Category Archives: Eldering
Edit Wikipedia
Edit Wikipedia entries in ways to attend improving humanity. :- Doug.
Links and tags
Add links and tags to things that could bend the arc of humanity. :- Doug.
Flowing and interlinking?
Might we use flowing and interlinking to help us help them? :- Doug.
When most human?
We had thought that to move into our futures we would become more technological. Could we not become also more human? And better human? Where and when have we been most human? :- Doug.
Freed humans
With machines taking over our tasks we are freed to become more human. :- Doug.
Throttle big AI
Individual artificial intelligence may throttle big AI. :- Doug.
Imponderable
Artificial intelligence is imponderable, but humanity is. :- Doug.
no tech improvement?
What if there were no technological improvement, or it did not matter, but if humanity did improve? How would that look? :- Doug.
AI in bedroom slippers
Google is the artificial intelligence that pads around the house in bedroom slippers. :- Doug.
Opening paths
Our every thought to the 300-year grandchild elders, our every Google search on the related subjects, our every conversation about them, helps them develop towards a better humanity. It is not some magic voodoo, rather opening paths in the common … Continue reading
Story carries
Make a story that carries our elders further. :- Doug.
Googley-eye
the eye with which you look is the eye by which you are seen: Google :- Doug.
Training Google
Do myriad Google searches on futures studies, 300 years ahead, developing humanity: train this artificial intelligence on purpose. Set up computer programs and algorithms—and maybe our own AI—to do this work deeply. :- Doug.
Elders ought not care
Elders ought not care what transpires with artificial intelligence nor genetics nor other technologies to the extent they are background of humanity. Humans and their development are our proper foci. :- Doug.
Bigger attracts slows
Bigger makes an artificial intelligence more attractive to more users, making it bigger still. Until, perhaps, it gets so big it slows. :- Doug.
We think in waves
Every time we think of the 300-year grandchild elders, we are learning, and we are reaching out. It is a similar process to learning to ride a bike, paddle a canoe, or write a journal: developing a skill. Only this … Continue reading