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	<title>Commentaires pour Strange Paths</title>
	<link>http://strangepaths.com</link>
	<description>Physics, computation, philosophy of mind</description>
	<pubDate>Sun, 20 Jul 2008 15:10:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Replicazione del DNA par Caterina</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/replicazione-del-dna/2007/07/03/it/#comment-63301</link>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Jul 2008 18:25:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/replicazione-del-dna/2007/07/03/it/#comment-63301</guid>
					<description>Scopro solo ora il tuo sito web...e purtroppo vado troppo di corsa per poterlo spulciare in ogni particolare. Sto preparando anche io (come Stefano scrive nei sui commenti) un esame (Biologia Molecolare) e questo video è interessantissimo!! Complimenti.

Ps: complimenti anche x la citazione di Carroll (per il quale io vado matta ...).</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Scopro solo ora il tuo sito web&#8230;e purtroppo vado troppo di corsa per poterlo spulciare in ogni particolare. Sto preparando anche io (come Stefano scrive nei sui commenti) un esame (Biologia Molecolare) e questo video è interessantissimo!! Complimenti.</p>
<p>Ps: complimenti anche x la citazione di Carroll (per il quale io vado matta &#8230;).
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Replicazione del DNA par Stefano</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/replicazione-del-dna/2007/07/03/it/#comment-61736</link>
		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Jul 2008 17:07:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/replicazione-del-dna/2007/07/03/it/#comment-61736</guid>
					<description>Ciao Xantox, si be lo immaginavo...dicevo che è troppo veloce per apprezzare bene tutti i movimenti che avvengono nella forca di replicazione...cmq complimenti...al momento sto studiando per l'esame di biotecnologie e questa animazione è una chicca ; )</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ciao Xantox, si be lo immaginavo&#8230;dicevo che è troppo veloce per apprezzare bene tutti i movimenti che avvengono nella forca di replicazione&#8230;cmq complimenti&#8230;al momento sto studiando per l&#8217;esame di biotecnologie e questa animazione è una chicca ; )
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Replicazione del DNA par xantox</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/replicazione-del-dna/2007/07/03/it/#comment-61414</link>
		<pubDate>Sat, 05 Jul 2008 03:39:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/replicazione-del-dna/2007/07/03/it/#comment-61414</guid>
					<description>La velocità é approssimativamente quella reale, sulla base di una replicazione in cellule eucarioti.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>La velocità é approssimativamente quella reale, sulla base di una replicazione in cellule eucarioti.
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Replicazione del DNA par Stefano</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/replicazione-del-dna/2007/07/03/it/#comment-60755</link>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Jul 2008 15:19:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/replicazione-del-dna/2007/07/03/it/#comment-60755</guid>
					<description>un "esplorando il corpo umano" in versione + evoluta : ))
veramente bello! forse un pò troppo veloce..</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>un &#8220;esplorando il corpo umano&#8221; in versione + evoluta : ))<br />
veramente bello! forse un pò troppo veloce..
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Reversible computation par Jim Clarage</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/reversible-computation/2008/01/20/en/#comment-60134</link>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jun 2008 21:51:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/reversible-computation/2008/01/20/en/#comment-60134</guid>
					<description>As a concrete example of this relationship between computation and thermodynamics, place your hand on your head as you read Landauer or Bennett's work on this subject. You will feel the heat of your scalp, which is of course your body's way of cooling the 100billion-neuron computer hard at work processing these ideas. The &lt;a href="http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2001/JacquelineLing.shtml" rel="nofollow"&gt;human brain runs at about 20 Watts&lt;/a&gt; in fact, a large percentage of the body's overall heat dissipation.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As a concrete example of this relationship between computation and thermodynamics, place your hand on your head as you read Landauer or Bennett&#8217;s work on this subject. You will feel the heat of your scalp, which is of course your body&#8217;s way of cooling the 100billion-neuron computer hard at work processing these ideas. The <a href="http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2001/JacquelineLing.shtml" rel="nofollow">human brain runs at about 20 Watts</a> in fact, a large percentage of the body&#8217;s overall heat dissipation.
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Arche interstellaire par Yogi</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/arche-interstellaire/2007/02/14/fr/#comment-57347</link>
		<pubDate>Sat, 14 Jun 2008 22:57:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/arche-interstellaire/2007/02/14/fr/#comment-57347</guid>
					<description>Fascinante discussion, dont je n'ai fait pour l'instant qu'effleurer la lecture !
Sur le dernier débat concernant l'habitabilité de la planète cible, sans doute vaudra-t-il mieux adapter par ingénierie génétique le métabolisme humain aux conditions trouvées, plutôt que d'espérer trouver une planète de type P0.

