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It's been a long time since a Pentagon project from the DARPA labs truly evoked a "WTF DARPA?!" response, but our collective jaw dropped when we saw the details on a project known as BioDesign. DARPA hopes to dispense with evolutionary randomness and assemble biological creatures, genetically programmed to live indefinitely and presumably do whatever their human masters want. And, Wired's Danger Room reports, when there's the inevitable problem of said creatures going haywire or realizing that they're intelligent and have feelings, there's a planned self-destruct genetic code that could
Originally posted by Erasurehead
Think Terminator movies. Super strong cyborg warriors that will eventually take over the human race and exterminate us like rodents.
Good times ahead....good times..
Originally posted by Zanti Misfit
No , I would think more on the lines of Phillip K. Dick's Classic SciFi Novel ' Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep ? Aka Blade Runner " . Is it Human ? Alien ? Android ? or just plain Not Right ?
A current hypothesis gaining prominence proposes that activation of the enzyme telomerase is necessary for cells to become immortal, or capable of proliferating indefinitely.
Cancer research
Darpa’s human-enhancement programs were looking promising. In February 2002, Darpa asked Congress for a new, $78 million-per-year push for research including “the development of biochemical materials for enhancement of performance.” That was on top of $90 million to explore how “biological systems … adapt to wide extremes.” The human being, a Darpa fact file proclaimed in April 2002, “is becoming the weakest link in Defense systems.” Strengthening that chain meant “sustaining and augmenting human performance,” as well as “enabling new human capabilities.” Darpa was going to figure out how to build a better soldier.
Mark Roth never expected his research to have military applications. He was a biochemist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, studying how chromosomes move during cell replication. Then, about a decade ago, his second daughter, Hannah Grace, died of heart failure at the age of 1. Her death sent him down a much stranger path. “I became interested in immortality,” he says.
2007
DARPA Bioengineering Program Seeks to
Turn Soldiers Into Cyborgs
DARPA's Creepy Bioengineering Program 25aug03
The Advanced Research Projects Agency was founded in 1958 (the D was added in 1972) as a place to noodle around on ideas too big, or too far out, for the Cold War military-industrial complex...
Be More Than You Can Be
In 2005 DARPA held one of its famous contests that challenge scientists to achieve some set of criteria. This time, it was to keep a mouse alive for 3 hours with 60 percent of its blood lost, which simulates a lethal wound. Roth's studies took him from immortality to being able to stimulate a state of stasis in animals not known to normally hibernate. Using a combination of lowered oxygen levels and a dose of hydrogen sulfide (the latter inspired by a PBS show he saw on a caving accident), Roth was able to induce the mice into a hibernation-like state and then re-animate them after 10 hours.
human enhancement projects
It's coming. Imagine a warrior—with the
intellect of a human and the immortality of a machine—controlled by our thoughts.
DARPA has started a major program in this area. DARPA is the only place you can have such a program,
and talk about it! This is a great time to be in R&D.
DARPATech 2002 Welcoming Speech