"Page0062" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bloom Howard - The Lucifer Principle (htm))24 24 24 c opies of itself. Suddenly the fields, streets, kitchens and garbage heaps are awash in bright new contraptions stumbling over each other in an effort to grab the stuff more contraptions are made of. And, to put it bluntly, there simply isn't enough raw material to go around. It doesn't take long before some bright designer endows his gadgets with a clever twist. The improved models speed up the raw-material gathering process by pouncing on finished-products from rival micro-plants, stripping them to pieces, and using the parts as pre-packaged parcels of raw industrial stuff. The insidious new models spread fast, stalking unwary gizmos left and right, strewing the planet with discarded components that others snatch in seconds. Then the updated models increase their efficiency even further by working in packs. Sometimes millions of complex final products are lost at a time. But in the grand scheme of the new economy, the loss is not that great. Gadgets abducted for scrap can be replaced at a price that even the Koreans would find hard to believe. This auto-construction technique, based on Dawkins' replicators, is the genetic system. The genetic method's sheer efficiency is one of the primary reasons mother nature isn't nice. She doesn't have to be. For the last few billion years, raw materials have grown so scarce and finished goods so numerous that gizmos have scrambled through a mad dash to grab and disassemble each other. But that fact doesn't disturb mother nature at all. In fact, she's discovered that research and development is AIDED by the finished products' competition. Just toss them out there and watch them try to outwit each other. Keep the clever and flip the unsuccessful into the circular file. From a million failures will spring the breakthroughs of tomorrow. The generative power of the genetic process helps explain why we are so appallingly expendable in the eyes of an indifferent cosmos. Our pre-historic cousin the Neanderthal? Clever contraption. Numerous anthropologists believe the Neanderthal was capable of philosophy, religion and language. Unfortunately once you evolve 24 24 24 c opies of itself. Suddenly the fields, streets, kitchens and garbage heaps are awash in bright new contraptions stumbling over each other in an effort to grab the stuff more contraptions are made of. And, to put it bluntly, there simply isn't enough raw material to go around. It doesn't take long before some bright designer endows his gadgets with a clever twist. The improved models speed up the raw-material gathering process by pouncing on finished-products from rival micro-plants, stripping them to pieces, and using the parts as pre-packaged parcels of raw industrial stuff. The insidious new models spread fast, stalking unwary gizmos left and right, strewing the planet with discarded components that others snatch in seconds. Then the updated models increase their efficiency even further by working in packs. Sometimes millions of complex final products are lost at a time. But in the grand scheme of the new economy, the loss is not that great. Gadgets abducted for scrap can be replaced at a price that even the Koreans would find hard to believe. This auto-construction technique, based on Dawkins' replicators, is the genetic system. The genetic method's sheer efficiency is one of the primary reasons mother nature isn't nice. She doesn't have to be. For the last few billion years, raw materials have grown so scarce and finished goods so numerous that gizmos have scrambled through a mad dash to grab and disassemble each other. But that fact doesn't disturb mother nature at all. In fact, she's discovered that research and development is AIDED by the finished products' competition. Just toss them out there and watch them try to outwit each other. Keep the clever and flip the unsuccessful into the circular file. From a million failures will spring the breakthroughs of tomorrow. The generative power of the genetic process helps explain why we are so appallingly expendable in the eyes of an indifferent cosmos. Our pre-historic cousin the Neanderthal? Clever contraption. Numerous anthropologists believe the Neanderthal was capable of philosophy, religion and language. Unfortunately once you evolve |
|
© 2026 Библиотека RealLib.org
(support [a t] reallib.org) |