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#1831 Julia36

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Posted 26 January 2015 - 01:27 AM

QUANTUM ARCHAEOLOGY.

How Science is trying to resurrect the dead.


Micro Map of the past being created.

  • Quantum computers and new maths to calculate detailed histories and memories of everyone dead.
  • Face and body reconstructions a million years old already achieved: mind reconstructions coming.
  • 106 billion people to be resurrected within 40 years.

MAIN ARTICLE:~~>(working: Nine pages)
QuantumArchaeology


029a53d4ba8e0529c2e174bcb942e0fac4b9d9f9

TEDxDeExctinction talks website »

<--- MORE INFORMATION BACK THRU THIS THREAD<------

 

=====================================================

 

Consciousness isn't defined, what are we talking about?

 

 


Edited by stopgam, 26 January 2015 - 01:35 AM.


#1832 Julia36

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Posted 26 January 2015 - 02:53 AM

A.I. is going to have to beat this from one of the world's great orchestras.:

 


Edited by stopgam, 26 January 2015 - 03:01 AM.


#1833 Julia36

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Posted 26 January 2015 - 03:14 AM

AI takes on world champions

 

"Stanford software analyzed a pool of about 50,000 images, slotting each into one of 10 categories, such as “dogs,” “horses,” and “trucks.” It was right about 80 percent of the time. Karpathy took the same test and completely smoked the AI code, scoring 94 percent. Karpathy, himself a graduate student at Stanford, thought humans would beat machines on this type of test for a long time. “[I]t will be hard to go above 80 percent,” he wrote in a blog post, referring to AI algorithms, “but I suspect improvements might be possible up to range of about 85-90 percent.”

Boy, was he wrong.

Last year, a system built by researchers at Google aced another, more complex, image recognition test, called ImageNet, scoring 93.4 percent accuracy (you can see how Google’s software performed on the test here). Again, Karpathy, with some colleagues at Stanford, went head-to-head with the system. But this time, they bombed what was a much more complex test, initially scoring about an 85 percent accuracy rate. Comparing the ImageNet test to the 2011 test software isn’t exactly an apples-to-apples comparison, but here’s the point: Humans were easily beating AI software in 2011; now that’s not the case. Not by a long shot. more>>

 

http://www.wired.com/2015/01/karpathy/

 

 


Twenty-Ninth AAAI Conference

supercomputers-3.png

 

 

"Hundreds of artificial intelligence scientists will be in Austin for an international conference next week.

University of Texas professors and students have a number of gadgets to show off at the conference, including some robots that aren't controlled by humans and can play soccer all by themselves."

 

http://www.aaai.org/...AAAI/aaai15.php

 

 

 

 



#1834 Julia36

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Posted 26 January 2015 - 03:22 AM

Russia's new Combat Robot

 

 

 

 


Edited by stopgam, 26 January 2015 - 03:25 AM.


#1835 Julia36

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Posted 27 January 2015 - 01:02 AM

Scientists find a way to unboil an egg

 

egg_spiral_egg_cup1-680x1024@2x.jpg

 

[yet another axiom of Quantum Archaeology demomstrated].

 

http://phys.org/news...nboil-eggs.html

 

"Yes, we have invented a way to unboil a hen egg," said Gregory Weiss, UCI professor of chemistry and molecular biology & biochemistry. "In our paper, we describe a device for pulling apart tangled proteins and allowing them to refold. We start with egg whites boiled for 20 minutes at 90 degrees Celsius and return a key protein in the egg to working order.">>>> more

 

At some point scientists who hold there are no laws in the universe are going to have to capitulate.

 

If law --> then prediction  - and retrodiction (backwards in time).

 

giphy.gif

 

 

NB

 

Anything capable of existing is capable of being retrieved. That is true for boiled eggs and it is true for dead men.

Information is incapable of destruction (Susskind).

 

Everything in the cosmos exists by laws, is defined by laws, is predicted and retrodicted by laws.

 

The dead will be rebuilt by the future, exti9nct species are already being brought back to life. Science is advancing. At some point Man will have enough machine intelligence to describe anyone who has ever lived - than resurrect him.

 

If this is revolutionary, to argue against it is to reject science.

The psychological difficulty stares into our faces that death does not, has not cannot exist. To expect to die is blind ignorance of the way the universe works. No-one has died.No-one can die. Death is a fallacy. As long as anything exists recovery is possible. This is true for eggs, for men and for universes.

