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Singularia

James Harvey: The Singularity is Just the Tip of the Iceberg

April 20, 2012 by Socrates

https://media.blubrry.com/singularity/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/193666447-singularity1on1-james-harvey-2.mp3

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A couple of days ago, I interviewed Australian James Harvey.

James is unique among my guests because he was the first interviewee whose willingness to take a chance on a brand-new podcast helped me kick off Singularity 1 on 1.

However, this is not the only thing that makes him different; James is also “a musician, a poet, a mystic and learned observer of Life…”

Most notably, in 2009, Harvey published his thought-provoking book Singularia: Being at an Edge of Time, which was my reason for inviting him the first time.

This time around, I asked James to share and discuss his unique Both/And point of view of singularity, which eludes the traditional dichotomy of the struggle of opposites but stresses their unity as parts of a whole.

In our first conversation, two quotes stood out for me:

1. I respect science and think it is a marvelous tool but I do not worship it!

2. We are Singularia

This time, my favorite quote is Harvey’s observation:

Our analog universe has an infinite resolution both zooming in and zooming out.

In addition, during our second conversation with James, we discussed a variety of other topics, such as the importance and differences of digital and analog worlds (e.g., mp3 files and live music); his book Singularia and why the singularity is a lot more than just technology; Jaron Lanier’s view that the singularity is rapture for geeks; and art, creativity, love, and the fear of death.

To show your support, you can write a review on iTunes, make a direct donation, or become a patron on Patreon.

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Filed Under: Podcasts Tagged With: James Harvey, Singularia

James Harvey: We are Singularia

June 27, 2010 by Socrates

https://media.blubrry.com/singularity/feeds.soundcloud.com/stream/184910295-singularity1on1-james-harvey-singularia.mp3

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This is my first singularity podcast.

I intend to do many more interviews like that to spark the discussion about the singularity with the help of some of the best and brightest people I can get to do a podcast for the benefit of us all.

My guest today is Australian James Harvey.

James Harvey is the author of the thought-provoking book Singularia: Being at the Edge of Time.

***

I have to admit that I have often been called a very logical person.

Most of the time, I agree with the above characterization, but occasionally, there are exceptions.

My interview with James was an excellent example of the alternative, emotional me.

The result was that even though I didn’t agree with all of James’ arguments logically, I dare say that I felt a deep connection to him, and he managed to move me. Thus, even though this was the first direct conversation between us, I hope that I will have the privilege to talk and socialize with him more and that, eventually, one day, I can call him my friend.

I enjoyed the whole interview and believe it is well worth listening to. Though different parts will resonate better with different people, two quotes stand out as something that I will personally take away from James on this occasion:

I respect science and think it is a marvelous tool but I do not worship it!

We are Singularia

Anyway, it is best if you hear James Harvey himself, so make sure you listen to the first Singularity podcast in full:

Stay tuned for more great singularity podcast interviews coming soon to Singularity Weblog and Singularity Symposium.

As always, your input and suggestions are most welcome.

You can send me an Email here.

Filed Under: Podcasts Tagged With: James Harvey, Singularia, singularity, transhumanism

Singularia (Part 3): What Was It We Were Thinking Of…

May 21, 2010 by James Harvey

Oh yes, will technology transcend biology … and our mostly metaphysical reply:

Technology, while a big and important cultural driver, has always been only a part of the fundamental shifts that humans have increasingly manifested over time and which may
be expected to culminate in the coming Singularity event.

From a Metaphysical point of view the so called Technological Singularity, Transhumanism, AI, or whatever one may wish to call it, represents an illusion, spawned within a continuing cynical, materialist hallucination in projecting a disrespect for life and a desired ultimate dominance of and a total submission from nature. This technological vision promotes an adolescent wet dream of the ego supreme; a very attractive, but delusional and dangerous fantasy that revels in power and control.

Indeed, at the end of the day, who would the Technological Singularity Trans-humanist agenda serve and how? For the bulk of humanity it would not and could not exist. This option will only be for a very select few and they will need to check their humanity, empathy and compassion for the rest of Earth’s children at the door. The keys to a digital heaven will be given only to those who can afford it and are willing to turn their backs on its ancestry, history, humanity and soul.