Beaucoup de lecture en perspective sur ce site, merci et Bravo !</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Fascinante discussion, dont je n&#8217;ai fait pour l&#8217;instant qu&#8217;effleurer la lecture !<br />
Sur le dernier débat concernant l&#8217;habitabilité de la planète cible, sans doute vaudra-t-il mieux adapter par ingénierie génétique le métabolisme humain aux conditions trouvées, plutôt que d&#8217;espérer trouver une planète de type P0.</p>
<p>Beaucoup de lecture en perspective sur ce site, merci et Bravo !
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Interstellar Ark par Gilgamesh</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/interstellar-ark/2007/02/14/en/#comment-56931</link>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jun 2008 22:43:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/interstellar-ark/2007/02/14/en/#comment-56931</guid>
					<description>I'm quite late, but I don't forget you :)

Yes, the Ark may be conceived as the "exocytosis vesicle" of the Gaia cell. A "seminosphere" (from semen, inis: seed).

The goal is not to "save humanity", but to spread it within the Galaxy in its own human and sustainable entirety. And I do not think that humanity is in danger in short-medium term. Even, not at all. However, at bigger timescales, at scales that formidably exceeds us, the ability to propagate our being in multiple points of the universe is perhaps the only strategy that can make humanity a cosmic time phenomenon.

And "our being", Humanity, does not only include the biological species "Homo sapiens" (which is expected to "soon" give birth to new species), but also the biosphere which gave ti birth and the incredible evolutionary success it has accumulated in its various species.

But for this, it takes a great vessel ^ _ ^. A miniature biosphere.

One way to do it big is to repeat "ad infinitum" the same pattern, repeat the same process. Ark is a thin surface (thickness / surface: 10-7) formed by hollow identical polymer strands. In the central channel (diameter: ~ 1-2 m), filled with water which also circulates nutrients (CO2 dissolved ... NPK) and light. The wall is made of vegetative fibre bundles (not giving flowers or fruits), of small diameter (some mm -&#62; some tenth of cm) with a "hair" chlorophilian root in the central channel. The thickness of the fiber walls is the same as the diameter of the central channel.

Some properties of these fibers:
* They grow on both ends towards the light source,
* They are aligned in the direction of constraints,
* They cease to grow when the stress reaches a certain threshold and then grow in diameter,
* They wrap themselves around each other when they come into contact,
* They secrete bark as a viscous and water-resistant latex.

It is "enough" to devise such a kind of vegetal being to generate the two walls of the Ark. Initially, the Ark is just a few meters in diameter but it has already its final geometry (fiber arrangemen), and the growth can achieve sizes of the order of the kilometer.

Architecture of walls:

&lt;img src="http://pix.nofrag.com/0/3/5/786ea21e238e5906576e69c6c0be3.png" /&gt;

I cheated to represent two types of walls as one: the floor of the Ark that supports the ocean's weight is thick (50 m or 12 ~ thick strands) and without inter-wall vacuum. The vacuum is 30 m between the sidewalls, finer (2 * 3 layers), which falls on the hub.There is very little inorganic system integrated with walls: just the gateways.

In the interior, there is an ocean of 25 m depth on which float a "continental platform" in the form of a puzzle of hexagons: the human habitat is completely decoupled from the walls.

