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What’s the Story?
A discovery engine for meaningful knowledge, fueled by cross-disciplinary curiosity.
A Brain Pickings project edited by Maria Popova in partnership with Noodle.
Twitter: @explorer
Kevin Kelly
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Every minute a new impossible thing is uploaded to the internet and that improbable event becomes just one of hundreds of extraordinary events that we’ll see or hear about today. The internet is like a lens which focuses the extraordinary into a beam, and that beam has become our illumination. It compresses the unlikely into a small viewable band of everyday-ness. As long as we are online - which is almost all day many days — we are illuminated by this compressed extraordinariness. It is the new normal.

[…]

The good news may be that it cultivates in us an expanded sense of what is possible for humans, and for human life, and so expand us. The bad news may be that this insatiable appetite for supe-superlatives leads to dissatisfaction with anything ordinary.

Kevin Kelly on how the internet is expanding the boundaries of the normal and the possible.

A wise woman once said, “If you imagine less, less will be what you undoubtedly deserve. … Imagine immensities.” Welcome to the age of immensities. 

In envisioning how machines will replace humans, Kevin Kelly breaks down our relationship with robots into four categories.
Complement with Ellen Ulman’s Close to the Machine.

In envisioning how machines will replace humans, Kevin Kelly breaks down our relationship with robots into four categories.

Complement with Ellen Ulman’s Close to the Machine.