Martine Rothblatt My daughter my wife our robot and the quest for immortality

Chris Anderson: So I guess
what we’re going to do is

we’re going to talk about your life,

and using some pictures
that you shared with me.

And I think we should start
right here with this one.

Okay, now who is this?

Martine Rothblatt: This is me
with our oldest son Eli.

He was about age five.

This is taken in Nigeria

right after having taken
the Washington, D.C. bar exam.

CA: Okay. But this doesn’t
really look like a Martine.

MR: Right. That was myself as a male,
the way I was brought up.

Before I transitioned from male
to female and Martin to Martine.

CA: You were brought up Martin Rothblatt.

MR: Correct.

CA: And about a year after this picture,
you married a beautiful woman.

Was this love at first sight?
What happened there?

MR: It was love at the first sight.

I saw Bina at a discotheque
in Los Angeles,

and we later began living together,

but the moment I saw her,
I saw just an aura of energy around her.

I asked her to dance.

She said she saw an aura
of energy around me.

I was a single male parent.
She was a single female parent.

We showed each other
our kids' pictures,

and we’ve been happily married
for a third of a century now.

(Applause)

CA: And at the time, you were
kind of this hotshot entrepreneur,

working with satellites.

I think you had two successful companies,

and then you started
addressing this problem

of how could you use satellites
to revolutionize radio.

Tell us about that.

MR: Right. I always
loved space technology,

and satellites, to me, are sort of
like the canoes that our ancestors

first pushed out into the water.

So it was exciting for me
to be part of the navigation

of the oceans of the sky,

and as I developed different types
of satellite communication systems,

the main thing I did was to launch
bigger and more powerful satellites,

the consequence of which
was that the receiving antennas

could be smaller and smaller,

and after going through
direct television broadcasting,

I had the idea that if we could make
a more powerful satellite,

the receiving dish could be so small

that it would just be a section
of a parabolic dish,

a flat little plate embedded
into the roof of an automobile,

and it would be possible to have
nationwide satellite radio,

and that’s Sirius XM today.

CA: Wow. So who here has used Sirius?

(Applause)

MR: Thank you for
your monthly subscriptions.

(Laughter)

CA: So that succeeded despite
all predictions at the time.

It was a huge commercial success,

but soon after this, in the early 1990s,

there was this big transition in your life
and you became Martine.

MR: Correct.
CA: So tell me, how did that happen?

MR: It happened in consultation with Bina
and our four beautiful children,

and I discussed with each of them

that I felt my soul was always female,
and as a woman,

but I was afraid people would
laugh at me if I expressed it,

so I always kept it bottled up

and just showed my male side.

And each of them
had a different take on this.

Bina said, “I love your soul,

and whether the outside
is Martin and Martine,

it doesn’t it matter to me,
I love your soul.”

My son said, “If you become a woman,
will you still be my father?”

And I said, “Yes,
I’ll always be your father,”

and I’m still his father today.

My youngest daughter did an absolutely
brilliant five-year-old thing.

She told people, “I love my dad
and she loves me.”

So she had no problem
with a gender blending whatsoever.

CA: And a couple years after this,
you published this book:

“The Apartheid of Sex.”

What was your thesis in this book?

MR: My thesis in this book is that there
are seven billion people in the world,

and actually, seven billion unique ways
to express one’s gender.

And while people may have
the genitals of a male or a female,

the genitals don’t determine your gender

or even really your sexual identity.

That’s just a matter of anatomy

and reproductive tracts,

and people could choose
whatever gender they want

if they weren’t forced by society
into categories of either male or female

the way South Africa used to force people
into categories of black or white.

We know from anthropological science
that race is fiction,

even though racism is very, very real,

and we now know from cultural studies

that separate male or female genders
is a constructed fiction.

The reality is a gender fluidity

that crosses the entire continuum
from male to female.

CA: You yourself don’t always
feel 100 percent female.

MR: Correct. I would say in some ways

I change my gender about as often
as I change my hairstyle.

CA: (Laughs) Okay, now, this is
your gorgeous daughter, Jenesis.

And I guess she was about this age
when something pretty terrible happened.

