The Extropian Principles
V. 2.6
President, Extropy Institute
...[Look
for version 3.0 of the Principles later this year.]
...
EXTROPY A measure of
intelligence, information, energy, vitality, experience, diversity, opportunity,
and growth.
EXTROPIANISM The philosophy
that seeks to increase extropy.
...
Extropianism is a transhumanist philosophy:
Like humanism, transhumanism values reason and humanity and sees no grounds
for belief in unknowable, supernatural forces externally controlling our
destiny, but goes further in urging us to push beyond the merely human
stage of evolution. As physicist Freeman Dyson has said: "Humanity
looks to me like a magnificent beginning but not the final word."
Religions traditionally have provided a sense of meaning and purpose in
life, but have also suppressed intelligence and stifled progress. The Extropian
philosophy provides an inspiring and uplifting meaning and direction to
our lives, while remaining flexible and firmly founded in science, reason,
and the boundless search for improvement.
1. Boundless Expansion: Seeking more intelligence,
wisdom, and effectiveness, an unlimited lifespan, and the removal of political,
cultural, biological, and psychological limits to selfactualization and
self-realization. Perpetually overcoming constraints on our progress and
possibilities. Expanding into the universe and advancing without end.
2. Self-Transformation: Affirming continual moral,
intellectual, and physical self-improvement, through reason and critical
thinking, personal responsibility, and experimentation. Seeking biological
and neurological augmentation.
3. Dynamic Optimism: Fueling dynamic action with
positive expectations. Adopting a rational, action-based optimism, shunning
both blind faith and stagnant pessimism.
4. Intelligent Technology: Applying science and
technology creatively to transcend "natural" limits imposed by
our biological heritage, culture, and environment.
5. Spontaneous Order: Supporting decentralized,
voluntaristic social coordination processes. Fostering tolerance, diversity,
long-term thinking, personal responsibility, and individual liberty.
These principles are developed below. Deeper treatments
can be found in various issues of EXTROPY: The Journal of Transhumanist
Thought Spontaneous Order in #7, Dynamic Optimism in #8, and Self-Transformation
in #10.
...
1. BOUNDLESS EXPANSION
Extropians recognize the unique place of our species,
and our opportunity to advance nature's evolution to new peaks. Beginning
as mindless matter, parts of nature developed in a slow evolutionary ascendence,
leading to progressively more powerful brains. Chemical reactions generated
tropistic behavior, which was superseded by instinctual and Skinnerian
stimulus-response behavior, and then by conscious learning and experimentation.
With the advent of the conceptual awareness of humankind, the rate of advancement
sharply accelerated as intelligence, technology, and the scientific method
were applied to our condition. We seek to sustain and quicken this evolutionary
process of expanding extropy, transcending biological and psychological
limits into posthumanity.
In aspiring to posthumanity, we reject natural and traditional
limitations on our possibilities. We champion the rational use of science
and technology to eradicate constraints on lifespan, intelligence, personal
vitality, freedom, and experience. We recognize the absurdity of meekly
accepting "natural" limits to our lifespans. The future will
bring a graduation from Earth the cradle of human and transhuman intelligence
and the inhabitation of the cosmos.
Resource limits are not immutable. Extropians affirm a
rational, market-mediated environmentalism aimed at sustaining and enhancing
the conditions for our flourishing. We oppose apocalyptic environmentalism
which hallucinates catastrophe, issues a stream of irresponsible doomsday
predictions, and attempts to strangle our continued evolution. Intelligent
management of resources and environment will be fostered by the Extropian
goal of vastly extended lifespan. The market price system encourages conservation,
substitution, and innovation, preventing any need for a brake on growth
and progress. Migration into space will immensely enlarge the energy and
resources accessible to our civilization. Extended lifespans will foster
wisdom and foresight, while restraining recklessness and profligacy.