***

There could indeed be a singularity in human consciousness occurring in the exponential growth manifesting in data, information and inter-connectivity; but it will not be exclusively a technological one. There seems to exist, a natural evolutionary breakthrough in human consciousness, occurring in humanity’s time-line and swelling in our life time. An accumulation of rapid change that has already been overwhelming and ravishing us. Humanity has been accelerating into an intense, instinctual, migratory phase physically, psychologically and metaphysically. A shift that is happening and that cannot be avoided, revealing itself as a culmination of our past epiphanies, experiments and collective experiences.

That this looks conflicted and confusing should be no surprise. Metaphorically we are like a caterpillar in its self-constructed cocoon, dying to one reality while also being born into a fresher and expanded being-becoming. A metamorphosis stimulated through the awaking of a deeply en-coded biological message triggering a transformation of old material into new.

The sum-total experience of any form of Singularity approaching our world would be by definition grander than technology. Technologies are the tools that enhance the imagination of human consciousness in service of creativity. Technology is an interim step and not the goal. The goal or consequence of a cultural singularity would be a focused unity formed from out of our diversity. A coming together, in an extreme sense, where all prior notions and ideas, rules and habits break down and all previous bets are off.

We can observe that these shifts happen from time to time in the geological fossil record. They appear as time line spikes of novelty in evolution as life mysteriously first appears and then regularly jumps from one state to another. These events seem to occur outside of any obvious causes and are not the kinds of mutations brought on by calamity or extinction events. How or why these tipping points take place remains a mystery cloaked within many competing scientific theories. Nevertheless, we do find leaps. In the famous Cambrian Explosion 550 million years ago, sea life previously consisted of vulnerable critters growing exoskeletons to protect themselves as shelled creatures. Then suddenly, by the end of the next geological day, we have fish with soft flesh on the outside and internal skeletons. This is also when vision – eyes – unexpectedly appeared. The result produces a literal line in the geological sand where an unparalleled rate of animal diversification explodes. All these new species colonized a wide range of what were previously unavailable ecological niches. This event has been called the Big Bang of animal evolution, as it produced all the known phyla of animals: insects, worms, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.

What if, the event we are calling a singularity was actually another of these biological evolutionary spikes? That the approaching singularity could be the result of an accelerating increase in consciousness and communication, experience and transcendence arising from out of the evolutionary progressions of a primordial earth. A cosmic transcendence from a no-thing (the original Big Bang singularity) into a something(s) and eventually a someone(s); who have only very, very recently been enabled by technology.

Modern humans are officially said to have evolved into our current format about 200,000 years ago, though recent archeological finds (see part 2 in this series) call this figure into question and we could be two to three times older, maybe more. Regardless, humanity is the new kid on the block in the 4.5 -billon year story taking place this planet; a world where multi-celled life first appeared less than one billion years ago. The ontological universe presents a mighty mystery, that has spawned viable life and grown the natural world as we experience it, and she trumps science and technology by her very being and becoming. The uber mother-matrix of our universe is infinitely greater than any artifact we, her children, can create from out of itself.

Nevertheless, our human mission seems to be powered by free will and destined to go and grow into spaces and places, progressive developmental phases and more logical conundrums than we have never known before. From a neurological point of view we would appear to be energetically each a universes unto itself. Each of us, projecting a brilliant, sparkling, illuminated spiral density of chemical-electrical activity; which accumulates information and remembers experiences, while expressing itself on a rainbow continuum ranging from the ultra logical to the extremely irrational. It seems an amazing feat that we can communicate at all, let alone agree on anything. How we choose to express this self-aware consciousness has been and will continue to be our story; personally and collectively.

There will be much of our past that we will need to digest and overcome, while there also exists a great deal that must be retained. Throwing out our biological baby with the perceived, outdated, ethical bath-water, would not only be another mixed metaphor, but a stupid idea. Describing and limiting this apparent coming transformation as being an exclusively materialistic manifestation of human ingenuity provoking a technological singularity leading us towards an immersion into the machine as an on-line, all the time, eternal application can only be a dead end.

Unless, we can also celebrate, integrate and embrace our human capacity and genius for relatedness. Experiencing, expressing and demonstrating a unity of our collective dreams
and purposes through cultural expressions, that are empowered by technology but mediated and ruled by the empathetic “heart.” This would be our ancient quest for the redemption of the wounded land and the ideals of wholeness, which is traditionally known as the Grail. What comes from the earth returns to the earth in the service of an eternal renewal in the spirit of life; thus any technology can only serve and never dominate the life force.

