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  • Throughout human history people have tried to create utopia, the perfect society

  • In fact, America, the American dream, in some sense was based on utopianismWhy do we

  • have the Shaker movementWhy did we have the QuakersWhy did we have so many different

  • kinds of religious movements that fled Europe looking to create autopia here in the Americas

  • Well, we know the Shakers have disappeared and many of these colonies have also disappeared

  • only to be found in footnotes in American textbooks, and the question is why?

  • One reason why is scarcity because back then the industrial revolution was still young

  • and societies had scarcityScarcity creates conflict and unless you have a way to resolve

  • conflict, your colony falls apartHow do you allocate resourcesWho gets access

  • to food when there is a famineWho gets shelter when there is a snowstorm and all

  • of the sudden you've eaten up your seed cornThese are questions that faced the early American

  • colonists, and that's the reason why we only see the ghost towns of these utopias.  

  • However, now we have nanotechnology, and with nanotechnology, perhaps, who knows, maybe

  • in 100 years, we'll have something called the replicatorNow the replicator is something

  • you see in Star TrekIt's called the molecular assembler and it takes ordinary raw materials,

  • breaks them up at the atomic level and joins the joints in different ways to create new

  • substancesIf you have a molecular assembler, you can turn, for example, a glass into wood

  • or vice versaYou would have the power of a magician, in fact, the power of a god,

  • the ability to literally transform the atoms of one substance into another and we see it

  • on Star Trek. It's also the most subversive device of all

  • because if utopias fail because of scarcity then what happens when you have infinite abundance

  • What happens when you simply ask and it comes to youOne of my favorite episodes on Star

  • Trek is when the Enterprise encounters a space capsule left over from the 20th century,

  • the bad 20th centuryPeople died of all these horrible diseases, and many people froze

  • themselves knowing that in the 23rd century or so they'll be thawed out and their diseases

  • will be curedWell, sure enough, it's the 23rd century nowThe Enterprise finds

  • a space capsule and begins to revive all these people and cure them of cancer, cure them

  • of incurable genetic diseases, and then one of these individuals, however, was a banker

  • He is revived and he says to himself, “My God, my gamble worked; I'm alive; I'm in the

  • 23rd century,” and he said, “Call my stock broker; call my banker; I am rich; I

  • am rich; my investments, they have been sitting there in the bank for centuries; I must be

  • a quadrillionaire!”  And then the crew of the Enterprise looks at this man and says,

  • What is money; what is a bank; what is a stock brokerWe don't have any of these

  • in the 23rd century,” and then they say, “If you want something, you simply ask for

  • it and you get it.” Now that's subversiveThat's revolutionary

  • because if all utopiansocieties vanished because of scarcity and conflict, what happens

  • when there is no scarcityWhat happens when you simply ask and you get what you want

  • This has enormous philosophical implicationsFor example, why bother to workWhy bother

  • to go to work when you simply ask for things and it comes to you?  

  • Now, some sociologists think that if drugs, for example, are totally legalized, absolutely

  • legalized then maybe three to five percent of the human race will become permanent drug

  • addictsThat's the price for total legalization of drugs.  I don't know, but that's a number

  • that people talk aboutWhat happens when we have this society based on replicators

  • Then will we have three to five percent of the human race become permanent parasites

  • This is a possibilityThe whole nature of the human psyche is based around producing

  • things, doing something, making a contributionWhat happens when you don't have to do that

  • anymoreWhat happens when there is infinite plentyWhat happens if there isutopia?

  •   The detractors will say, “Bah-humbug! There

  • is no replicator; it violates the laws of physics.”  Well, actually that's not true

  • There actually is a nanobot that can replicate, actually take apart molecules and rearrange

  • them in fantastic waysMother Nature has already created itIt's called the ribosome

  • The ribosome can take hamburgers, milk shakes and turn them into a baby in nine months

  • That is a miracleThe ribosome takes hamburgers, French fries, potato chips, breaks apart the

  • molecules and reassembles them into DNAMother Nature has created the replicator

  • It replicates humans, but what happens when humans create replicators by which we can

  • replicate everythingThis is a very subversive idea

Throughout human history people have tried to create utopia, the perfect society

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