Posted in: Robot chats with astronaut on space station See in context
So, if machines take over all human activity, including art and science, what will happen to the organic body and its conditioned-to-work-and-think brain? Surely, will it decay? Is mankind-machines coexistence possible while people is fighting for jobs and resources: competition, nations, and so on? Anyway, what is the endeavour in which a robot cannot ever take part or channel at all? Why won't the future automatons be alive? What is the fundamental difference between a mechanical structure, organic or inorganic, that imitates life and life itself? Is there any, virtual or real? Is it only the holder of power the one who has the capacity for defining and differentiating? A subjective imposition? Along these lines, a serious-funny book, take a look in a sample in goo.gl/rfVqw6 Just another mind leisure suggestion, far away from dogmas or axioms
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Posted in: Trump meets former Japanese PM Aso; criticizes strong dollar against yen
Posted in: Trump meets former Japanese PM Aso; criticizes strong dollar against yen
Posted in: Japanese 'sugar baby' gets 9 years for scamming men out of ¥155 mil
Posted in: Drugs like Ozempic won’t ‘cure’ obesity but they might make us more fat-phobic