The surface soil is about 3 m.

Total ocean habitat + ~ 8 Gt

Underneath the pattern of walls there is a diagram of the solar ring of 125 GW as a tapestry of élécroluminescent LED (light output close to 1). On the day, the ring shines on the surface of the Ark. The night it is turned off and the light power is injected into the strands, to feed the chlorophyllian fibers.

All elements of the Ark are 100% recycled (except 16 Gt of fuel, of course:)).

I'll continue on the same later.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m quite late, but I don&#8217;t forget you <img src='http://strangepaths.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>Yes, the Ark may be conceived as the &#8220;exocytosis vesicle&#8221; of the Gaia cell. A &#8220;seminosphere&#8221; (from semen, inis: seed).</p>
<p>The goal is not to &#8220;save humanity&#8221;, but to spread it within the Galaxy in its own human and sustainable entirety. And I do not think that humanity is in danger in short-medium term. Even, not at all. However, at bigger timescales, at scales that formidably exceeds us, the ability to propagate our being in multiple points of the universe is perhaps the only strategy that can make humanity a cosmic time phenomenon.</p>
<p>And &#8220;our being&#8221;, Humanity, does not only include the biological species &#8220;Homo sapiens&#8221; (which is expected to &#8220;soon&#8221; give birth to new species), but also the biosphere which gave ti birth and the incredible evolutionary success it has accumulated in its various species.</p>
<p>But for this, it takes a great vessel ^ _ ^. A miniature biosphere.</p>
<p>One way to do it big is to repeat &#8220;ad infinitum&#8221; the same pattern, repeat the same process. Ark is a thin surface (thickness / surface: 10-7) formed by hollow identical polymer strands. In the central channel (diameter: ~ 1-2 m), filled with water which also circulates nutrients (CO2 dissolved &#8230; NPK) and light. The wall is made of vegetative fibre bundles (not giving flowers or fruits), of small diameter (some mm -&gt; some tenth of cm) with a &#8220;hair&#8221; chlorophilian root in the central channel. The thickness of the fiber walls is the same as the diameter of the central channel.</p>
<p>Some properties of these fibers:<br />
* They grow on both ends towards the light source,<br />
* They are aligned in the direction of constraints,<br />
* They cease to grow when the stress reaches a certain threshold and then grow in diameter,<br />
* They wrap themselves around each other when they come into contact,<br />
* They secrete bark as a viscous and water-resistant latex.</p>
<p>It is &#8220;enough&#8221; to devise such a kind of vegetal being to generate the two walls of the Ark. Initially, the Ark is just a few meters in diameter but it has already its final geometry (fiber arrangemen), and the growth can achieve sizes of the order of the kilometer.</p>
<p>Architecture of walls:</p>
<p><img src="http://pix.nofrag.com/0/3/5/786ea21e238e5906576e69c6c0be3.png" /></p>
<p>I cheated to represent two types of walls as one: the floor of the Ark that supports the ocean&#8217;s weight is thick (50 m or 12 ~ thick strands) and without inter-wall vacuum. The vacuum is 30 m between the sidewalls, finer (2 * 3 layers), which falls on the hub.There is very little inorganic system integrated with walls: just the gateways.</p>
<p>In the interior, there is an ocean of 25 m depth on which float a &#8220;continental platform&#8221; in the form of a puzzle of hexagons: the human habitat is completely decoupled from the walls.</p>
<p>The surface soil is about 3 m.</p>
<p>Total ocean habitat + ~ 8 Gt</p>
<p>Underneath the pattern of walls there is a diagram of the solar ring of 125 GW as a tapestry of élécroluminescent LED (light output close to 1). On the day, the ring shines on the surface of the Ark. The night it is turned off and the light power is injected into the strands, to feed the chlorophyllian fibers.</p>
<p>All elements of the Ark are 100% recycled (except 16 Gt of fuel, of course:)).</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll continue on the same later.
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Interstellar Ark par alfhiggins</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/interstellar-ark/2007/02/14/en/#comment-55419</link>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 19:26:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/interstellar-ark/2007/02/14/en/#comment-55419</guid>
					<description>Do you imagine the Ark, or perhaps several Arks, stopping at various star systems to establish colonies on whatever celestial bodies seem appropriate, staying long enough to make sure those colonies are self-sufficient and stable, refueling, repairing, and then moving on to the next viable star system?  Sort of interstellar humanity spores spreading our seed through the cosmos.