 

It is the basis of Archaeology, of forensics, of court trials, of memory and of the laws of physics.

 

We cant yet describe  complete reversal processes but accelerating science will have enough skill at some point in the future to achieve resurrection.

 

fig3.jpg

 

The environment -  which includes people - can be conveniently described as coordinates of space-time grids. Our lives are zillions of plots on this grid - the Quantum Archaeology Grid (above). With enough knowledge of the laws of science and a very few readings of plots in the present, any dead person will become describable as science advances: then microrobots will reassemble them.

 

 

death-clairvoyant-psychic-the_psychic-ho

 

I am arguing from philosophical principles and side-stepping the confused battle ground where classical and quantum physics clash.

 

http://en.wikipedia....wiki/T-symmetry

 

The greatest proof is first resurrections, and our present level of complexity allows resurrecting extinct species (prototypes) but not yet specific individuals - which is greater magnitude for calculation.

 

Thus it is that Resurrection of Dead is a matter of calculation alone.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Edited by stopgam, 27 January 2015 - 01:46 AM.


#1836 Julia36

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Posted 27 January 2015 - 02:03 AM

 

 

simple consciousness Venus flytrap. Which one is conscious?

 

1276510292_venus-flytrap-eats-frog.gif

 

F97869586.jpeg

 

 

Modelling and Simulation

 

jTf66F1.gif

We think we act ii independently, but our every action can be modelled and planned for.

Our thoughts are actions. They also can be modelled with a complex enough system.

The rule is that a more complex modelling  system can model a less complex one. Where you have modelling, you have prediction and restriction

the image above is from, Professor of modelling and simulations Dirk Kelging

 

 


Edited by stopgam, 27 January 2015 - 02:44 AM.


#1837 Julia36

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Posted 27 January 2015 - 02:54 AM

Prediction = Retrodiction

 

alignshow.png

 

see http://www.bioinform.../rev_trans.html

 

Sequence Manipulation Suite: Reverse Translate Reverse Translate accepts a protein sequence as input and uses a codon usage table to generate a DNA sequence representing the most likely non-degenerate coding sequence. A consensus sequence derived from all the possible codons for each amino acid is also returned. Use Reverse Translate when designing PCR primers to anneal to an unsequenced coding sequence from a related species.

Paste the raw sequence or one or more FASTA sequences into the text area below. Input limit is 20000 characters.

 

 

One way back  is via the tree of life at molecular levels.

 

This will be synthesised with the environment models and cross- checked for errors.

 

The  errors  n resurrecting a living man from 100's of millions of years ago would be too small to be significant to him.

 

101GelAnimation.gif

 

 

stats2.png


Edited by stopgam, 27 January 2015 - 03:18 AM.


#1838 Julia36

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Posted 27 January 2015 - 03:46 AM

Software that knows the risks

gambling-cat-casino-cartoon-roulette-whe

 

"Imagine that you could tell your phone that you want to drive from your house in Boston to a hotel in upstate New York, that you want to stop for lunch at an Applebee's at about 12:30, and that you don't want the trip to take more than four hours. Then imagine that your phone tells you that you have only a 66 percent chance of meeting those criteria -- but that if you can wait until 1:00 for lunch, or if you're willing to eat at TGI Friday's instead, it can get that probability up to 99 percent."

 

http://newsoffice.mi...of-success-0115

 

 

Evolutionary approaches to big-data problems

giphy.gif

 

The AnyScale Learning For All (ALFA) Group at MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) aims to solve the most challenging big-data problems -- questions that go beyond the scope of typical analytics. ALFA applies the latest machine learning and evolutionary computing concepts to target very complex problems that involve high dimensionality."

 

http://newsoffice.mi...a-problems-0114

 


Edited by stopgam, 27 January 2015 - 03:50 AM.


#1839 Julia36

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Posted 27 January 2015 - 04:15 AM

Entanglement on a chip: Breakthrough promises faster computers

 

quantum-entanglement1.png

 

New research, reported today in The Optical Society's (OSA) new high-impact journal Optica, describes how a team of scientists has developed, for the first time, a microscopic component that is small enough to fit onto a standard silicon chip that can generate a continuous supply of entangled photons.">>

http://phys.org/news...ough-faster.htm



#1840 Julia36

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Posted 27 January 2015 - 04:27 AM

 

SpaceEngine - a free space simulation program that lets you explore the universe in three dimensions, from planet Earth to the most distant galaxies. Areas of the known universe are represented using actual astronomical data, while regions uncharted by astronomy are generated procedurally. Millions of galaxies, trillions of stars, countless planets - all available for exploration. You can land any planet, moon or asteroid and watch alien landscapes and celestial phenomena. You can even pilot starships and atmospheric shuttles.


