Birthdays
Asa Butterfield b. 1997 (Ender’s Game, Hugo, The Wolfman, Merlin [TV], Nanny McPhee Returns)
Sam Huntington b. 1982 (Being Human, Warehouse 13, Superman Returns)
Hannah Spearritt b. 1981 (Primeval, Seed of Chucky)
David Oyelowo b. 1976 (Rise of the Planet of the Apes, A Sound of Thunder)
Alan and Albert Hughes b. 1972 (The Book of Eli, From Hell)
Jane Adams b. 1965 (Poltergeist [2015], Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Carnivale)
Thomas Alfredson b. 1965 (director, Let the Right One In)
James Robinson b. 1963 (writer, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Cyber Bandits)
Tony Guma b. 1962 (Star Trek Into Darkness, Super 8, Star Trek)
Jennifer Runyon b. 1960 (Carnosaur, Quantum Leap, Space [TV], Ghostbusters)
Ivan G’Vera b. 1959 (The Village, Terminator: Salvation, Alien Nation [TV])
Denise Nickerson b. 1957 (Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, Dark Shadows)
Barry Sonnenfeld b. 1953 (director, Pushing Daisies, Men in Black, The Addams Family, The Tick)
Annette O’Toole b. 1952 (Smallville, Superman, Cat People, It)
Heather Young b. 1945 (Galactica 1980, Land of the Giants, The Time Tunnel, Batman)
Samuel R. Delany b. 1942 (author, won 1967 Nebula for Babel-17, won 1968 Nebula for The Einstein Connection)
Don Steele b. 1936 died 5 August 1997 (Gremlins, Death Race 2000)
Gordon Jump b. 1932 died 22 September 2003 (Hard Time on Planet Earth, Amazing Stories, The Incredible Hulk, The Fury, The Bionic Woman, Conquest of the Planet of the Apes, Bewitched)
Grace Lee Whitney b. 1930 (Star Trek, Batman, Bewitched, The Outer Limits)
Jonathan Haze b. 1929 (X: The Man with the X-Ray Eyes, The Little Shop of Horrors, The Terror, Viking Women and the Sea Serpent, Not of this Earth, It Conquered the World, The Day the World Ended, Monster from the Ocean Floor)
George Grizzard b. 1928 died 2 October 2007 (Twilight Zone, 3rd Rock from the Sun)
Anne McCaffrey b. 1926 (author, Dragonriders of Pern series, The Ship Who… series)
Last year, I put Samuel R. Delany in the Picture Slot, and I was considering Grace Lee Whitney when the list starting coming together during this morning's research. A few other options crossed my mind including Asa Butterfield, the young actor who had title roles in Ender's Game and Hugo, Jonathan Haze, a guy in a whole passel of 1950s monster movies and the original Seymour in The Little Shop of Horrors and the Author Anne McCaffrey. But as you can see, I chose Heather Young, who played the stewardess Betty on Land of the Giants. Sometimes the blog feels like Let's Remember a Star Trek Episode, so I decided to save Grace Lee for next year.
Many happy returns to the living on the list, and to the dead, thanks for all the memories.
Movies released
The Incredible Shrinking Man released 1957
Predictor: Ray Kurzweil in his 1999 book The Age of the Spiritual Machines
Prediction: By 2009, research has been initiated on reverse engineering the brain through both destructive and non-invasive scans.
Reality: The brain is still a pretty damned big mystery and we aren't any closer to "reverse engineering" it than we were when Kurzweil wrote this. On Wikipedia, Kurzweil claims 89 out of 108 predictions he made were entirely correct by the
end of 2009. An additional 13 were what he calls “essentially correct"
(meaning that they were likely to be realized within a few years of
2009), for a total of 102 out of 108.
I'm not listing anything like 108 of his predictions, but his track record is much worse than he lets on. Kind of like Ehrlich's The Population Bomb, Kurzweil gets to keep his reputation because nobody is checking up on him and reporting to the general public.
I should note that I don't consider my readership the general public. From what I can tell, you are far cleverer than that.
Looking one day ahead... INTO THE FUTURE!
It's time to hear once again from T. Baron Russell, our optimistic friend from 2005.
Join us then... IN THE FUTURE!
Showing posts with label brain research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brain research. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Thursday, February 7, 2013
7 February 2013
Prediction: By the year 2000, we will be recording information directly onto the brain. Instant expertise will be possible, replaying a memory will be like reliving a thing and unpleasant memories will be erased.
Predictor: Arthur C. Clarke on the BBC TV show Horizon in 1964
Reality: Hmm. Sounds like the central plot devices in Joss Whedon's Dollhouse and Charlie Kaufman's Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
If I recall correctly, neither of those stories ended well.
I don't know if anyone is even working on this kind of thing. From what little I know about brain research, this sounds way beyond our capabilities. There are certainly drugs that have amnesia as a side effect, but they cannot pluck out the bad memories from the good. The one thing that is getting clearer on the quantitative side of psychological research is that memory is not as good a recording device as we might hope.
I'm giving old ACC a big fat goose egg on this one, and that's probably good news for mankind in general.
Looking ahead one day... INTO THE FUTURE! It's the German chocolate company's turn to show us a glimpse of things to come, this time a strange sea battle... in the year 2000!
Join me then... IN THE FUTURE!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)