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Why is the question of the di? erence between living and non-living matter - tellectually so attractive to the man of the West? Where are our dreams about our own ability to understand this di? erence and to overcome it using the ? rmly established technologies rooted? Where are, for instance, the cultural roots of the enterprises covered nowadays by the discipline of Arti? cial Life? Cont- plating such questions, one of us has recognized [6] the existence of the eternal dream of the man of the West expressed, for example, in the Old Testament as follows: . . . the Lord God formed the man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being (Genesis, 2. 7). This is the dream about the workmanlike act of the creation of Adam from clay, about the creation of life from something non-living, and the con? dence in the magic power of technologies. How has this dream developed and been converted into a reality, and how does it determine our present-day activities in science and technology? What is this con? dence rooted in? Then God said: “Let us make man in our image. . . ” (Genesis, 1. 26). Man believes in his own ability to repeat the Creator’s acts, to change ideas into real things, because he believes he is godlike. This con? dence is – using the trendy Dawkins’ term – perhaps the most important cultural meme of the West.
Buchkauf
Advances in artificial life, Jozef Kelemen
- Sprache
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2001
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- Titel
- Advances in artificial life
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Autor*innen
- Jozef Kelemen
- Verlag
- Springer
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 2001
- ISBN10
- 3540425675
- ISBN13
- 9783540425670
- Kategorie
- Informatik & Programmierung
- Beschreibung
- Why is the question of the di? erence between living and non-living matter - tellectually so attractive to the man of the West? Where are our dreams about our own ability to understand this di? erence and to overcome it using the ? rmly established technologies rooted? Where are, for instance, the cultural roots of the enterprises covered nowadays by the discipline of Arti? cial Life? Cont- plating such questions, one of us has recognized [6] the existence of the eternal dream of the man of the West expressed, for example, in the Old Testament as follows: . . . the Lord God formed the man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being (Genesis, 2. 7). This is the dream about the workmanlike act of the creation of Adam from clay, about the creation of life from something non-living, and the con? dence in the magic power of technologies. How has this dream developed and been converted into a reality, and how does it determine our present-day activities in science and technology? What is this con? dence rooted in? Then God said: “Let us make man in our image. . . ” (Genesis, 1. 26). Man believes in his own ability to repeat the Creator’s acts, to change ideas into real things, because he believes he is godlike. This con? dence is – using the trendy Dawkins’ term – perhaps the most important cultural meme of the West.