Becoming Immortal by 2045
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Russian Billionaire Dmitry Itskov Plans on Becoming Immortal by 2045
Dmitry Itskov wants to live forever. The 32-year-old Russian billionaire
and media mogul thinks he can do this by building himself (and
everyone) an android body by the year 2045.
There are a few flaws to Itskov’s idea, but that hasn’t stopped more
than 20,000 people from publicly supporting the site outlining his plan
of using android bodies for immortality. Dubbed the 2045
Initiative, Itskov is selling his idea as the "next step" in human evolution, or "neo-humanity," as he refers to it.
It doesn't stop with android bodies, either. The 2045 folks are also
calling for a new religion and set of ethics because they don’t believe
any of the current ones can handle the societal implications of living forever—as most of the current ones have you dying first in order to achieve immortality.
Itskov has also gone ahead and registered his own political party in Russia called “Evolution 2045.”
But let’s back up a second. How exactly does Itskov plan to become immortal?
"The main science mega-project of the 2045 Initiative aims to create
technologies enabling the transfer of [an] individual’s personality to a
more advanced non-biological carrier, and extending life, including to
the point of immortality," reads his site.
Itskov is calling his artificial "advanced non-biological carrier" body
an "avatar," which is controlled by a “brain-computer interface.” It
functions more or less like the fake bodies in the 2009 James Cameron
movie of the same name. Did Itskov get his idea from watching the movie?
The photo below, which I found on his public Facebook page, would suggest that yeah, he probably did.
But this isn’t just a hairbrained, movie-inspired scheme for Itskov. He’s really thought it through, and has an impressive cast of experts on board. He's even met the Dalai Lama and gotten his blessing for Initiative 2045.
“We are facing the time where the unconscious evolution period has almost finished, and we come to the new era, a new period of controlled evolution,” says Itskov in a video interview.
His future, that “new period of controlled evolution,” goes something like this:
By 2020, Initiative 2045 aims to
make this avatar technology widely available and mainstream—never mind
that’s seven years from now and a working prototype doesn’t exist yet.
By 2025, Itskov expects an “autonomous life-support system for the human brain linked to a robot." In other words, they'll have the tech for implanting the human
brain into the robot. By 2035, a human should be able to upload their
brain into a robot, and by 2045 our bodies will be replaced with
holograms. When this happens, Itskov says we will become "a new
species.”
Besides creating the technology needed for this kind of evolution, Initiative 2045 has a variety of “key” future projects beyond trying to start an “international social movement." Along with a social network called immortal.me, Itskov lists the projects he wants to start:
a charity foundation called Global Future 2045, the “scientific
research centre ‘Immortality,’” “a business incubator” with no further
elaboration, a “University of ‘Immortality,’” and an “annual award for
contribution to the realization of the project of ‘Immortality.’”
To help realize these goals is the Global Future Congress, which held
its first meeting in Moscow last year. The congress will meet again in New York City this June, where it promises to unveil the most human-like robot the World has ever seen.
Conspicuously absent among all of Itskov’s writings, as well as among all the scientists, philosophers and spiritual leaders speaking at this year’s conference, are experts on cyber security and the Internet philosopher-types who love pontificating on the effects of connecting the brain to the Internet.
This is the biggest issue I've found with Itskov’s current model: he has
completely ignored our Internet obsession. If we could implant the web
into our brain and download skills, Matrix-style, we would. For good or
bad, that's an area that can't be ignored. (For one, Itskov would
probably get more support if he reached out to Google and tried to
incorporate Google Glass into his avatars.)
Another curious omission is with the groups Itskov is currently working
with: he's focused on transhumanists and philosophers, but as yet he
doesn't seem to have tapped into the hacker world. There are a whole lot
of people out there interested in mind hacking, and Initiative 2045
appears to be one of the first broad attempts at driving into that realm.
The main antagonist in the groundbreaking anime movie Ghost in the Shell is
the hacker known as The Puppet Master, who enters people’s
“cyberbrains,” wipes their memories, and then uses their bodies for his
own specific purposes, like carrying out crimes. Since Itskov is in the
habit of being inspired by movies, I’d say Ghost in the Shell is a must watch for him. It's an important cautionary tale, for even if Itskov does manage to build the future of his dreams, his immortality won’t matter if he loses his identity.
As weird and unnecessary as some of Itskov’s Initiative goals come
across, his Global Congress conference has managed to attract the who’s
who of immortality, robotic and cybernetics research, including Google's
director of engineering, Ray Kurzweil, and the director of the Intelligent Robotics Laboratory, Dr. Hiroshi Ishiguro. Spiritual types like the Archbishop of Ottawa and Lazar Puhalo are speaking as well.
Don't get me wrong, there are some practical implications
for Itskov’s type of technology. Beyond medical purposes for creating
replacement bodies, this type of avatar technology would allow you “work
in dangerous environments” or “perform rescue operations,”
writes Itskov on his site. Beyond that, the possibilities a drone body
allows for are relatively endless, assuming they'll ever get off the
ground.
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