No mysteries are sacrosanct, no limits unquestionable;
the unknown will yield to the ingenious mind. We seek to understand the
universe and to master reality up to and beyond any currently foreseeable
limits.
...
2. SELF-TRANSFORMATION
Extropians affirm reason, critical inquiry, intellectual
independence, and honesty. We reject blind faith and the passive, comfortable
thinking that leads to dogma, mysticism, and conformity. Our commitment
to positive self-transformation requires us to critically analyze our current
beliefs, behaviors, and strategies. Extropians therefore feel proud by
readily learning from error rather than by professing infallibility. We
prefer analytical thought to fuzzy but comfortable delusion, empiricism
to mysticism, and independent evaluation to conformity. We affirm a philosophy
of life but distance ourselves from religious dogma because of its blind
faith, debasement of human worth, and systematic irrationality.
We seek to become better than we are, while affirming
our current worth. Perpetual self-improvement physical, intellectual, psychological,
and ethical requires us to continually re-examine our lives. Self-esteem
in the present cannot mean self-satisfaction, since a probing mind can
always envisage a superior self in the future. Extropians are committed
to deepening their wisdom, honing their rationality, and augmenting their
physical and intellectual capabilities. We choose challenge over comfort,
innovation over emulation, transformation over torpor.
Extropians are neophiles and experimentalists who track
new research for more efficient means of achieving goals and who are willing
to explore novel technologies of self-transformation. In our quest to advance
to a posthuman stage, we rely on our own judgment, seek our own path, and
reject both blind conformity and mindless rebellion. Extropians frequently
diverge from the mainstream because they refuse to be chained by any dogma,
whether religious, political, or intellectual. Extropians choose their
values and behavior reflectively, standing firm when required but responding
flexibly to new conditions.
Personal responsibility and autonomy go hand-in-hand with
self-experimentation. Extropians take responsibility for the consequences
of their choices, refusing to blame others for the results of their own
free actions. Experimentation and self-transformation require risks; we
wish to be free to evaluate potential risks and benefits for ourselves,
applying our own judgment, and assuming responsibility for the outcome.
We seek neither to rule others nor to be ruled. We vigorously resist those
who use the institutionalized coercion of the State to impose their judgments
of the safety and effectiveness of various means of self-experimentation.
Personal responsibility and selfdetermination are incompatible with authoritarian
centralized control, which stifles the choices and spontaneous ordering
of autonomous persons.
Coercion, whether for the purported "good of the
whole" or for the paternalistic protection of the individual, is unacceptable
to us. Compulsion breeds ignorance and weakens the connection between personal
choice and personal outcome, thereby destroying personal responsibility.
Extropians are rational individualists, living by their own judgment, making
reflective, informed choices, profiting from both success and shortcoming.
As neophiles, Extropians study advanced, emerging, and
future technologies for their self-transformative potential. We support
biomedical research to understand and control the aging process. We examine
any plausible means of conquering death, including interim measures like
biostasis, and long-term possibilities such as migration of personality
from biological bodies into superior embodiments ("uploading").
We practice and plan for biological and neurological augmentation
through means such as neurochemical enhancers, computers and electronic
networks, General Semantics, fuzzy logic, and other guides to effective
thinking, meditation and visualization techniques, accelerated learning
strategies, applied cognitive psychology, and soon neural-computer integration.
Shrugging off the limits imposed on us by our natural heritage, we apply
the evolutionary gift of our rational, empirical intelligence, aiming to
surpass the confines of our humanity.
...
3. DYNAMIC OPTIMISM
Extropians espouse a positive, dynamic, empowering attitude.
Seeing no rational support for belief in a non-physical "afterlife",
we seek to realize our ideals in this world. Rather than enduring
an unfulfilling life sustained by a desperate longing for an illusory heaven,
we direct our energies enthusiastically into moving toward our ever-evolving
vision.
