On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 8:17 PM, John Grigg <<a href="mailto:possiblepaths2050@gmail.com" target="_blank">possiblepaths2050@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>> India? Interesting. And so you believe this is in large part due to<br>
> Hinduism, which is a polytheistic religion? Are the dieties of India<br>
> "jealous gods?" Please explain further your view on this. I admit that<br>> India has been a popular background for Western writers who enjoy doing<br>> transhumanistically-bent science fiction. <br>
<br>In fact, buddhism seems hardly incompatible with transhumanism if one accepts that James Hughes qualifies as both a buddhist and a transhumanist. :-)<br><br>But yes, my reference was more to the remnants of the indoeuropean culture in contemporary India, which may have little to do with the kind of devotional or mystical hinduism that betrays obvious muslim - if not christian - influences.<br>
<br>Besides anedoctical evidence or personal inferences, and speaking of statistics, for instance, already in 1993, an international poll conducted by <a href="http://research.arc2.ucla.edu/pmts/Germline/Biography/cbdn.htm" target="_blank">Daryl
Macer</a>, manager in Japan of the <a href="http://www2.unescobkk.org/eubios/" target="_blank">Eubios
Ethics Institute</a>, verified that the percentage of the general population in favour of the general availability of genetic engineering technology aimed at both preventing diseases and increasing physical and mental abilities inherited by their offspring ranged, if I am not mistaken, from 22% in Israel to 43% in the US to <i>83%</i> (!) in India. See <a href="http://research.arc2.ucla.edu/pmts/Germline/Biography/cbdn.htm" target="_blank">Daryl Macer</a> et al., "<a href="http://www2.unescobkk.org/eubios/Papers/HGT95.htm" target="_blank">International
Perceptions and Approval of Gene Therapy</a>", in <a href="http://www.liebertpub.com/publication.aspx?pub_id=19" target="_blank"><i>Human Gene Therapy</i></a>
n. 6, pp. 791-803. This may or may not be mentioned in Rifkin's <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B000CDG8LA/qid=1135473833/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/103-0708899-0276623?v=glance&s=books" target="_blank"><i>The Biotech Century</i></a>, I am not sure. <br>
<br>But this general mentality is also well reflected at a political level. See for instance the well-known 2006 speech of Indian President <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Kalam" target="_blank"></a><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Kalam">Abdul Kalam</a> on the occasion of the opening of the International Institute of Information Technology in Bhubaneswar, which is still available at <br>
<a href="http://pib.nic.in/release/rel_print_page1.asp?relid=22519" target="_blank">http://pib.nic.in/release/rel_print_page1.asp?relid=22519</a>. If anybody knows of a more transhumanist-friendly statement by a head of State, I would be curious to hear about it...<br>
<br>Stefano Vaj<br>