We need to re-member ourselves as human-beings rather than redefine ourselves as human-doings. Being-ness represents an open ended, mysteriously alive, sensitive and progressive creature re-cycling its lively self-aware energy within a universal creation. A celebration of our very recent cosmic development, appearing as a human consciousness, arising to be a someone emerging from out of the womb of no-where. Each an unprecedented psycho-physical energy pattern, evolving within gravity through matter as a striving bio-logical entity reaching back up into the light as a being~becoming. We are each an alive, aware and responsive being-ness, expressing itself within great spiral cycles of time by engaging in activities of spinning and weaving individual manifestations of our truest dreams and fears, deepest insights and ideals. We are most precious, self-remembering sensory nerve endings to a profound and sacred mystery story 14 billion Earth years old.

We are all Singularia. An individuated verb-noun for which there can be no plural, yet which are also not uncountable examples of a unique expression of consciousness called human. Singularia, each approaching its own unique, yet collective event horizon, as the waves of novelty and change carries us up onto the shore of a very new and unknown land.

Welcome to a truly new world, which is not only stranger than you suppose but stranger than you can suppose:

Slartibartfast: I must warn you, we’re going to pass through … Well … a sort of gateway thing.

Arthur Dent: What?

Slartibartfast: It may disturb you. It scares the willies out of me…

Douglas Adams
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

About the Author: James Harvey is a poet, a mystic, a seasoned Light worker and learned observer of Life… Most recently, he is the author of the thought provoking book Singularia: Being at the Edge of Time.


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Filed Under: Op Ed Tagged With: James Harvey, Singularia

Singularia (Part 2): Who Am Us Anyway?

May 14, 2010 by James Harvey

Who Am Us Anyway?

Who do we really think we are?

One answer has been: Tool Maker.

At a certain level of evolution we are a modern species of ambitious monkey that imagines, crafts and uses tools. Always have been.

A recent find in Germany has uncovered a cache of very large, finely crafted and balanced hunting spears dated to be 400,000 years old. The oldest complete set of hunting weapons ever discovered, which changes prior conceptions of our ancient human ancestors from being opportunistic scavengers into systematic, organized and cooperative predators.

Technology, it seems, is one of those things we do naturally in order to succeed and also stimulate ourselves. New technology always shows up first, within succeeding cultural generations, as our finest instruments of music, art, hunting and warfare. Devices and gadgets, tools, instruments and machinery all imagined, designed, developed, built and used to enhance human abilities and accessorize or empower our memories, desires, dreams and insights.

From the extraordinary, 16,000 year old, painted caves at Lascaux we can fast forward to a digital 3D AVATAR in IMAX. Realizing that it’s metaphorically the same cave in which we have always employed our best practice technology to express and convey our dreams and visions. From sticks and stones, bows and arrows, Bunker Blasters and Hydrogen Bombs, we also employ competitive techniques to release our aggressions with ever newer tools of “shock and awe.”

The novelty and challenge of our current situation relates to the exponential rate at which our technology is now developing, along with an accompanying explosive increase of our accumulated information being communicated, retained, searched and duplicated.

Not so long ago computers were the size of large buildings but for a generation now they have been “carry on” luggage. Twenty years ago there was no World Wide Web, Internet or e-Mail. Today the wires are disappearing as we use Wireless Broadband and Smart Phones. Also, there are now more active web pages on-line than there are currently people on the planet; and both are growing. New languages become spoken in Geek and multi-competitive digital software codes, as new concepts, protocols and expanding networks lead us down the garden path into growing untested possibilities. A networked global society, empowered by tools, suddenly emerges, taking us from the Wright Brothers at Kittyhawk to Space Shuttles traveling out to a permanently staffed space station in less than 80 years.

All of us have been experiencing an unprecedented and spontaneous adoption to an ubiquitous technology becoming embedded into our daily lives, as millions of people around the planet have became global citizens and hyper-linked 24/7. This stupendous cultural development has surprisingly occurred without any real proposals or discussions, other than the marketing and promotion of “The Future” such as the Jetson’s Theme Song:

These amusing, clever cultural Meme’s seduce and drive us like a migratory species into a new digital landscape. An electronic real estate, that lives no-where, but exists everywhere, moving at the speed of light. A “silly putty” reality where anything goes as content and culture morphs and mutates within a dance of 0’s & 1’s. Producing mash-ups and re-mixes of all that went before, goes on now and strives into becoming, as we collectively surf the waves of novelty in a psychological climate of familiar yet growing strangeness. We call it Post-Modern, but really, it is the really bumpy and dangerous patch between succeeding ages in our evolution in consciousness. Is there any wonder that a ‘love-hate’ – ‘fear-desire’ – agnostic belief in “whatever” becomes a default psychological position for the mutating monkeys migrating towards their singular date with fate?

