June 10, 2005

  • Test

    This entry is in memory of Howard Eavenson Boyer, Jr., who, today’s New York Times informs us, was born in Philadelphia on Oct. 26, 1943, and in his youth studied the 17th-century
    metaphysical poets.

    Later in life, Boyer worked for Harvard University Press, where he edited science books, including Mind Children: The Future of Robot and Human Intelligence (1988), by Hans Moravec.

    Boyer died at 61 on May 4, 2005.

    From Log24.net on Sept. 9, 2003,

    Reply to Lucifer:

    January 9, 1989, is the date of The New Yorker’s review of Hans Moravec’s Mind Children: The Future of Robot and Human Intelligence (Harvard University Press).

    Brad Leithauser, reviewing Mind Children, says
    that if Moravec “is correct in supposing that human minds will be
    transferred into or otherwise fused with machines, it seems likely that
    traditional religious questions — and traditional religions themselves
    – will either melt away or suffer wholesale metamorphosis. Debates
    about Heaven or Hell — to take but one example — would hold little
    relevance for an immortal creature.”

    Au contraire.  Immortal creatures– such as, according to Christianity, human beings– are the only creatures for whom such debates hold relevance.

    For an example of such a debate, see

    The Contrasting Worldviews of
    Sigmund Freud and C.S. Lewis,

    by Harvard psychiatrist Armand Nicholi.

    For more on Nicholi, see my entry
    of August 19, 2003,

    Intelligence Test.

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