Edited by stopgam, 27 January 2015 - 04:33 AM.


#1841 Julia36

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Posted 27 January 2015 - 04:45 AM

Scientists extend telomeres to slow cell aging
January 26, 2015

 

telomeres%20age.jpg

"Scientists at the Stanford University School of Medicine have developed a new procedure that uses modified messenger RNA to quickly and efficiently increase the length of human telomeres, the protective caps on the ends of chromosomes that are associated with aging and disease. Treated cells behave as if they are much younger than untreated cells, multiplying with … more…

 

http://www.kurzweila...slow-cell-aging

 

animal-kingdom-park_bench-park-middle_ag

 



#1842 Julia36

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Posted 28 January 2015 - 02:59 AM

Moore's Law Relentless

 

supercomputers.png

 

"Moore’s law, the prediction in 1965 that there would be a doubling of transistors in a chip every 2 years, has relentlessly marched on. Now, in parallel, there is a doubling every 5 years of the number of mobile devices connected via the Internet, leading to approximately 50 billion in 20201 (Table). This leads to the projection that in the next 5 years there will be almost 7 connected devices per individual." more

 

http://jama.jamanetw...ticleid=2091997

 

food-drink-markets-store-shop_keeper-cor

 

=============================================================

 

Have fishermen discovered a new species of ancient MAN? Chunky jawbone fossil dredged up off coast of Taiwan

 

251E40EB00000578-0-image-a-33_1422375716
 
 
history-cave-pre_historic-fire-channel-v

Edited by stopgam, 28 January 2015 - 03:08 AM.


#1843 Julia36

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Posted 28 January 2015 - 03:10 AM

 

stories about Norbert Weiner

 

http://21stcenturywi...by-Jackson1.pdf


Edited by stopgam, 28 January 2015 - 03:15 AM.


#1844 Julia36

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Posted 28 January 2015 - 04:09 AM

asteroid.gif

(357439) 2004 BL86 - Wiki

 

great NASA are using gifs.

They are sorely underused.



#1845 Julia36

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Posted 28 January 2015 - 04:13 AM



Climate Scientists' Ancient Temple Found

 

88121_990x742-cb1422290636.jpg

 

Trying to alter and warn of climate change is an ancient impulse in man.

 

"At the Cara Blanca site in Belize, archaeologists report the discovery of a water temple complex: a small plaza holding the collapsed remnants of a lodge and two smaller structures. The main structure rests beside a deep pool where pilgrims offered sacrifices to the Maya water god

 

http://news.national...eology-science/

 

[I dont think we understand climate yet, but we need to get control of it. More people die from the environment than ever have by war.]

 

whatwentwrong.jpg

 

"Though the complex models say there is 0.6 °C manmade warming "in the pipeline" even if we stop emitting greenhouse gases, the simple model - confirmed by almost two decades without any significant global warming - shows there is no committed but unrealized manmade warming still to come. There is no scientific justification for the IPCC's extreme RCP 8.5 global warming scenario that predicts up to 12 °C global warming as a result of our industrial emissions of greenhouse gases.

Once errors like these are corrected, the most likely global warming in response to a doubling of CO2 concentration is not 3.3 °C but 1 °C or less. Even if all available fossil fuels were burned, less than 2.2 °C warming would result."

 

tumblr_mcc1268PL61ro3b7eo1_500.gif


 http://phys.org/news...ses-errors.html

 

 

 

 


Edited by stopgam, 28 January 2015 - 05:02 AM.


#1846 Julia36

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Posted 28 January 2015 - 04:48 AM

Loanhead%20of%20Daviot%202.jpg

Aberdeen Scotland.

Constructed sometime around 2500 B.C., Loanhead of Daviot is a recumbent stone circle comprised of a large recumbent stone, two stones flanking the recumbent stone, and eight other stones in a circle that is 67 feet in diameter. In the middle of the low Bronze Age cairn within the circle is a rectangular mortuary pit, which some report may be the oldest part of the site. Nearby is a circular cremation cemetery, which was in use about 1500 B.C. Found were a number of cremated remains of adults and infants."

