This <a href="http://www.gazettetimes.com/articles/2005/06/26/news/nation/nat05.txt">Corvallis Gazette-Times article on transhumanism</a> is an example of good media coverage. Facts, ideas, and the reader is left free to make up her mind.
<br>HARTFORD,
Conn. - Sitting in his office at Trinity College, James Hughes explains
his vision of a family gathering a couple of hundred years from now:
One family member is a cyborg, another is outfitted with gills for
living underwater. Yet another has been modified to live in a vacuum.<br>"But <span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 204);">they will all consider themselves as descendants of humanity</span>,'' he says.<br>As
executive director of the World Transhumanist Association, he's one of
the leaders in a movement that sees, in the next 50 years, a world
where flesh fuses with mechanics and brains with circuitry. He recently
published "Citizen Cyborg'' (Westview Press, $26.95), a book that has
made waves in academic circles and urges the need to prepare for this
future.<br>Transhumanism, a theory that has been kicking around for a
few decades, envisions a "post-human'' phase where technology will
bring us beyond human capabilities. <span style="background-color: rgb(204, 255, 255);">Intelligence-boosting brain chips, extended life spans and even immortality</span>
are all part of this vision. It's an idea that covers a lot of ground.
Walking canes and eyeglasses are a basic form of transhumanism. And
then there's uploading one's mind and living as sheer consciousness on
a computer.<br>The [<a href="http://transhumanism.org/">World Transhumanist Association</a>]
was founded in 1997 by Nick Bostrom while he was a philosophy professor
at Yale. Hughes says it has more than 30 chapters worldwide, including
recent additions in Somalia and Uganda.<br>While transhumanism was long relegated to the scientific fringe, <span style="background-color: rgb(255, 204, 204);">it has edged closer to the mainstream</span> in the past few years.
<br>"I
believe part of it is that these technological possibilities, five or
10 years ago, seemed like science fiction,'' says Bostrom, now director
of the <a href="http://www.oxfhi.ox.ac.uk/">Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University</a>.