Difference between revisions of "Hyperlife"

From Cyborg Anthropology
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
'''What would it mean to disconnect briefly and connect to something over a longer period of time?'''
+
===Definition===
 +
Hyperlife is a term coined by [[Kevin Kelly]] in Chapter 17 of his book [[Out of Control]]. He explains that "Hyperlife is a particular type of vivisystem endowed with integrity, robustness, and cohesiveness -- a strong vivisystem rather than a lax one. A rain forest and a periwinkle, an electronic network and a servomechanism, SimCity and New York City, all possess degrees of hyperlife. Hyperlife is my word for that class of life that includes both the AIDS virus and the Michelangelo computer virus".<ref>[http://www.kk.org/outofcontrol/ch17-h.html Out of Control by Kevin Kelly] Basic Books: 1995.</ref>
  
Jason Barger spent seven straight days flying to seven different cities. He flew 6548 miles without stepping foot outside of the airport. His book [http://www.stepbackfromthebaggageclaim.com/ Step Back from the Baggage Claim] is about his experience.
+
====Species of Hyperlife====
 +
"Biological life is only one species of hyperlife. A telephone network is another species. A bullfrog is chock-full of hyperlife. The Biosphere 2 project in Arizona swarms with hyperlife, as do Tierra, and Terminator 2. Someday hyperlife will blossom in automobiles, buildings, TVs, and test tubes".<ref>[http://www.kk.org/outofcontrol/ch17-h.html Out of Control by Kevin Kelly] Basic Books: 1995.</ref>
  
 +
==References==
 +
<references />
  
[[Category:Unfinished]]
 
[[Category:Book Pages]]
 
 
[[Category:Marked for Editing]]
 
[[Category:Marked for Editing]]
 +
[[Category:Book Pages]]
 +
 +
__NOTOC__

Revision as of 04:01, 16 February 2011

Definition

Hyperlife is a term coined by Kevin Kelly in Chapter 17 of his book Out of Control. He explains that "Hyperlife is a particular type of vivisystem endowed with integrity, robustness, and cohesiveness -- a strong vivisystem rather than a lax one. A rain forest and a periwinkle, an electronic network and a servomechanism, SimCity and New York City, all possess degrees of hyperlife. Hyperlife is my word for that class of life that includes both the AIDS virus and the Michelangelo computer virus".[1]

Species of Hyperlife

"Biological life is only one species of hyperlife. A telephone network is another species. A bullfrog is chock-full of hyperlife. The Biosphere 2 project in Arizona swarms with hyperlife, as do Tierra, and Terminator 2. Someday hyperlife will blossom in automobiles, buildings, TVs, and test tubes".[2]

References

  1. Out of Control by Kevin Kelly Basic Books: 1995.
  2. Out of Control by Kevin Kelly Basic Books: 1995.