 

ayt_P1070358.JPG

 

http://www.megalithi...icle.php?sid=98


Edited by stopgam, 28 January 2015 - 05:14 AM.


#1847 Julia36

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Posted 28 January 2015 - 10:15 AM



#1848 platypus

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Posted 28 January 2015 - 10:54 AM

 

 

Consciousness isn't defined, what are we talking about?

This should help:

 

https://en.wikipedia...i/Consciousness

 

More specifically, consciousness is:

 

https://en.wikipedia.../wiki/Sentience

 

...and the ability to experience:

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qualia

 

Are the future AIs going to experience the above? 



#1849 Julia36

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Posted 28 January 2015 - 01:43 PM

:)  Interesting area of psychology to think about. I dont need it to deconstruct a human being.

 

BTW here is one of the greatest lectures ever given in physics unifying the different string theories, and unifying Relativity and Quantum Theory.

 

 


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#1850 Julia36

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Posted 29 January 2015 - 08:09 AM

[a difficulty is you want to keep pushing generating more axioms. This leaves people behind and it's frsutrat8ng to have to answer basic questions because you want to keep discovering. In QA this means discovering quicker ways to plot space-time coordinates to raise the dead.

It happens all the time but people think that humans are special cases in physics whereas physics doesn't ever say that.

If you view the whole world as Cause & Effect you can do enough engineering to reconstruct the past.

My quaint view of physics is things are cause & effect when you can observe (measure ) them and you have to use probability when you dint know enough to be able to measure them except in groups. Quantum Theory isn't a complete theory, and as no-one says they understand it, I cant learn it.

 

Until then resurrecting the dead will be done in classical physics, and I'll bet that the world is describable deterministically in the future , which is bad philosophy. As Edward Witten

says one makes bets based on best theories and the outcomes are unknown. But we're moving rapidly into the age of Artificial Intelligence, where machines not only calculate but calculate innovative, absorb information at unimaginable speeds, inventing shortcuts and doing original research and discovery, also at blinding accelerating speeds.

 

Q A is correct in my bet:)   An amazing testimony is the clarity of Ed Witten's mind: no jumbled learning to confuse & muddle him later on!]

 

string-theory-how-long-science-cjmadden.

 

[As a Socratic lead:

1. Do you think Archaeology is being done?

2. Do you accept test have confirmed forensic archaeology can rebuild faces from skulls?

3. Have you see work to build replicas of body and faces from DNA?

4. Have you looked at evolutionary biology of Thomton's lab which has resurrected a 800 million year old extinct proton pump and tested it successfully in yeast?

5. Have you noticed de-extinction progress?

6. Have to seen science advancing? Mathematics advancing?

7. Isn't Artificial Intelligence getting smarter?

8. Cant you see computers advancing?

9. Technology advancing?

10. How can recovery halt then?

 

My aim isn't to do the work myself but kick it into debate where the truth and techniques will be worked out.

No-one has died.

& I challenge the assumption in our philosophy that death could ever be a  final state which is contra science. Information is incapable of destruction (Susskkind)

 

 

But we've been taught this like some holy incantation, alongside man is special outside physics because he has free will and consciousness (and other attributes) nothing else does. Animals were said not to have these special gifts, but Darwin showed we are animals.

 

Death fear is huge and by aged 7 or so we learn to accept it as a final state, although chemical experiments show stuff reversing we were supposed to be so special we were finished on death.

 

It's pitiful. Pathos. Unhealthy (sic) . So I see religion...which I've side stepped in QA so far..it needs a paper on it...as death worship...but it's utterly false and a hangover from our ape past where we couldn't anticipate the coming power of science and technology.

 

 

Death is finished -  because it never was.  The next quest for philosophy is the abolition of  suffering  a complete solution not the bits medicine is giving.  I think that can be done. ]

 

Cartoon_Headstone_with_Death_Carved_on_I


Edited by stopgam, 29 January 2015 - 09:08 AM.


#1851 Julia36

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Posted 29 January 2015 - 08:24 PM

 



#1852 Julia36

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Posted 30 January 2015 - 08:15 AM

"As above so below"

 

giphy.gif

Structure of world's largest single cell is reflected at the molecular level

"correlation between RNA's that are expressed together within different parts of the Caulerpa cell with those expressed together in the multicellular organs of tomato. Even though the lineage that Caulerpa belongs to probably separated from that giving rise to land plants more than 500 million years ago, in many ways Caulerpa displays patterns of RNA accumulation shared with land plants today."

