[ExI] Sheldon is a transhumanist!

Ryan Rawson ryanobjc at gmail.com
Fri Oct 1 22:35:04 UTC 2010


As an avid watcher of TBBT, this article mischaracterizes the show
quite a bit.  The real mystery here isnt sheldon declaring he wants to
make it to the singularity, but the fact that the sitcom is popular AT
ALL.

Sheldon isnt really the nerd of the group, he's the UBER NERD with 0
social skills of the group.  There is in fact only 1 non-nerd
reoccurring character - the neighbour Penny.  The rest of the group
are pretty nerdy, all holding PhDs except for the poor Masters of
engineering from MIT who is continuously made fun of by Sheldon (PhD
physics).

I have no idea how this sitcom is popular.

On Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 9:48 AM, Keith Henson <hkeithhenson at gmail.com> wrote:
> The Singularity Goes Prime Time
> October 1, 2010 by Phil Bowermaster
>
> This week’s episode of the CBS sitcom The Big Bang Theory brings the
> idea of the technological Singularity to one of the widest audiences
> it has ever reached.
>
> In the opening teaser, ubergeek Sheldon (Jim Parsons) explains to his
> long-suffering roommate and best fried Leonard (Johnny Galecki) that
> he is trying to determine how much longer he has to live. Referring to
> the time line shown here, he laments that he will probably not make it
> far enough into the future to, well, live to see it would be one way
> of putting it:
>
> Sheldon: At best I have 60 years left. 60 only gets me to here. I need
> to get here.
>
> Leonard: What’s there?
>
> Sheldon: The earliest estimate of the Singularity, when man will be
> able to transfer his consciousness into machines and achieve
> immortality.
>
> Leonard: So, you’re upset about missing out on becoming some sort of
> freakish, self-aware robot…
>
> Sheldon: By this much!
>
> Leonard: Tough break. You want eggs?
>
> Sheldon: You don’t get it, Leonard. I’m going to miss so much: the
> Unified Field Theory, Cold Fusion, the dogopus…
>
> Leonard: What’s a dogopus?
>
> Sheldon: A hybrid dog and octopus — man’s best underwater friend.
>
> Leonard: Is somebody working on that?
>
> Sheldon: I was going to. I planned on giving it to myself for my 300th birthday.
>
> Popular both with geeks and with the intellectually inferior sorts
> that Sheldon refers to as “muggles,” The Big Bang Theory (now in its
> fourth season) is a major hit, claiming an average of  14 million
> viewers per week. The show is also critically acclaimed. Just a few
> weeks ago, Parsons won the 2010 Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a
> comedy series.
>
> If Sheldon’s description of the Singularity seems imprecise, that’s
> probably by design. While a serious in-depth explanation of what the
> Singularity is all about would be edifying, it probably wouldn’t make
> it onto TV.
>
> Certainly not network TV.
>
> In prime time.
>
> On a popular sitcom.
>
> Twisting serious scientific and technological ideas into comedic
> material is one of the show’s major tropes. So the audience gains a
> certain familiarity with terminology and concepts, but something less
> than a real understanding of these ideas. Hey, it’s a start.
>
> Another major contribution of The Big Bang Theory is that it serves as
> a kind of mainstream endorsement of geek culture. The  Geek Chic
> movement was one thing, but this is something bigger. As I wrote in
> 2007 after watching the first few episodes:
>
> After all, isn’t it amazing that a show like this can feature four
> such characters, not as the annoying neighbors or as the object of
> derision or pity of the real heroes of the show? These guys are the
> heroes.
> Three physicists and an engineer — heroes for our time.
>
> One major difference between Sheldon’s description of the Singularity
> and references we may have seen to it elsewhere in prime time (in
> Fringe, for example) is that Sheldon describes the Singularity not as
> a catastrophe to be avoided, or something that is simply “going to
> happen,” but rather as a goal. In just a few short sentences he makes
> a case for life extension, uploading of consciousness, and the
> achievement of major longstanding scientific aims via cooperation
> between human and artificial intelligence.
>
> Sheldon is a transhumanist!
>
> Sure, these ideas are all portrayed as bizarre and ridiculous, but
> that’s because Sheldon is the nerd of the group. But that’s okay. If
> The Big Bang Theory has demonstrated anything, it’s how quickly and
> easily nerdy ideas can become mainstream. Stay tuned.
>
> Originally published by Phil Bowermaster in The Speculist, September 30, 2010.
>
> http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-singularity-goes-prime-time?utm_source=KurzweilAI+Daily+Newsletter+Plain+Text&utm_campaign=46b019c9b6-UA-946742-1&utm_medium=email
>
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