Living vigorously, effectively, and joyfully, requires
dismissing gloom, defeatism, and ingrained cultural negativism. Problems
technical, social, psychological, ecological are to be acknowledged but
not allowed to dominate our thinking and our direction. We respond to gloom
and defeatism by exploring and exploiting new possibilities. Extropians
hold an optimistic view of the future, foreseeing potent antidotes to many
ancient human ailments, requiring only that we take charge and create
that future. Dynamic optimism disallows passively waiting and wishing for
tomorrow; it propels us exuberantly into immediate activity, confidently
confronting today's challenges while generating more potent solutions for
our future.
We question limits others take for granted. Observing
accelerating scientific and technical learning, ascending standards of
living, and evolving social and moral practices, we project continuing
progress. Today there are more researchers studying aging, medicine, computers,
biotechnology, nanotechnology, and other enabling disciplines than in all
of history. Technological and social development continue to accelerate
leading, in the eyes of some of us, to a Singularity a time in the future
when everything will be so radically different from today, and changing
so fast, that we cannot accurately foresee life beyond that horizon. Extropians
strive to maintain the pace of progress by encouraging support for crucial
research, and pioneering the implementation of its results.
Adopting dynamic optimism means focusing on possibilities
and opportunities, being alert to solutions and potentialities. It means
refusing to whine about what cannot be avoided, learning from mistakes
rather than dwelling on them in a victimizing, punishing manner. Dynamic
optimism requires us to take the initiative, to jump up and plough into
our difficulties, our actions declaring that we can achieve our
goals, rather than sitting back and submerging ourselves in defeatist thinking.
Our actions and words radiate dynamic optimism, inspiring
others to excel. We are responsible for taking the initiative in spreading
this invigorating optimism; sustaining and strengthening our own dynamism
is more easily achieved in a mutally reinforcing environment. We stimulate
optimism in others by communicating our Extropian ideas and by living our
ideals.
Dynamic optimism and passive faith are incompatible. Faith
in a better future is confidence that an external force, whether God, State,
or extraterrestrials, will solve our problems. Faith, or the Pollyanna/Dr.
Pangloss variety of optimism, breeds passivity by promising progress as
a gift bestowed on us by superior forces. But, in return for the gift,
faith requires a fixed belief in and supplication to external forces, thereby
creating dogmatic beliefs and irrationally rigid behavior. Dynamic optimism
fosters initiative and intelligence, assuring us that we are capable of
improving life through our own efforts. Opportunities and possibilities
are everywhere, calling to us to seize them and to build upon them. Attaining
our goals requires only that we believe in ourselves, work diligently,
and be willing to revise our strategies.
Where others see difficulties, we see challenges. Where
others give up, we move forward. Where others say enough is enough,
we say: Forward! Upward! Outward! We espouse personal, social, and
technological evolution into ever higher forms. Extropians see too far
and change too rapidly to feel future shock. Let us advance the wave of
evolutionary progress.
...
4. INTELLIGENT TECHNOLOGY
Extropians affirm the necessity and desirability of science
and technology. We use practical methods to advance our goals of expanded
intelligence, superior physical abilities, self-constitution, and immortality,
rather than joining the well-trodden path of comfortable self-delusion,
mysticism, and credulity. We regard science and technology as indispensable
means to the evolution and achievement of our most noble values, ideals,
and visions. We seek to foster these disciplined forms of intelligence,
and to direct them toward eradicating the barriers to our extropian objectives,
radically transforming both the internal and external conditions of existence.
Technology is a natural extension and expression of human
intellect and will, of creativity, curiosity, and imagination. We foresee
and encourage the development of ever more flexible, smart, responsive
technology. We will co-evolve with the products of our minds, integrating
with them, finally merging with our intelligent technology in a posthuman
synthesis, amplifying our abilities and extending our freedom.