 

Caulerpa_taxif_lynn.JPG

 http://phys.org/news...-molecular.html

 

 



#1853 Julia36

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Posted 30 January 2015 - 08:30 AM

decoding The Pompeii Scrolls .

 

giphy.gif

 

https://embed.thegua...y-imaging-video

 

"In AD 79, the eruption of Vesuvius covered all of Herculaneum with some 30 m of volcanic ash. Its remains were first excavated in the years between 1750 and 1765 by Karl Weber by means of underground tunnels. Its name derives from the discovery of a library in the house containing 1,785 carbonized papyrus scrolls, the "Herculaneum papyri". wiki

 

http://www.newswise....ancient-scrolls

 

"Without unrolling the scrolls, Seales' software will run extremely high-resolution images from the tangled surfaces, making sense of the jumbled letters into words, and words into passages. "The software will combine novel methods for finding the scroll surfaces together with a user-guided interface for correcting mistakes and improving the automatic first-guess,"

 

Herculaneum-papyri.jpg

 

 

"Many scholars believe that additional scrolls may be buried in the Villa of the Papyri, which was only partially excavated in 1752. Since the upper-floor library was found in a state of transition—as if someone was moving the scrolls to safety at the time of the eruption—many scholars believe the house's main library has not yet been found."

http://magazine.byu..../?act=view&a=43

 

 

 

Vesuvius was supposed to be extinct.

 

The number of philosophy works that may be recovered from the scrolls are huge.

 

 

Sunday-Funnies-06.jpg


Edited by stopgam, 30 January 2015 - 09:28 AM.


#1854 Julia36

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Posted 30 January 2015 - 08:59 AM

Robots writing more top stories.

 

automated-robot-journalis-012.jpg

 

[They will pass humans in 7 years ,my estimate. This thread can already be automatized. How d'you know it's not already?]

 

http://www.theverge....ncial-reporting

 

last summer the AP partnered with Automated Insights to begin automating quarterly earnings reports using their Wordsmith platform. You wouldn't necessarily know it at first blush. Sure, maybe reading it in the context of this story it's apparent, but otherwise it feels like a pretty standard, if a tad dry, AP news item. The obvious tell doesn't come until the end of an article: "This story was generated by Automated Insights."



#1855 Julia36

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Posted 30 January 2015 - 09:06 AM



#1856 Julia36

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Posted 30 January 2015 - 11:44 AM

mamenchisaurus-sinocanadorum-54ca3be6a27

 

"50-foot-long 'dragon' dinosaur species discovered in China

The long-necked Qijianglong lived about 160 million years ago in the Late Jurassic period

 

 

Sauropods, a category of dinosaurs that includes the Diplodocus, typically had necks that comprised up to a third of their body size. A new species of dinosaur described in a recent Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology had a neck that could stretch up to 25 feet long, which is half its body length.

The dino has been named Qijianglong (pronounced "CHI-jyang-lon"), which means "dragon of Qijiang." Its bones were discovered near China's Qijiang City by construction workers in 2006. It belongs to a family of sauropods known as mamenchisaurids. Miraculously, when the beast was unearthed, its head was still attached to its vertebrae, something extremely unusual in the paleontology world.

"It is rare to find a head and neck of a long-necked dinosaur together" more>>

 

http://www.cnet.com/...vered-in-china/

 

71357312-funny_microsoft_yahoo_google_di



#1857 Julia36

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Posted 31 January 2015 - 06:08 AM

Scientists learn to predict when we'll die

 

Fallishere-8.jpg

 

http://timesofindia....ow/46074670.cms

 

 

 

"A group of scientists has identified a biological clock that could help predict how long we live, according to a study.

Researchers from the University of Edinburgh in collaboration with researchers in Australia and the US studied chemical changes to DNA to establish an individual's biological age which they compared with their actual age, the Mirror reported Friday.

The results showed that people with biological age greater than their true age were more likely to die sooner than those whose biological and actual ages were the same.

Four independent studies tracked the lives of almost 5,000 older people for up to 14 years.

Each person's biological age was measured from a blood sample at the outset and participants were followed up throughout the study.

Researchers found that the link between having a faster-running biological clock and early death held true -- even after considering factors like smoking, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

"This new research increases our understanding of longevity and healthy ageing," said the study's lead author Ian Deary from the University of Edinburgh's Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology.

