Where did Galileo go for advice? Where did he find inspiration when he wanted to make sense of those odd orbital trajectories? In the 16th century there were precious little giants on which shoulders he could stand and most of them were dead and buried. Also, I’m pretty sure the library of the University of Padua didn’t have an internet connection.
Yet by meticulous observation and cold reasoning the Italian astronomer and mathematician forever changed the worldview of all humanity and infuriated a bunch of fundamentalists as an added bonus. This is what one dedicated man can do through careful application of the scientific method.
Now imagine hundreds, thousands, no millions of Galileis living at the same time, exchanging and debating ideas, attacking different problems through similar methods and vice versa, cross-pollinating, inspiring, competing, cooperating. The power of reason multiplied is an awesome power indeed.
This is the world we live in, right now!
Just consider the field of neuroscience. Today, tens of thousands of researches all over the world are following hundreds of different paths to that ultimate goal, understanding the workings of the human brain. They are scanning the contents of our skulls with ever more sophisticated instruments, they are growing neurons in petri dishes, they are interfacing animal brains with robots, they are building computer models of specific brain regions, etc, etc. When one road leads to a dead end, another forces a breakthrough. The gathered momentum is overwhelming, unstoppable.
Galileo, Da Vinci and a couple of odd scientists and artists spread throughout medieval Europe, delivered us from the dark ages. Our own Renaissance promises to be much more profound.
The Cyborg
Friday, July 17, 2009
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