Masahiko Inami's The Birth of Superhumans!
The author who moved from
KMD to the University of Tokyo explains the research being done to create
superhumans by extending human motor function and senses using human extension
engineering, machinery and information systems.
While the conventional approach to
technology, is to "compensate" for the deficits of the body, as represented by artificial prosthetic
limbs, now there is a trend toward using technology to "expand" the
human body. The unification of human and machine. Mr. Inami elaborates the
design and technology for such an endeavor.
Virtual
reality and telexistence are technologies that feel like reality. A robot or
humanoid that can become an alter ego. This book
looks at the post physicality.
Mr. Inami
and I are co-representatives of the "Superman Sports Society". I am
not in the habit of publicly proclaiming my admiration for my friends, but this
is probably the best book of the year.
While weaving the genealogy of research into
warps, and domestic and foreign SF and pop culture into wefts, we will
continuously explain difficult and innovative engineering starting with MIT and
both domestic and overseas research.
Mr. Inami says, SF depicts the “What” (what
we want to make), and research depicts the “How” (how to achieve it).
Therefore, what make this book most appealing is its careful reading of science
fiction and pop-culture in Japan and the United States. This is the kind of
writing I admire. A new writer has appeared on the scene.
2001: A Space Odyssey, The Fly, Invisible,
Jurassic Park, Being John Malkovich, Matrix, Real Steel, Total Recall,
Surrogates. It’s impossible to repress films like these.
Doraemon, Perman, Ghost In The Shell,
Evangelion, Cyborg 009, Cobra, Jumborg Ace, Tetsujin 28, Parasyte, Golgo 13,
Anpanman. It is hard for engineering researchers to follow the examples set by
works like these in great detail.
There is a lot of stimulating information to
encounter in this book.
For example, thinking is
regulated by the body. He points out that it is impossible to say tongue
twisters at 10 times the speed in one's head.
-- That is definitely true.
Pink (magenta) does not exist in the physical
world, the brain senses this color by seeing the colors red and purple, which
occupy opposite sides of the color spectrum, at the the same time. When it
comes to the human senses, our sense of hearing is faster than our sense of sight, but the
difference between the speed of light and the speed of sound is corrected in
the brain at the same time that they are being perceived.
-- So that’s how it works.
President Johnson was very particular about
the temperature in his personal airplane, so they made a fake temperature
control knob for him to use and he stopped complaining. Apparently he was
satisfied as long as he thought he was in control, even if the temperature
didn’t change.
-- I want to go see the
actual thing at the Museum of Flight in Seattle.
The important point to emphasize in the
development of humanoid robots, is that in order to ensure that robots function
correctly in the environments in which they will be used, you have to find out
how people want to use their robots.
- I see, it’s inevitable
that you have to consider the demand when it comes to developing humanoid
robots.
At this point in the book, we’re introduced
to research on how to manipulate the human body by sending an electric current
to a wearable device, as well as research on body sharing or how to attach a
camera to the head so that people who are far away can experience the same
things as that person. Sharing experiences by controlling the body via remote
control. Mr Inami asks the question what exactly is is a body. Interesting.
There are many fantasies concerning the
possibilities of IoT such as the automatic unlocking of the entrance doors,
automatic piano performances, and automatic cooking when you get hungry, and
things like the automatic operation of a transparent robot. Mr. Inami is famous
for making a human transparent with optical camouflage, but will we really be
able to accomplish such things by expanding the body and sensations with IoT?
Interesting.
The world is an uproar over IoT and AI, and
what will come after the smart revolution. However, isn't it more exciting to
think that in the near future the very existence of humans will be questioned
due to virtual reality and humanoids that will make it possible to separate the
body from the senses? I will wait for the next work from Mr. Inami. No, I will
urge him to write more.
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