Profound technological innovation excites rather than
frightens us. We welcome change, expanding our horizons, exploring new
territory boldly and inventively. We favor careful and cautious development
of powerful technologies, but will neither stifle evolutionary advancement
nor cringe before the unfamiliar. Regarding timidity and stagnation as
unworthy of us, we choose to stride valiantly into the future. Extropians
therefore favor surging ahead delighting in future shock rather than ignobly
stagnating or reverting to primitivism. Intelligent use of biotechnology,
nanotechnology, space and other technologies, in conjunction with a free
market system, can remove resource constraints and discharge environmental
pressures.
We see the coming years and decades as a time of enormous
changes, changes that we can use to vastly expand our opportunities and
abilities, transforming our lives for the better. This technological transformation
will be accelerated by genetic engineering, life extending biosciences,
intelligence intensifiers, smarter interfaces to swifter computers, neural-computer
integration, virtual reality, enormous and interconnected databases, swift
electronic communications, artificial intelligence, neuroscience, neural
networks, artificial life, off-planet migration, and nanotechnology.
...
5. SPONTANEOUS ORDER
Extropians emphasize self-generating, organic, spontaneous
orders over centrally planned, imposed orders. Both types of order have
their place, but the under-appreciated spontaneous variety are crucial
for our social interactions. Spontaneous orders have properties that make
them especially conducive to Extropian goals and values; we see spontaneously
ordering processes in many contexts, including biological evolution, the
self-regulation of ecosystems, artificial life studies, memetics (the study
of replicating information patterns), agoric open systems (market-like
allocation of computational resources), brain function and neurocomputation.
The principle of spontaneous order is embodied in the
free market system a system that does not yet exist in a pure form. We
are evolving away from tribalism, feudalism, authoritarianism, and democracy
towards a polycentric system of distributed power shared among autonomous
agents, their plans coordinated by the economic network. The free market
allows complex institutions to develop, encourages innovation, rewards
individual initiative, cultivates personal responsibility, fosters diversity,
and decentralizes power. Market economies spur the technological and social
progress essential to the Extropian philosophy. We have no use for the
technocratic idea of central control by self-proclaimed experts. No group
of experts can understand and control the endless complexity of an economy
and society. Expert knowledge is best harnessed and transmitted through
the superbly efficient mediation of the free market's price signals signals
that embody more information than any person or organization could ever
gather.
Sustained progress and effective, rational decision-making
require the diverse sources of information and differing perspectives that
evolve in spontaneous orders. Centralized command of behavior constrains
exploration, diversity, and dissenting opinion. Respecting spontaneous
order means supporting voluntaristic, autonomy-maximizing institutions
as opposed to rigidly hierarchical, authoritarian groupings with their
bureaucratic structure, suppression of innovation and dissent, and smothering
of individual incentives. Our understanding of spontaneous orders grounds
our opposition to self-proclaimed and involuntarily imposed "authorities",
and makes us skeptical of political solutions, unquestioning obedience
to leaders, and inflexible hierarchies.
Making effective use of a spontaneously ordering social
system requires a degree of tolerance and self-restraint, allowing others
to pursue their lives as they choose, just as we wish to be free to go
our own way. Mutual progress and fulfillment will result from a cooperative
and benevolent attitude towards all those who respect our rights. Tolerating
diversity and disagreement requires us to maintain control of the impulses
built into the human organism, and to uphold demanding standards of rational
personal behavior. Extropians are guided in their actions by studying the
fields of strategy, decision theory, game theory, and ethology. These reveal
to us the benefits of cooperation, and encourage the long-term thinking
appropriate to persons seeking an unlimited lifespan.
...
CONCLUSION
These are principles not only of belief but of action.
We become transhuman only when we have fully integrated these values into
our lives, when we have consciously transformed ourselves ready for the
future, rising above outmoded human beliefs and behaviors. When technology
allows us to reconstitute ourselves physiologically, genetically, and neurologically,
we who have become transhuman will be primed to transform ourselves into
posthumans persons of unprecedented physical, intellectual, and psychological
capacity, self-programming, potentially immortal, unlimited individuals.
