:09,010 --> 00:38:16,170
Kayla: The call overseeing the company that housed the cryonaut who triggered him to delve into the world of transhumanism.

314
00:38:16,670 --> 00:38:18,630
Chris: Oh my God. What a tangled web.

315
00:38:18,710 --> 00:38:33,690
Kayla: I know. And that's just the start of Max Moore's journey. There's so much more to come after. Next time on cult or just weird humanity plus and the current state of transhumanist work and beyond.

316
00:38:34,310 --> 00:38:42,230
Chris: This is Chris, this is Kayla, and this is trans podcast or just weird.