Shawn Wade (born November 20, 1985) is a United States musician. He is currently the bassist of hard rock Band 12 Stones.
Biography
Shawn Wade was born in Rockford, IL and attended Auburn High School in Rockford where he graduated in 2004. He is the oldest of 4 other brothers and sisters. Shawn was born into a family that raced motorcycles and got his first motorcycle for his birthday at age 5. He stopped racing motorcycles at age 11, when it became financially impossible with a such a large family. His interest then turned to baseball and football. In school he took an interest to the arts, specifically the performing arts and was deeply involved in the theatre program in high school. Shawn returned to 2 wheels at age 15, but this time in the form of BMX. His parents quickly approved because it was cheaper and safer than motorcycles. He picked up on the sport quickly and was even ABA Illinois State Champion in 2003. Music eventually took over his life and he stopped racing in 2005 to invest more time in it.
Musical Background
Previous bands include: Indemic, Left 4 Dead, and Silence is Broken.
Biography
Shawn Wade was born in Rockford, IL and attended Auburn High School in Rockford where he graduated in 2004. He is the oldest of 4 other brothers and sisters. Shawn was born into a family that raced motorcycles and got his first motorcycle for his birthday at age 5. He stopped racing motorcycles at age 11, when it became financially impossible with a such a large family. His interest then turned to baseball and football. In school he took an interest to the arts, specifically the performing arts and was deeply involved in the theatre program in high school. Shawn returned to 2 wheels at age 15, but this time in the form of BMX. His parents quickly approved because it was cheaper and safer than motorcycles. He picked up on the sport quickly and was even ABA Illinois State Champion in 2003. Music eventually took over his life and he stopped racing in 2005 to invest more time in it.
Musical Background
Previous bands include: Indemic, Left 4 Dead, and Silence is Broken.
Joy Enamavu is a bilingual journalist from Kerala, South India. He covered the first Gulf War(1990-1991) for the Malayalam language newspaper Mathrubhumi, which is the second largest newspaper in Kerala. Joy Enamavu was the only journalist-an Indian expatriate-who could effectively report the War affairs in details. The journalist also wrote a book named Yasoodi (A beduvian religion in the history of middle east) about the Kurds' struggles and the nightmare they had when Saddam Hussein was at reign.The Anfal Project clearly and realastically explained in the novel Yasoodi(Yezidi)by the writer.Yezdis are very few at present world and it is a religion that has a history of thousands of years.The human struggles are very well observed in writers magic.The Malayalam readers for the first time can have an idea about the divers culture,religious belief and social structure of a far place.The very knowedge of Yezidi religion is enough for readers to remember Joy Enamavu for quite long time in the history of Mlayalam literature. Mostly the people of Malayalam speaking never convinced the atrocities committed by Saddam regime against humanity, the media actually misled the entire Malayalam speaking people.Due to the media feedbacks of wrong concepts and inexperienced journalists folks in Malayalam,the readers had not had a chance to know what happened in Iraq actually.Those handled the subject had to depend on the people who were not even neared the truth. Joy also contributed many articles and features in Telugu language. His articles and features published in Eenadu Daily and its Sunday Supplements. He was born on 7th October 1956, has wide range of experience that probably no other journalist in Malayalam have so far have few at present.
Quantum Archeology -also known as quantum resurrection and physical resurrection, is an emerging idea in transhumanist philosophy describing a possible methodology for raising the ancient dead. It anticipates coming process technologies usually called hypercomputing that include quantum computing, nanocomputing and light computing and attempts to look at resurrection issues in a post-singularity world.
Supporters include Frank Tipler and opponents Robert Ettinger.
The idea was inspired by Asimov's Foundation trilogy where Hari Seldon makes acurate probabilistic predictions using psychohistory across thousands of years.
The basis of psychohistory is the idea that, while the actions of a particular individual could not be foreseen, the laws of statistics could be applied to large groups of people and used to predict the general flow of future events.
Quantum archeology states that it is possible to reconstruct the exact states of any of spacetime, including the memories of any person, since the cosmos is entirely subject to law.
Asimov used the analogy of a gas: in a gas, the motion of a single molecule is very difficult to predict, but the mass action of the gas can be predicted to a high level of accuracy - known in physics as the Kinetic Theory.
Quantum archeology is opposite of psychohistory and is an attempt at the science of how those predictions are made, including methods like and is in its infancy.
It assumes the cosmos is a determinist system and it therefore follows it is possible to describe any history with enough processing power leading to resurrection by future techniques.
[ supports the theory, although sees manifestation into three dimensional resurrectees as unnecessary because sufficient simulations will be the same thing.
Like archeology which is able to reconstruct objects from ancient times using surviving fragments, knowledge about similar objects and probabilities, quantum archeology assumes future computing power like quantum computers will enable this by back tracing using laws of cause and effect with emerging mathematical and statistical methods.
There are always more variables in the cosmos than there were is history enabling enough information to be gathered to reconstruct any historical event down to the quantum particle. The universe is becoming increasing complex and any group of variables should plot backwards to a time when there are fewer events.
Everett's Many World's Theory implies that many future worlds will have few common ancestors. Therefore enough variables will exist at any future time to resurrect any past event in infinite or near infinite worlds.
Quantum Archeology further holds that no event in the cosmos can be non-determined, just complex, and makes no special conditions for human beings or any observers.