As posthumans we will both embody extropy and generate
more more intelligence, information, energy, vitality, experience, diversity,
opportunity, and growth. The Extropian Principles serve as a codification
of values helpful in guiding us into the future. These Principles continue
to evolve and cannot replace independent thinking by the individual.
...
READINGS
These books are listed because they express Extropian
ideas. However, appearance on this list should not be taken to imply full
agreement of a book or its author with the Extropian principles, or vice
versa. Reading just the first ten books listed will illuminate many components
of the evolving Extropian worldview.
- Paul M. Churchland: Matter and Consciousness
- Richard Dawkins: The Selfish Gene
- Eric Drexler: Engines of Creation
- David Friedman: The Machinery of Freedom (2nd Ed.)
- Hans Moravec: Mind Children: The Future of Robot and
Human Intelligence
- Ed Regis: Great Mambo Chicken and the Transhuman Condition
- Julian Simon: The Ultimate Resource
- Robert Anton Wilson: Prometheus Rising
- Ayn Rand: Atlas Shrugged (fiction)
- Marc Stiegler: The Gentle Seduction (fiction)
- Harry Browne: How I Found Freedom in An Unfree World
- Paul M. Churchland: A Neurocomputational Perspective
- Stephen R. Covey: The 7 Habits of Highly Effective
People
- Mike Darwin & Brian Wowk: Cryonics: Reaching For
Tomorrow
- Ward Dean & John Morgenthaler: Smart Drugs and
Nutrients
- Freeman Dyson: Infinite in All Directions
- Eric Drexler: Nanosystems: Molecular Machinery, Manufacturing,
and Computation
- Eric Drexler, C. Peterson
- with Gayle Pergamit: Unbounding the Future: The Nanotechnology
Revolution
- F.M. Esfandiary: Optimism One; Up-Wingers;
Telespheres
- Robert Ettinger: The Prospect of Immortality;
Man Into Superman
- FM-2030: Are You A Transhuman?
- David Gauthier: Morals By Agreement
- Alan Harrington: The Immortalist
- Timothy Leary: Info-Psychology
- J.L. Mackie: The Miracle of Theism
- Jan Narveson: The Libertarian Idea
- Jerry Pournelle: A Step Farther Out
- Ilya Prigogine and Isabelle Stengers: Order Out of
Chaos
- W. Duncan Reekie: Markets, Entrepreneurs and Liberty
- Albert Rosenfeld: Prolongevity II
- Julian Simon and Herman Kahn (eds): The Resourceful
Earth
- Alvin Toffler: Powershift
- Robert Anton Wilson: The New Inquisition
Fiction:
- Roger MacBride Allen: The Modular Man
- Greg Egan: Quarantine
- Robert Heinlein: Methusaleh's Children; Time
Enough for Love
- James P. Hogan: Voyage To Yesteryear; Inherit
the Stars
- Charles Platt: The Silicon Man
- Eric Frank Russell: The Great Explosion
- Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wlson: Illuminatus!
(3 vols.)
- L. Neil Smith: The Probability Broach
- Bruce Sterling: Schismatrix
- Vernor Vinge: True Names
- "The Ungoverned" in Across Realtime
...
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
My thanks to all those who have commented on the numerous
drafts of the revised Principles, especially Jamie Dinkelacker, Derek Ryan
(aka Derek Strong), and Ralph Whelan.
...
COPYRIGHT POLICY
The Extropian Principles 2.6 may be reproduced in any
publication, private or public, physical or electronic, without need for
further authorization, so long as they appear unedited, in their entirety
and with this notice. Notification of publication or distribution would
be appreciated. The Extropian Principles 2.6 are copyright ©1995 by
Max More, Ph.D., c/o Extropy Institute, 13428 Maxella Avenue, #273, Marina
Del Rey, CA 90292. more@extropy.org
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