The researchers measured each person's biological age by studying a chemical modification to DNA, known as methylation, which can affect many genes and occur throughout a person's life. "                                                                               

 

HIDDEN IN YOUR GENES-->death_penalty_503165.jpg

 

 

 

 

4685z48.gif

 

[A man's life can be represented in detail as a line on a chart:

 

Quantum Archaeology Grid  (above) proposes to plot people and all events we can as trajectory lines on a mo0vinmg grid

 

You can run the grid forwards and backwards.

Plot points are related via the laws of physics.

 

No event is missed, and all are related by coordinates.

 

Each new event plotted effects ll others, by small amounts close by but by large amounts further off (the butterfly effect). ]

 

 

 


Edited by stopgam, 31 January 2015 - 07:01 AM.


#1858 Julia36

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Posted 31 January 2015 - 06:30 AM

Deep-brain imaging reveals which nearly identical neurons are associated with specific behaviors

 

brain.png

 

"Researchers at the UNC School of Medicine have used new deep-brain imaging techniques to link the activity of individual, genetically similar neurons to particular behaviors of freely moving mice. For the first time ever, scientists watched as one neuron was activated when a mouse searched for food while a nearly identical neuron next to it remained … more…"

 

http://www.kurzweila...entical-neurons

 

[Still using cause & effect! Mapping a  prototype human brain will help resurrecting people, who vary little in general architectures]

 

health-beauty-sneeze-ops-operations-oper


Edited by stopgam, 31 January 2015 - 06:32 AM.


#1859 Julia36

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Posted 31 January 2015 - 06:37 AM

thumb_BrainScanningTime.jpg

 

This and other graphs:

 

http://www.singulari...ts/page160.html

 

brain-o.gif

 

 

 

animal-kingdom-turtle-old_aged-medium-cl

 

======================================================

Brain more complicated than  thought

 

local processing occuring-

 

Nerve cells use a much larger repertoire of data-processing structures than previously thought. Research at LMU and in Regensburg shows that the so-called spines on the dendritic processes of neurons are able to process stimuli locally.

A recent study by teams of neurobiologists based at LMU and Regensburg addresses the role of the short protrusions called "spines" that form on the dendrites of nerve cells in the mammalian olfactory bulb. Dendrites serve as receptors for signals delivered by the so-called axons of other neurons. As the researchers now report in in the journal Neuron, their findings show that each of the many spines on the dendritic "trees" on these nerve cells is capable of processing incoming signals locally and independently of the activation state of the rest of the cell. In other words, each dendritic spine operates as an independent computational unit." more>>>

 

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Edited by stopgam, 31 January 2015 - 07:31 AM.


#1860 Julia36

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Posted 31 January 2015 - 08:42 AM

QUANTUM ARCHAEOLOGY.

How Science is trying to resurrect the dead.


Micro Map of the past being created.

  • Quantum computers and new maths to calculate detailed histories and memories of everyone dead.
  • Face and body reconstructions a million years old already achieved: mind reconstructions coming.
  • 106 billion people to be resurrected within 40 years.

MAIN ARTICLE:~~>(working: Nine pages)
QuantumArchaeology


029a53d4ba8e0529c2e174bcb942e0fac4b9d9f9

TEDxDeExctinction talks website »

<--- MORE INFORMATION BACK THRU THIS THREAD<------

 

 

 

'Alcohol archaeologist' creates authentic ales and wines using 2,000-year-old residues in pots

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[there's a serious side to this]
detected traces of various ingredients left by the drinks - including barley, honey, herbs and spices - using a number of methods including liquid chromatography, gas chromatography and mass spectrometry.

The first drink that he recreated is named the Midas Touch, and is based on molecular evidence from residues found inside a Turkish tomb, believed to have belonged to King Midas, dating back to 700 BC.

A variety of alcoholic residues have been found inside important tombs around the world - suggesting that they were drinks used during celebrations or rituals and perhaps even to wish good luck to the dead in the afterlife.

The sweet and dry Midas Touch beer is made using honey, white muscat grapes and saffron.

The oldest beer that Dr McGovern brewed is entitled Chateau Jiahu, the ingredients for which were discovered inside a 9,000-year-old tomb in China." more>>>


 
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Edited by stopgam, 31 January 2015 - 08:47 AM.





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