Could you elaborate on the nature of the Ark's organic construction material and the internal structure of the Ark.  The three diagrams in the article are captioned in French and, unfortunately for me, I am not fluent.  (By the way I do greatly appreciate the fact that you are fluent in English!)  How would it be "grown" into Ark proportions?  integrated with the non-organic systems? Maintained with enough water, sunlight, and nutrients through the long journey?

What are your thoughts on terraforming?  Mars, for example, sounds like a decent candidate for this process in our immediate solar system.  Each case would of course have different variables, but it seems we could apply basic principles we might learn about the process in attempting to terraform Mars to bodies in other star systems.

I do feel that humanity will and should focus on colonizing our immediate neighborhood to a reasonable extent (orbital stations, Moon, Mars at the very least, perhaps Mercury, Venus, asteroids, and a few of the outer system moons) before venturing to "nearby" stars, and regardless of what transhumanistic developments occur in the next few centuries.  Learning to crawl before we try to run and all that.  

Convincing enough people that space settlement is an inevitable part of humanities future and should be pursued wholeheartedly is another matter.

Not to mention making sure that space is a demilitarized zone of human operation. This will take an awful lot of sociopolitical cooperation at an international level to pressure the warmongering hawks enough to make peaceful coexistence a reality for space.

What do you think about the "space elevator" (you may know it by other names) idea to decrease to cost of payloads exponentially?  Once they perfect the carbon nanotube technology it seems this could be a reality in the next 10 to 20 years or so.  

Thanks for responding so promptly and thoroughly to my last post!  :)</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Do you imagine the Ark, or perhaps several Arks, stopping at various star systems to establish colonies on whatever celestial bodies seem appropriate, staying long enough to make sure those colonies are self-sufficient and stable, refueling, repairing, and then moving on to the next viable star system?  Sort of interstellar humanity spores spreading our seed through the cosmos.</p>
<p>Could you elaborate on the nature of the Ark&#8217;s organic construction material and the internal structure of the Ark.  The three diagrams in the article are captioned in French and, unfortunately for me, I am not fluent.  (By the way I do greatly appreciate the fact that you are fluent in English!)  How would it be &#8220;grown&#8221; into Ark proportions?  integrated with the non-organic systems? Maintained with enough water, sunlight, and nutrients through the long journey?</p>
<p>What are your thoughts on terraforming?  Mars, for example, sounds like a decent candidate for this process in our immediate solar system.  Each case would of course have different variables, but it seems we could apply basic principles we might learn about the process in attempting to terraform Mars to bodies in other star systems.</p>
<p>I do feel that humanity will and should focus on colonizing our immediate neighborhood to a reasonable extent (orbital stations, Moon, Mars at the very least, perhaps Mercury, Venus, asteroids, and a few of the outer system moons) before venturing to &#8220;nearby&#8221; stars, and regardless of what transhumanistic developments occur in the next few centuries.  Learning to crawl before we try to run and all that.  </p>
<p>Convincing enough people that space settlement is an inevitable part of humanities future and should be pursued wholeheartedly is another matter.</p>
<p>Not to mention making sure that space is a demilitarized zone of human operation. This will take an awful lot of sociopolitical cooperation at an international level to pressure the warmongering hawks enough to make peaceful coexistence a reality for space.</p>
<p>What do you think about the &#8220;space elevator&#8221; (you may know it by other names) idea to decrease to cost of payloads exponentially?  Once they perfect the carbon nanotube technology it seems this could be a reality in the next 10 to 20 years or so.  </p>
<p>Thanks for responding so promptly and thoroughly to my last post!  <img src='http://strangepaths.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Interstellar Ark par Gilgamesh</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/interstellar-ark/2007/02/14/en/#comment-55404</link>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 17:12:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/interstellar-ark/2007/02/14/en/#comment-55404</guid>
					<description>Yes, the "hyper-transhumanist" solution is equally among the solutions which can be considered to enable humanity to leave Earth (I do not know if the term "hyper-transhumanist" exists :) , it is just to conceptualize the idea a totally disembodied humanity, in silicon or other support - see below the definition of transhumanism).

