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April 23, 1997: Nanotechnology - Charles Ostman
Published 2 years, 6 months ago
Description
Charles Ostman, senior fellow of the Foresight Institute and nanotechnology researcher, takes Art Bell on a breathtaking journey through the convergence of artificial intelligence, virtual reality, and molecular engineering. Ostman describes a near future where sentient autonomous agents roam the Internet, experiential conveyance replaces passive media, and the boundary between human cognition and machine intelligence dissolves entirely.
The discussion builds methodically from the Internet as a self-modifying organism to virtual environments capable of breaking through the human belief barrier. Ostman details experiments where subjects became so immersed in virtual worlds they needed recovery time upon disconnection. He warns that the same technology enabling spectacular educational breakthroughs could become a tool of unprecedented manipulation and control, creating a techno-elite class separated from the rest of humanity.
When the conversation finally reaches nanotechnology itself, Ostman explains how molecular-scale assembly will allow engineers to design materials atom by atom, potentially solving superconductivity, curing all disease, reversing aging, and even contriving artificial gravity. Art presses him on the dangers, and Ostman frames the entire trajectory as an evolutionary test that civilizations across the universe either pass or fail.
The discussion builds methodically from the Internet as a self-modifying organism to virtual environments capable of breaking through the human belief barrier. Ostman details experiments where subjects became so immersed in virtual worlds they needed recovery time upon disconnection. He warns that the same technology enabling spectacular educational breakthroughs could become a tool of unprecedented manipulation and control, creating a techno-elite class separated from the rest of humanity.
When the conversation finally reaches nanotechnology itself, Ostman explains how molecular-scale assembly will allow engineers to design materials atom by atom, potentially solving superconductivity, curing all disease, reversing aging, and even contriving artificial gravity. Art presses him on the dangers, and Ostman frames the entire trajectory as an evolutionary test that civilizations across the universe either pass or fail.