It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
"We have been doing a lot of consuming of information through our eyes. That may be a very inefficient channel," he said in the opening session of the TED2014 conference Monday. "My prediction is that we’re going to ingest information."
It may sound far fetched, but if the information stored in the pill made it into the bloodstream, it could then be deposited into pathways of the brain, Negroponte said. Once that happened, people could learn new skills almost instantaneously. "We're going to swallow a pill and know English, and swallow a pill and know Shakespeare," he said.
Nicholas Negroponte Says We'll Soon Be Swallowing Information
The Monk reached under his robe and produced a flat sample case. He opened it. It was full of pills. There was a large glass bottle full of a couple of hundred identical pills; and these were small and pink and triangular. But most of the sample case was given over to big, round pills of all colors, individually wrapped and individually labeled in the wandering Monk script.
No two labels were alike. Some of the notations looked hellishly complex.
"These are knowledge," said the Monk.
"Ah," I said, and wondered if I was being put on. An alien can have a sense of humor, can't he? And there's no way to tell if he's lying.
"A certain complex organic molecule has much to do with memory," said the Monk. "Ribonucleic acid. It is present and active in the nervous systems of most organic beings. Wish you to learn my language?"
This is a very astute observation and I agree it could pose a risk.
chr0naut
reply to post by OatDelphi
I see a problem in that the "information carrier" would have to cross the blood/brain barrier.
Anything that negates this barrier would also expose us to unneccesary risk in biological terms, not to mention the nanomachinery that would have to reside inside the brain to accurately deliver the information to where it is needed.
Such an information transfer would require massive engineering of the brain and biology of the recipient, but as an abstract idea, it is interesting to contemplate.
OatDelphiHow many jobs would be lost if this was to come true?
pryingopen3rdeye
OatDelphiHow many jobs would be lost if this was to come true?
and how many horse breeders lost their jobs when the automobile was invented? how many publishers lost their job when ebook became popular?, how many lost their job in the locomotive industry when the airplane was invented?
in all inventions change is the result, where one door closes another opens,
resist change and stagnate, or flow with the stream, be like water.
that said i do agree with the concerns over risk of contaminants, the health safety of the idea, also the risk of lies and propaganda being slipped into your knowledge.
but i dont think we should ever use the "it makes less money, or is more automated" line as a reasoning to resist a change.edit on 3/30/14 by pryingopen3rdeye because: (no reason given)
OatDelphi
pryingopen3rdeye
OatDelphiHow many jobs would be lost if this was to come true?
and how many horse breeders lost their jobs when the automobile was invented? how many publishers lost their job when ebook became popular?, how many lost their job in the locomotive industry when the airplane was invented?
in all inventions change is the result, where one door closes another opens,
resist change and stagnate, or flow with the stream, be like water.
that said i do agree with the concerns over risk of contaminants, the health safety of the idea, also the risk of lies and propaganda being slipped into your knowledge.
but i dont think we should ever use the "it makes less money, or is more automated" line as a reasoning to resist a change.edit on 3/30/14 by pryingopen3rdeye because: (no reason given)
I agree and disagree... jobs change as technology changes, that has shown to be true. However in every previous circumstance someone had to be taught by an educator. The pill if completed would eliminate the need for educators outright and providers of services would be hit very hard as well.
Think about it... If it is possible to imprint the knowledge of every book ever written on your brain by way of a pill, then you don't need to go to school, you don't need to go to MIT. Do you see what I'm getting at?
You wouldn't need a doctor to diagnose symptoms when you get sick or injured. You wouldn't need to pay an IT guy to fix your computer problems. You would hold the knowledge for all of that, and no one would have had to teach you it.
That is an immense amount of jobs lost. And that's just scratching the surface.