I have no particular prejudices against the transhumanist movement, it is an idea to be researched, but philosophically, I think that the human phenomenon is an inseparable whole:

* A biology: in biology, I put also the spirit (anima, awareness ...), which is like Spinoza said "the idea of the body." The man-organism capable of thought.
* A society: the man-organism is characterised by a hyper-sociability and only develops in interaction with others.
* A natural environment: the men in society have given birth to the so-called humanity, interacting with a biotic and abiotic environments (the starry sky for example).

With these three elements, we can reconstruct what we call humanity in its essential aspects, even if its entire memory has been obliterated in the past.

While a single thinking machine (even aware of itself and of the world) is not an humanity and can not reproduce. Even bearing in mind all that man has done in terms of knowledge and memories. And the same, in my opinion, applies to a machine without a body, without this particular interaction with a natural environment.

Of course, this is not because the spirit "in silico" is a sub-mind. But it is no humanity, is something else to explore. The ark is a "minimum Humanity": this is the concept. (Whether technically it can be reached with the Ark of the article, it is another story...). It is a fully human entity requiring the minimum energy expenditure.

Otherwise, of course, we can add the idea that the Ark also boards an hypothetical "silicium soul" (or whatever ...), or "hibernants" embryos, why not?

Returning to more "down to earth" consideration :) How is it possible to "land" from the Ark?

The Ark  is not abandoned once arriving in the target planetary system. It remains the living environment of reference. So this is a place to live virtually forever (as a planet). Its walls are renewed permanently. The target stellar system is a largely hostile environment.

To get on this "planet", I imagine a dozen shuttles containing some dozen of people (say 100 tons of payload) powered by fusion propulsion. These shuttles would be used initially to carry out missions in the solar system. During the last centuries of the travel, the arkonauts could of course improve or rebuild them. The ark has a significant technological capacity.



