braces_for_impact
Veteran Member
[h=1]Stephen Hawking dies aged 76[/h]
Goodbye to a fun and wonderful mind. Thanks for your contributions, good sir.
Goodbye to a fun and wonderful mind. Thanks for your contributions, good sir.
I've been thinking about this comment of yours off and on today.About bloody time.
I might use those words sometime.
To quote Bilby from the thread on Billy Graham, "about bloody time."
I've been thinking about this comment of yours off and on today.About bloody time.
I might use those words sometime.
Titled OP link: Stephen Hawking, modern cosmology's brightest star, dies aged 76 | Science | The Guardian
Kryten would disagree.Some of his most outspoken comments offended the religious. In his 2010 book, Grand Design, he declared that God was not needed to set the universe going, and in an interview with the Guardian a year later, dismissed the comforts of religious belief
“I regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. There is no heaven or afterlife for broken down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark,” he said.
He spoke also of death, an eventuality that sat on a more distant horizon than doctors thought. “I have lived with the prospect of an early death for the last 49 years. I’m not afraid of death, but I’m in no hurry to die. I have so much I want to do first,” he said.
He was a character in the SF TV series "Red Dwarf" who believed in "silicon heaven": "The iron will lie down with the lamp".
[h=1]Stephen Hawking dies aged 76[/h]
Goodbye to a fun and wonderful mind. Thanks for your contributions, good sir.
Or from our frame of reference, slowly falling into the event horizon forever.[h=1]Stephen Hawking dies aged 76[/h]
Goodbye to a fun and wonderful mind. Thanks for your contributions, good sir.
I can be a bit emotional about these things so I will think of him as peacefully resting in his own custom-made black hole.
EB
Titled OP link: Stephen Hawking, modern cosmology's brightest star, dies aged 76 | Science | The Guardian
Kryten would disagree.Some of his most outspoken comments offended the religious. In his 2010 book, Grand Design, he declared that God was not needed to set the universe going, and in an interview with the Guardian a year later, dismissed the comforts of religious belief
“I regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. There is no heaven or afterlife for broken down computers; that is a fairy story for people afraid of the dark,” he said.
He spoke also of death, an eventuality that sat on a more distant horizon than doctors thought. “I have lived with the prospect of an early death for the last 49 years. I’m not afraid of death, but I’m in no hurry to die. I have so much I want to do first,” he said.
He was a character in the SF TV series "Red Dwarf" who believed in "silicon heaven": "The iron will lie down with the lamp".
I found the comment about computers interesting.
I take it he didn't hold much hope for ghost-in-the-machine artificial intelligence.
Has anyone here seen the Netflix series Altered Carbon? Consciousness downloaded onto memory chips and backups uploaded into cloned 'skins' (bodies).
To quote Bilby from the thread on Billy Graham, "about bloody time."
Why? Billy graham was a nuisance. Do you think the same applies to this guy?