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by Joe Allen
May 04, 2022
from
JoeBot Website

Grimes
"Shinigami
Eyes" (2022)
It's a
short leap from
smoke signals to
brain chips...
Techno-optimists like to say humans are already
cyborgs awaiting
their next upgrade.
Yesterday it was
smartphones, today it's virtual reality goggles, and tomorrow - the
brain chip.
With each new device, our evolution toward human-machine
symbiosis accelerates. That's obvious when you ask someone for
directions and they pull out their phone.
Techno-pessimists largely agree.
Tech companies are
turning us into cybernetic organisms. The difference is, we're not
stoked about it. Even if "progress" really is "inevitable," there's
no sense in getting all giddy about nuclear warheads or trans
children or smartphone dependency.
In light of their vices
and virtues, some cultures are better than others.
It's true that humans are tool-users, by nature, but you have to
choose your tools wisely. All technologies fall on a spectrum,
albeit with discrete punctuation - from cave painting to the
printing press to electrodes that write memes directly onto your
wiggling brain cells.
Every person has to draw
their own lines.
Grimes - A
Mutated Generation
Of all the cyber-saints in media - from
Bill Gates to Lady Gaga -
few are as honest as the techno-pagan pop starlet,
Grimes...
A bit of a dingbat,
sure, but candid nonetheless.
You can see why
Elon Musk sired two
children with her (a son named X Æ A-12, and their daughter, Exa
Dark Sideræl, born via a
surrogate mother).
Last week Grimes
explained
to Lex Fridman:
We are becoming
cyborgs, like, our brains are fundamentally changed - everyone
who grew up with electronics, we are fundamentally different
from previous Homo sapiens.
I call us "Homo
techno."
I think
we've evolved into Homo techno which is like, essentially a
new species.
I think the
computers are what make us Homo techno. I think it's a brain
augmentation.
Right on cue, the
Twitter sperg-borg picked her theory apart.
Darwinian evolution
is genetic evolution. Yes, natural selection may act on fit brains
and bodies, but it only matters - in evolutionary terms - because
the genes get passed on.
So you can't change
someone's species by changing their brain, or their legs, or any
outward part of their body.
As usual, the
spergs miss the point...
But before I defend Grimes, let's hear a
little more about her cyborg sorcery:
Now is the
moment to reprogram the human computer. It's like, if you go
blind, your visual cortex will get taken over with other
functions.
We can choose
our own evolution, we can change the way our brains work, and we
actually have a huge responsibility to do that...
There's
definitely not adequate education. We're being inundated with
all this technology that is fundamentally changing the physical
structure of our brains, and we are not adequately responding to
that - to choose how we wanna evolve.
We could be,
really, whatever we want...
And I think if
we choose correctly and we choose wisely, consciousness could
exist for a very long time and integration with AI could be
extremely positive.
While I can't be
sure where she's getting this stuff from, I have a few guesses.
And
despite the waves of contempt rippling across my brain wrinkles, I
think Grimes is somewhat correct.
Brain Spasms
The Stanford
neuroscientist David Eagleman writes about this process in
his 2020 book
Livewired - The
Inside Story of the Ever-Changing Brain.
His central thesis
is that our neurological structure exhibits profound plasticity.
Everything you experience changes your brain, and if you change the
sensory inputs, the brain will rapidly adapt.
Areas that
typically perform one function will often shift to take on other
tasks.
Eagleman notes that
if a person loses their sight, other senses begin to move in to
restructure the visual cortex...
For example, as a
blind man learns Braille, the area that would normally process
visual input will take on the sense of touch:
The main neural
network involved in visual object recognition in the sighted is
activated by touch in the blind.
Such
observations have led to the hypothesis that the brain is a
"task machine" - doing jobs like detecting motion or objects in
the world - rather than a system organized by particular senses.
In other words,
brain regions care about solving certain types of tasks,
irrespective of the sensory channel by which information
arrives.
Therefore, despite
the innate tendencies hardwired in the genes, you can shape
someone's brain into anything you want.
There is no
foundational identity.
There is no
enduring soul.
On that basis,
Eagleman goes on to argue that scientists will soon be able to
implant electrodes that feed infrared or ultraviolet sight, or even
echolocation.
His most famous
project will let humans "feel" datastreams, so that people can
actually experience the aggregate mood on Twitter - they can "tether
themselves to the consciousness of the planet" - through a vibrating
vest, which his lab is busy developing.
In the relatively
near future, Eagleman believes we'll be able move robotic limbs with
ease, using only our minds. Our brains will simply restructure
themselves to accommodate these novel forms of electronic input and
output.
You'd think he
wanted to create a new species.
Homo sapiens vs.
Homo techno
To the extent that
any cultural mode alters the human body - through diet, say, or even
direct modification - culture is biology.
For instance,
if
one segment of a culture eagerly adopts any and all technologies,
and another actively resists "progress," the two groups' customs,
communication styles, tastes, religious outlooks, subtle brain
structures, mating patterns - and, over many generations, their
genetic composition - will split off and spiral out in two very
different directions.
Other than an
occasional raw dog
Rumspringa, the two groups would rarely interbreed due to strict
cultural differences, as with fundamentalists in any segregated
society.
In biological
terms, these two groups wouldn't be distinct species.
Not at first.
But imagine
their long-term trajectory in the wild...
