Varunraj+SOAPSTone

Varunraj Baskaran

Tittle: Transhumanism – The Future of Medicine and Supplements Aurthor: Mack LeMouse URL: []

Subject: Transhumanism and its role in medicine Occasion: To inform readers about a growing new subject Audience: Readers, scientists, critics, average people Purpose: To inform about transhumanism's benefits especially in the medical department Speaker: Mack LeMouse, internet, computer, and satellites Tone: Facetious, Logical, and informative

"The desire of a transhumanist you see, is to promote the use of technologies for the end of bettering the human condition"

"the range of transhumant technologies that have already been demonstrated to work and be viable are extensive. While there are currently brain chips available that allow users to interface directly with machines (designed to be used by paralysed patients), the technology I’m currently most interested in is gene doping; not only because it’s so close to being fully realised, but because of the massive implications it has for health, fitness and sports."

Tittle: Why Christianity & Transhumanism Are Not Enemies

Aurthor: Guillermo Santamaria

URL: []

Subject: Transhumanism and Christianity are they conflicting and is transhumaism morally correct. Occasion: Growing controversy between transhummanism and religion Audience: Readers, scientists, critics, average people

Purpose: To try to point out and infoorm readers why Christianity and Transhumanism are not inherently opposite. Speaker: Guillermo Santamaria, internet, computer, and satellites

Tone: Facetious, Logical, and informative

"Transhumanism’s main idea is that the physical limitations of the human body can and should be overcome. The first goal is supersede the limitations of our biology, with the eventual goal of merging our bodies with machines"

" No technology should be judged primarily on the metaphysical beliefs of those who developed it. If one rejects this view, then that person is left considering ridiculous things like determining the religious belief system of those who develop medicines, cars, cell phones to decide whether they will use them or not."

Tittle: What is Transhumanism?

Aurthor: David Pearce and Anders Sandberg

URL: []

Subject: Transhumanism

Occasion: Growing controversy about Transhumanism

Audience: Readers, scientists, critics, average people

Purpose: To inform readers about the basics of the Transhumanist movement and idea.

Speaker: David Pearce and Anders Sandberg, internet, computers, and satellites

Tone: Facetious, Logical, and informative

"Present-day processes can be fine-tuned; wealth can be increased and redistributed; tools can be developed and refined; culture can change, sometimes drastically; but human nature itself is not up for grabs.

This assumption no longer holds true. Arguably it has never been true. Such innovations as speech, written language, printing, engines, modern medicine and computers have had a profound impact not just on how people live their lives, but on who and what they are. Compared to what might happen in the next few decades, these changes may have been slow and even relatively tame. But note that even a single additional innovation as important as any of the above would be enough to invalidate orthodox projections of the future of our world."

"The transhumanist outlook can appear cold and alien at first. Many people are frightened by the rapid changes they are witnessing and respond with denial or by calling for bans on new technologies. It's worth recalling how pain relief at childbirth through the use of anesthetics was once deplored as unnatural. More recently, the idea of "test-tube babies" has been viewed with abhorrence. Genetic engineering is widely seen as interfering with God's designs. Right now, the biggest moral panic is cloning"