a+</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yes, the &#8220;hyper-transhumanist&#8221; solution is equally among the solutions which can be considered to enable humanity to leave Earth (I do not know if the term &#8220;hyper-transhumanist&#8221; exists <img src='http://strangepaths.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />  , it is just to conceptualize the idea a totally disembodied humanity, in silicon or other support - see below the definition of transhumanism).</p>
<p>I have no particular prejudices against the transhumanist movement, it is an idea to be researched, but philosophically, I think that the human phenomenon is an inseparable whole:</p>
<p>* A biology: in biology, I put also the spirit (anima, awareness &#8230;), which is like Spinoza said &#8220;the idea of the body.&#8221; The man-organism capable of thought.<br />
* A society: the man-organism is characterised by a hyper-sociability and only develops in interaction with others.<br />
* A natural environment: the men in society have given birth to the so-called humanity, interacting with a biotic and abiotic environments (the starry sky for example).</p>
<p>With these three elements, we can reconstruct what we call humanity in its essential aspects, even if its entire memory has been obliterated in the past.</p>
<p>While a single thinking machine (even aware of itself and of the world) is not an humanity and can not reproduce. Even bearing in mind all that man has done in terms of knowledge and memories. And the same, in my opinion, applies to a machine without a body, without this particular interaction with a natural environment.</p>
<p>Of course, this is not because the spirit &#8220;in silico&#8221; is a sub-mind. But it is no humanity, is something else to explore. The ark is a &#8220;minimum Humanity&#8221;: this is the concept. (Whether technically it can be reached with the Ark of the article, it is another story&#8230;). It is a fully human entity requiring the minimum energy expenditure.</p>
<p>Otherwise, of course, we can add the idea that the Ark also boards an hypothetical &#8220;silicium soul&#8221; (or whatever &#8230;), or &#8220;hibernants&#8221; embryos, why not?</p>
<p>Returning to more &#8220;down to earth&#8221; consideration <img src='http://strangepaths.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' />  How is it possible to &#8220;land&#8221; from the Ark?</p>
<p>The Ark  is not abandoned once arriving in the target planetary system. It remains the living environment of reference. So this is a place to live virtually forever (as a planet). Its walls are renewed permanently. The target stellar system is a largely hostile environment.</p>
<p>To get on this &#8220;planet&#8221;, I imagine a dozen shuttles containing some dozen of people (say 100 tons of payload) powered by fusion propulsion. These shuttles would be used initially to carry out missions in the solar system. During the last centuries of the travel, the arkonauts could of course improve or rebuild them. The ark has a significant technological capacity.</p>
<p>a+
</p>
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		<title>Commentaires sur Interstellar Ark par alfhiggins</title>
		<link>http://strangepaths.com/interstellar-ark/2007/02/14/en/#comment-54910</link>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 May 2008 03:05:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://strangepaths.com/interstellar-ark/2007/02/14/en/#comment-54910</guid>
					<description>This is a thought provoking article and follow up discussion...I wish I was more of a mathematician/engineer type so I could follow the math, but I can take it on faith that you know what you're talking about.

I love the idea of a plant based structure for the ship.

I'll have to go back and read my Kurzweil book to really have much to say about the feasibility of uploading the mind.  My personal belief is that we are made up of three basic parts, body, mind, and spirit, working in unison to create human consciousness.  It seems to me it will be quite some time, if ever, for us to be able to technologically transfer the spirit element into an artificial host.

What would the process of disembarking from the ship and setting up a colony once it arrives at its destination look like?  Wouldn't they need some sort of smaller vessels along, or the ability to construct them, to ferry raw materials and people around?

Aren't there documented cases of certain yogis being buried alive for extended periods of time without food, water, and with limited air?  Could these types of techniques be applied to a hibernation strategy?

Why couldn't a single ship incorporate the several different strategies (generations, Methusalah (sp?), hibernation/cryo, embryonic, cybernetic etc.) into one amalgamated scenario?

I realize the last post was quite a while ago, but these are things I've been thinking about as I've been reading.  I'll have to see if I can find the Wiki page....

Take care and keep dreaming!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a thought provoking article and follow up discussion&#8230;I wish I was more of a mathematician/engineer type so I could follow the math, but I can take it on faith that you know what you&#8217;re talking about.</p>
<p>I love the idea of a plant based structure for the ship.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll have to go back and read my Kurzweil book to really have much to say about the feasibility of uploading the mind.  My personal belief is that we are made up of three basic parts, body, mind, and spirit, working in unison to create human consciousness.  It seems to me it will be quite some time, if ever, for us to be able to technologically transfer the spirit element into an artificial host.</p>
<p>What would the process of disembarking from the ship and setting up a colony once it arrives at its destination look like?  Wouldn&#8217;t they need some sort of smaller vessels along, or the ability to construct them, to ferry raw materials and people around?</p>
<p>Aren&#8217;t there documented cases of certain yogis being buried alive for extended periods of time without food, water, and with limited air?  Could these types of techniques be applied to a hibernation strategy?</p>
<p>Why couldn&#8217;t a single ship incorporate the several different strategies (generations, Methusalah (sp?), hibernation/cryo, embryonic, cybernetic etc.) into one amalgamated scenario?</p>
<p>I realize the last post was quite a while ago, but these are things I&#8217;ve been thinking about as I&#8217;ve been reading.  I&#8217;ll have to see if I can find the Wiki page&#8230;.</p>
<p>Take care and keep dreaming!
</p>
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