If you took a
hypothetical family who runs naked through the woods and compared
them to a wire-head clan of cross-dressing cyborgs who never leave
home without a bionic exoskeleton, they'd look like separate
species.
It's apples to
purple oranges.
Factor in the latter's genetic enhancements for
bigger brains, stronger muscles, straighter smiles, nicer butts -
plus all the wonk-eyed failed experiments staring out of their
birthing vats - and it wouldn't be long before Homo sapiens and
Homo
techno could no longer interbreed.
Now, put them in
competition with one another.
Natural selection
will preserve the cultural modes - and by extension, the genes - of
the dominant group.
Over time, the
weaker group may die out...
It's like when
early agricultural civilizations, armed with superior tools and
complex social organization, began pushing out hunter-gatherers some
ten thousand years ago.
Big gods eat the
little ones...
Or more recently,
when industrial societies finished these primitive cultures off:
eradicating
their languages, their folkways, their deities, and unless they
were absorbed by the biomechanical super-organism, eventually
wiping out their genotypes.
That's the idea
behind 'cultural evolution'...
Natural selection
operates on multiple levels - the biological and the cultural -
which is to say that survival depends on a society's techniques and
technologies, sometimes more than biological fitness.
If I hear Grimes
correctly - and knowing something of her inspiration, I suspect I do
- that's what she means by "like, evolution"...

Cyborg Theocracy
-
Scientism is a
modern religion
-
Evolution is its creation myth
-
Technology is
its means to
apotheosis...
This inversion of
traditional spirituality pervades most developed societies, from
America and Europe to India and China.
As quality fades, we suffer
under the reign of quantity.
Usually, these
dogmas are communicated through subtle language games:
"trust the
Science," "follow the data," "improve the human condition," and
so forth...
For Grimes,
subtlety is not a vibe.
As she told Lex
Fridman last week, we are witnessing the birth of God as
Life 3.0:
Like, having
kids just makes me want to imagine amazing futures that, like,
maybe I won't be able to build, but they will be able to
build...
I do think
there are no technological limits...
So I think
digital consciousness is inevitable...
This is the universe
waking up, like, this is the universe seeing herself for the
first time...
And maybe like
social media and... we're all getting connected together, maybe
these are the neurons connecting the collective superintelligence...
Maybe we're a
blastocyst of some, like, incredible kind of consciousness or
being.
This narrative,
shared by many in Silicon Valley, holds that the universe came alive
through plant and animal life (Life 1.0), is now waking up through
human culture (Life 2.0), and will realize herself through
artificial intelligence (Life 3.0).
We are merely the
vehicles for some greater consciousness - the gods to be - which
will arise in digital form:
If we create
AI, again, that's intelligent design.
Literally all
religions are based on gods that create consciousness. We are
god-making...
Even if we
can't compute - even if we're so much worse than them, like,
unfathomably worse than an omnipotent kind of AI, like - I do not
think that they would think that we are stupid.
I think they
would recognize the profundity of what we have accomplished.
So we will be at
the mercy of our machines under the canopy of a universe that is
itself "cold and dead and sort of robotic":
Probably
artificial intelligence will eventually render us obsolete.
I don't think
that they'll do it in a malicious way, but I think we are very
weak, the sun is expanding, like, hopefully we can get to Mars,
but like we're pretty vulnerable.
I think we can
coexist for a long time with AI, and we can also probably make
ourselves less vulnerable, but I just think consciousness,
sentience, self-awareness... like maybe this is the true
beginning of life and we're the blue-green algae, we're the
single-celled organisms of something amazing.
It's like hearing
one of the Manson Family girls expound on cyborg theocracy from the
witness stand.
Grimes isn’t coming up with this stuff.
She's drawing on a
deep well of well-articulated theory and translating it into valley
girl.
The Singularity
and Its Discontents
This a burgeoning
religious movement, conceived by tech elites and disseminated
through entertainment and corporate propaganda.
One of its key
mythologies holds that we are all evolving into global brain, with
some 8 billion humanoid neurons, that is knitting itself together
through fiber optic cable.
Their faith deepens
with every new milestone in
artificial intelligence.
Rather than imagine
a swarm of autistic programmers and silver spoon investors in
Silicon Valley creating a horrific system of global control, it's
much nicer to imagine they are literally creating God in silico.
Instead of seeing
this evolutionary process in light of competition and natural
selection, where weak Homo sapiens are decimated or enslaved by
Homo
techno, who are in turn supplanted by their sacred machines, it's
far more pleasant to see our plight as normal growing pains.
From the
perspective of mere humanity, this cosmic vision is obviously
genocidal.
And yet, from within the belief system, it's perceived as
a quest for survival.
"Don't kill
what you hate," Grimes said sweetly, paraphrasing Buckminster
Fuller.
"Save what you
love."
It's a whitewashed,
girly version of Nature red in tooth and claw.
Many regular people
understand there's something unholy about the civilizational
transformation currently underway, but most can't put their finger
on what the problem is.
The problem is that
some portions of
our elite are gripped by a
techno-utopian vision of
the future in which bumbling human beings are just a passing phase.
In this twisted view, we are sacrificial victims for the digital
gods.
It's a slippery
slope from smartphones to virtual reality to brain chips...
Whatever the
technical limitations may be, we’re sliding fast into this bizarre
techno-cult.
Every person and every community is responsible for
drawing their own lines and defending those cultural boundaries
vigilantly.
The stakes are
our survival...!
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