Needless to say, the aptly named Jones has eschewed my cautionary
advice and eaten a whole handful of those delicious chocolate
espresso beans. Fasten your safety belts, Vo, your collective
inboxes are in for a lumpy ride.

BTW, regarding my earlier post, we already have a massively
paralleled computer system. It's called the Internet. The
trick is to communicate with this vast planetary intelligence.
Rather like a brain cell trying to talk to you. It does
already have a rudimentary ear and mouth, some call it google.
Let evolution work on this system a bit more... looks promising.

K.

-----Original Message-----
From: Jones Beene [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2005 4:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: SciAm article on brain


From: "Terry Blanton" <

> Damn.  I was so engrossed trying to figure out how much to pay 
> Jonesee that I left off my DNA quote (you noticed he was born 
> the year Crick, Watson, et.al. determined the double helix 
> structure, right?):

Excellent quote. Plus this query caused a blinding flash of 
remembrance about a prior & typically long-winded & probably 
boring posting (boring to the non-Illuminated, shall we say) - 
which was actually a DNA obit (or is that orbit):

>From the elephantine memory of my new 160 gig HD, which I will 
one-day incorporate into my new alter ego, the son-of-Xbox 
massively parallel new-me, when the time arrives for the final 
transmogrification:

[count zero; start word count]
Since posting an off-the-wall idea yesterday, inspired by a 
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory news release about "DNA 
information transfer," a little bit of synchronicity struck.

Well, maybe it wasn't really that unusual since the original 
poster of the following  thread on Slashdot and myself undoubtedly 
were inspired by the same story, but anyway an avalanche of input 
followed on that forum (several hundred posts in one day) that can 
be read at:
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/01/06/0229223&mode=thread&tid=126
Some of the following commentary is inspired from this ongoing 
thread.

In typical surfer fashion, from one of these posts I was led to a 
long-forgotten reminiscence of Douglas Adams, whose writing went 
way beyond far-out humor and inspired many things that once seemed 
terribly bizarre then, but are more commonplace today - almost 
taken for granted. William Gibson and Robert Forward were Sci-Fi 
visionaries similarly gifted with extraordinary foresight, but 
lacking Adams humor. Thankfully Gibson is still alive and even has 
his own internet blog these days.

In Douglas Adams' (Douglas Noel Adams=DNA) "Hitchhiker's Guide to 
the Galaxy", a race of intelligent beings from an advanced 
civilization build a supercomputer, "Deep Thought" in order to 
answer the question, "What is the meaning of life, the universe, 
and everything?" DT computed for 7.5 million years, and finally 
produced the answer, which is "42".

Adams died in May, 2001 but long before, pundits had tried to find 
some hidden meaning in "42." I wonder if it had any connection to 
decoding the information in (artificial) DNA strands using the 
four amino acids known as GATC and their positions as 4-base 
words.

I'll look to see if this question is answered on Slashdot later, 
as that thread seems to have struck a giant nerve - a meme nerve, 
so to speak. Adams was also an internet pioneer and an "info 
junkie" who believed something extraordinary was created when 
people pooled experiences and information over the internet.  He 
said part of the internet's extraordinary power was the fact that 
it "evolved as an organic entity, a bottom-up design rather than 
being hierarchically controlled from above".

The idea that hat humans could have even been "created" to carry a 
message across time in DNA, was definitely an implication of 
D.N.A.'s work but others have expressed the sentiment in more 
detail.

And for those who want to get really crazy with modern prophecy 
that derives from ancient prophecy, and realizing that many 
ancient civilizations, especially the ancient Egyptians, believed 
that humans came from Orion, consider "42" in that context. M-42 
or Messier object 42, is a nebulae in the Orion constellation. 
http://www.m-42.com/images/orionmos.png

Was this very spot the remnant of a long lost star in Orion - our 
"ancestral" home, or is it all just the further reverberations of 
some deeply ingrained meme?

What is a meme? First coined by Richard Dawkins in "The Selfish 
Gene," a meme is the extrasensory counterpart to a gene - a idea, 
behavior or skill that can be transferred from one person to 
another by imitation: stories, religions, inventions,  even music.

Many consider the meme to be the most important explanatory 
concept since DNA or the gene. The key to appreciating the wide 
impact of memes, and what separates them from the traditional 
theories of cultural evolution, is *continuity* over time - the 
meme is a replicator. The first replicator is of course the gene. 
The second replicator is the meme and it exists now NOT for human 
culture nor for any more immediate reason than its own survival. 
It can work with or even against the gene, because it has crossed 
over a "complexity barrier" to become its own self-sustaining 
entity.

Coincidentally or not, Dawkins was a big fan of Adams - and RD's 
wife, Lalla Ward, is the former Dr. Who sidekick, the lovely 
Romana. They met at a party held by Douglas Adams, who himself was 
a former Dr. Who scriptwriter.

Also mentioned in the numerous Slashdot threads is a Star Trek 
episode "The Chase " in which Dr. Galen, Captain Picards old 
Archaeology professor, found genetic data-blocks from various 
species around the galaxy stored in the junk portion of each 
species DNA, including our own. When a sufficient number of these 
data blocks were put together it completed a stellar map, 
identifying the precise location of the original origin of life.

The jury is still out on whether it was M-42, and even on the 
Panspermia Theory [panspermia.org], but many of us believe that 
there must be lots of intelligence out there - vastly older and 
vastly more advance than we are.

>From other posts on Slashdot: "The idea of storing and 
transmitting information via DNA was also proposed by Jaron Lanier 
in the Y2K issue of the NYT magazine. The NYT was running a 
contest to come up with a "time capsule" that would last till Y3K 
and asked various prominent scientists, architects etc. how they 
would make something that would last and would be easily found by 
future generations. Lanier proposed encoding a message in the DNA 
of cockroaches and then letting them reproduce naturally in the 
wild. In a thousand years they'd be everywhere! (His idea didn't 
win, a more conventional capsule with physical records was 
selected). Also in various science fiction books (Greg Bear) 
messages were encoded in people's DNA.

This info transfer idea was also proposed by David E.H. Jones in 
his Daedalus column (which now appears in Nature). His article on 
31 January, 1985, entitled "Archival Junk" discusses the use of 
DNA to encode the essence of human culture in case of another Dark 
Age. The article also appears in his compendium, The Further 
Inventions of Daedalus (Oxford University Press, 1999)."

I love it when synchronicity strikes!

Jones

 

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