The idea was first discussed on line in the kurzweilai forums, where it was initially regarded as a pseudoscience, but began to be taken seriously as it received endorsement from eminent scientists like Frank J. Tipler and discussed in Universities by scientists like Professor Vlatko Vedral.
Critics of the theory include Professor Robert Ettinger, who thinks there may be some special property of a human body not knowable by mapping.
Another criticism of the theory is that entropy causes too much information to be lost at death therefore resurrection would breech the second law of thermodynamics.
Proponents retort that entropy does not imply abstract chaos but presently unmeasurable complexity.
Religious objections appear to believe human beings operate by different laws to the universe which was a challenge made to Everett's Many Worlds Theory.
Another objection is that a computer simulation may not produce a person. Founder of cyonics Professor Robert Ettinger in 2007 wrote on quantum archeology:
Some philosophers have criticized transhumanism on the grounds that it is an attempt at a religion since both posit immortality, resurrection, and through the Simulation Argument, a creator, but it is devoid of a subjective valuation system for Man.
Debates occur about the nature of identity such as those discussed in The Prospect of Immortality, and by the philosopher Professor Derek Parfit; the computing capacity needed, and the social and legal difficulties of raising the dead.
See Also
*Psychohistory
*Statistics
*Prediction
*Quantum Theory
*Many Worlds Theory
Supporters include Frank Tipler and opponents Robert Ettinger.
The idea was inspired by Asimov's Foundation trilogy where Hari Seldon makes acurate probabilistic predictions using psychohistory across thousands of years.
The basis of psychohistory is the idea that, while the actions of a particular individual could not be foreseen, the laws of statistics could be applied to large groups of people and used to predict the general flow of future events.
Quantum archeology states that it is possible to reconstruct the exact states of any of spacetime, including the memories of any person, since the cosmos is entirely subject to law.
Asimov used the analogy of a gas: in a gas, the motion of a single molecule is very difficult to predict, but the mass action of the gas can be predicted to a high level of accuracy - known in physics as the Kinetic Theory.
Quantum archeology is opposite of psychohistory and is an attempt at the science of how those predictions are made, including methods like and is in its infancy.
It assumes the cosmos is a determinist system and it therefore follows it is possible to describe any history with enough processing power leading to resurrection by future techniques.
[ supports the theory, although sees manifestation into three dimensional resurrectees as unnecessary because sufficient simulations will be the same thing.
Like archeology which is able to reconstruct objects from ancient times using surviving fragments, knowledge about similar objects and probabilities, quantum archeology assumes future computing power like quantum computers will enable this by back tracing using laws of cause and effect with emerging mathematical and statistical methods.
There are always more variables in the cosmos than there were is history enabling enough information to be gathered to reconstruct any historical event down to the quantum particle. The universe is becoming increasing complex and any group of variables should plot backwards to a time when there are fewer events.
Everett's Many World's Theory implies that many future worlds will have few common ancestors. Therefore enough variables will exist at any future time to resurrect any past event in infinite or near infinite worlds.
Quantum Archeology further holds that no event in the cosmos can be non-determined, just complex, and makes no special conditions for human beings or any observers.
The idea was first discussed on line in the kurzweilai forums, where it was initially regarded as a pseudoscience, but began to be taken seriously as it received endorsement from eminent scientists like Frank J. Tipler and discussed in Universities by scientists like Professor Vlatko Vedral.
Critics of the theory include Professor Robert Ettinger, who thinks there may be some special property of a human body not knowable by mapping.
Another criticism of the theory is that entropy causes too much information to be lost at death therefore resurrection would breech the second law of thermodynamics.
Proponents retort that entropy does not imply abstract chaos but presently unmeasurable complexity.
Religious objections appear to believe human beings operate by different laws to the universe which was a challenge made to Everett's Many Worlds Theory.
Another objection is that a computer simulation may not produce a person. Founder of cyonics Professor Robert Ettinger in 2007 wrote on quantum archeology:
Some philosophers have criticized transhumanism on the grounds that it is an attempt at a religion since both posit immortality, resurrection, and through the Simulation Argument, a creator, but it is devoid of a subjective valuation system for Man.
Debates occur about the nature of identity such as those discussed in The Prospect of Immortality, and by the philosopher Professor Derek Parfit; the computing capacity needed, and the social and legal difficulties of raising the dead.
See Also
*Psychohistory
*Statistics
*Prediction
*Quantum Theory
*Many Worlds Theory
The Union of Students of the University of Alaska Anchorage is the student government of the University of Alaska Anchorage.
Each student pays $1 per credit hour for students registered in 3 or more credits. Maximum charge $12 and maximum credit hour is 12.
The President, Vice President and 23 Senators are elected at large to serve on the Assembly. Four representatives (Residence Hall Association, Club Council, Greek Council and Graduate Student Association) complete the rest of the board. The President and Vice President are elected in the spring for one year terms.
The union has co-sponsored political debates in Anchorage, including a 2004 debate held at the university between Senatorial candidates Tony Knowles and Lisa Murkowski.
Each student pays $1 per credit hour for students registered in 3 or more credits. Maximum charge $12 and maximum credit hour is 12.
The President, Vice President and 23 Senators are elected at large to serve on the Assembly. Four representatives (Residence Hall Association, Club Council, Greek Council and Graduate Student Association) complete the rest of the board. The President and Vice President are elected in the spring for one year terms.
The union has co-sponsored political debates in Anchorage, including a 2004 debate held at the university between Senatorial candidates Tony Knowles and Lisa Murkowski.