This upcoming video game looks pretty fantastic, and it may be of interest to this community. You start out as a single-celled organism and evolve your way through time to the point where you can travel through space and colonize the galaxy. Perhaps a little more thought-provoking than Halo. Really, the point here is that you are IN CONTROL OF EVOLUTION. The species you create spread through the internet for other people to find as they travel around the Universe with their own species. Sounds pretty rad.
As always, Wikipedia has tons of information on the game: Spore (video game)
We've Moved!
Our hard-working programmers have rigged us up a new site that is much more dynamic! Please check it out and post your thoughts there: huthex.com
Mission Statement
The Human Thought Experiment strives to answer the question of whether we can make any further progress on figuring out our existence simply by creating a movement of thought. Is it within our mental abilities to explain our situation, or will we find that the nature of the universe is truly beyond our comprehension? Although some individuals grappling with big ideas may have previously found the pursuit frustrating and fruitless, the Human Thought Experiment is meant to change that paradigm by creating a truly productive forum. At a time when science and religion are often at odds, The Human Thought Experiment offers an alternative approach and is meant to include people of all ages, all backgrounds, of all ideas, and is meant to truly revolutionize the manner in which we address our existence. The two best assets humans have are our cognition and our ability to communicate; the thoughts must come from individuals like you and the Human Thought Experiment will provide the tools of communication. There is at least a possibility that intense human thought on this subject directly could lead to greater understanding of our existence: this is that experiment.
Monday, April 28, 2008
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Why the HTE can work now
I'm just going to provide a link to an interesting article about social projects on the internet, because there's no sense in my summarizing it when these quotes do the job:
With the right tools on the internet, we can use some of those free-time television hours to come up with some really solid thoughts. Now we just need to get those tools in order and maybe we'll be one of the experiments that works...
The whole article is definitely worth reading:
Gin, Television and Social Surplus
So if you take Wikipedia as a kind of unit, all of Wikipedia, the whole project--every page, every edit, every talk page, every line of code, in every language that Wikipedia exists in--that represents something like the cumulation of 100 million hours of human thought. I worked this out with Martin Wattenberg at IBM; it's a back-of-the-envelope calculation, but it's the right order of magnitude, about 100 million hours of thought.
And television watching? Two hundred billion hours, in the U.S. alone, every year. Put another way, now that we have a unit, that's 2,000 Wikipedia projects a year spent watching television. Or put still another way, in the U.S., we spend 100 million hours every weekend, just watching the ads. This is a pretty big surplus. People asking, "Where do they find the time?" when they're looking at things like Wikipedia don't understand how tiny that entire project is, as a carve-out of this asset that's finally being dragged into what Tim calls an architecture of participation.
[...]
Just to pick one example, one I'm in love with, but it's tiny. A couple of weeks one of my students at ITP forwarded me a a project started by a professor in Brazil, in Fortaleza, named Vasco Furtado. It's a Wiki Map for crime in Brazil. If there's an assault, if there's a burglary, if there's a mugging, a robbery, a rape, a murder, you can go and put a push-pin on a Google Map, and you can characterize the assault, and you start to see a map of where these crimes are occurring.
[...]
Maybe this will succeed or maybe it will fail. The normal case of social software is still failure; most of these experiments don't pan out. But the ones that do are quite incredible, and I hope that this one succeeds, obviously. But even if it doesn't, it's illustrated the point already, which is that someone working alone, with really cheap tools, has a reasonable hope of carving out enough of the cognitive surplus, enough of the desire to participate, enough of the collective goodwill of the citizens, to create a resource you couldn't have imagined existing even five years ago.
With the right tools on the internet, we can use some of those free-time television hours to come up with some really solid thoughts. Now we just need to get those tools in order and maybe we'll be one of the experiments that works...
The whole article is definitely worth reading:
Gin, Television and Social Surplus
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