As to the question “Will Technology Replace Biology”– well, the facts are that human consciousness has already merged with the machine. Because we all live inside a vast machine culture and fantasy world that our ancestor dreamed but has become dangerously cut off from the natural world. This artificial paradise scenario has already become a science-fiction technological fix on our daily reality such that we are totally dependent upon it. We become weaker physically and also dumber overall as we can Google any question but cannot personally verify the conflicting information.

Yet, we still remain biological beings, responsive to the same old mother-matrix organic analog world of wind and rain, sun and surf. We naturally remain illogical, deep feeling, loving and even rude people, despite our machines and the multi-tasking addictions they tempt us to attain. Human consciousness has always been a work in process, enjoying an unbroken evolution both biologically and culturally, and we shall naturally become mad, self-destructive and quickly extinct if we insist on cloning ourselves inside static, objectified boxes; no matter how god-like and heavenly they may seem to be. To be ultimately successful our technology will begin to merge into the background, in a great disappearing act, as our tools and devices become immersed into our biological world and we potentially evolve into a richer, deeper culture in response to the organic impulses that naturally drive humanity’s quest.

“Machines are junk waiting to happen.”

Humans however live at the ‘speed of life’ and are adoptive, beautiful, inscrutable, sexy, precious and unique to the universe; as far as we can tell. See for example, Monty Python‘s The Galaxy Song:

About the Author: James Harvey is a poet, a mystic, a seasoned Light worker and learned observer of Life… Most recently, he is the author of the thought provoking book Singularia: Being at the Edge of Time.

 

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Filed Under: Op Ed Tagged With: James Harvey, Singularia

Singularia: a “Both/And” Point of View of the Singularity (Part 1)

May 7, 2010 by James Harvey

Here, at the Singularity Weblog, Socrates asks:

“Will technology replace biology?”

An obviously rhetorical question, with an apparent answer, depending upon which side of the debate you may find yourself. But yet this presents a valid point for enquiry given the extraordinary predictions being made by Ray Kurzweil (and other transhumanists) for an approaching Technological Singularity.

Certainly, the question is not new. In contrast to the enthusiastic promotion for AI there also exists a growing dystopian vision of Artificial Intelligence which has inspired entire industries of science fiction literature from Frankenstein to I Robot with recent transformations, through further technological innovations, into the block buster films starring: HAL, Agent Smith, Terminator and Blade Runner. All asking the question:

Will our machines still love us when they are smarter than we are? (Are we going to eventually produce artificial machine intelligences that think and plan, re-pair and also reproduce in “up-grades” on an exponential timeline?)

Some people would definitely have it so and others of us would really rather not want to know.

There is as well the prospect of uploading one’s consciousness, as a digital simulacrum, into a cloud-computing hive of existence, that while still just a fantasy, is actually being imagined, discussed and theorized.

That it appeals to the ego while also being abhorrent to the soul comes as no surprise.

Could this be a natural and even a spiritual-mechanical evolution as Dr Kurzweil has recently expressed?

Or would AI be just another projection of materialist and commercial dreams upon much deeper organic well-springs of consciousness; a self aware, remembering, creative expression of free will that is indigenous to this little blue-green globe of life spinning in the Milky Way?

What if the real answer could be neither one, nor the other, but a third way of Yes?

A “both/and” point of view upon the coming Singularity expressing a metaphysical and psychological mystery. That the conundrum of human consciousness – Who am I? What am I doing here? – never actually has been a problem to be solved, but a transformative process to be dreamed, chosen and experienced…

About the Author: James Harvey is a poet, a mystic, a seasoned Light worker and learned observer of Life… Most recently, he is the author of the thought provoking book Singularia: Being at the Edge of Time.

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Filed Under: Op Ed Tagged With: James Harvey, Singularia

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Ethos: “Technology is the How, not the Why or What. So you can have the best possible How but if you mess up your Why or What you will do more damage than good. That is why technology is not enough.” Nikola Danaylov

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