MR: Yes, she was finding herself
unable to walk up the stairs

in our house to her bedroom,

and after several months of doctors,

she was diagnosed to have a rare,
almost invariably fatal disease

called pulmonary arterial hypertension.

CA: So how did you respond to that?

MR: Well, we first tried to get her
to the best doctors we could.

We ended up at Children’s National
Medical Center in Washington, D.C.

The head of pediatric cardiology

told us that he was going to refer her
to get a lung transplant,

but not to hold out any hope,

because there are
very few lungs available,

especially for children.

He said that all people
with this illness died,

and if any of you have seen
the film “Lorenzo’s Oil,”

there’s a scene when the protagonist

kind of rolls down the stairway
crying and bemoaning the fate of his son,

and that’s exactly
how we felt about Jenesis.

CA: But you didn’t accept that
as the limit of what you could do.

You started trying to research
and see if you could find a cure somehow.

MR: Correct. She was in the intensive
care ward for weeks at a time,

and Bina and I would tag team
to stay at the hospital

while the other watched
the rest of the kids,

and when I was in the hospital
and she was sleeping,

I went to the hospital library.

I read every article that I could find
on pulmonary hypertension.

I had not taken any biology,
even in college,

so I had to go from a biology textbook
to a college-level textbook

and then medical textbook
and the journal articles, back and forth,

and eventually I knew enough to think
that it might be possible

that somebody could find a cure.

So we started a nonprofit foundation.

I wrote a description
asking people to submit grants

and we would pay for medical research.

I became an expert on the condition –
doctors said to me, Martine,

we really appreciate all the funding
you’ve provided us,

but we are not going to be able
to find a cure in time

to save your daughter.

However, there is a medicine

that was developed at the
Burroughs Wellcome Company

that could halt the progression
of the disease,

but Burroughs Wellcome has just
been acquired by Glaxo Wellcome.

They made a decision not to develop

any medicines for rare
and orphan diseases,

and maybe you could use your expertise
in satellite communications

to develop this cure
for pulmonary hypertension.

CA: So how on earth did you get
access to this drug?

MR: I went to Glaxo Wellcome

and after three times being rejected
and having the door slammed in my face

because they weren’t going
to out-license the drug

to a satellite communications expert,

they weren’t going to send the drug
out to anybody at all,

and they thought
I didn’t have the expertise,

finally I was able to persuade
a small team of people to work with me

and develop enough credibility.

I wore down their resistance,

and they had no hope this drug
would even work, by the way,

and they tried to tell me,
“You’re just wasting your time.

We’re sorry about your daughter.”

But finally, for 25,000 dollars

and agreement to pay 10 percent
of any revenues we might ever get,

they agreed to give me
worldwide rights to this drug.

CA: And so you put this drug on the market
in a really brilliant way,

by basically charging what it would take
to make the economics work.

MR: Oh yes, Chris, but this really wasn’t
a drug that I ended up –

after I wrote the check for 25,000,

and I said, “Okay, where’s
the medicine for Jenesis?”

they said, “Oh, Martine,
there’s no medicine for Jenesis.

This is just something we tried in rats.”

And they gave me, like,
a little plastic Ziploc bag

of a small amount of powder.

They said, “Don’t give it to any human,”

and they gave me a piece of paper
which said it was a patent,

and from that, we had to figure out
a way to make this medicine.

A hundred chemists in the U.S.
at the top universities

all swore that little patent
could never be turned into a medicine.

If it was turned into a medicine,
it could never be delivered

because it had a half-life
of only 45 minutes.

CA: And yet, a year or two later,
you were there with a medicine

that worked for Jenesis.

MR: Chris, the astonishing thing
is that this absolutely worthless

piece of powder

that had the sparkle of a promise
of hope for Jenesis

is not only keeping Jenesis
and other people alive today,

but produces almost a billion
and a half dollars a year in revenue.

(Applause)

CA: So here you go.

So you took this company public, right?

And made an absolute fortune.

And how much have you paid Glaxo,
by the way, after that 25,000?

MR: Yeah, well, every year we pay them
10 percent of 1.5 billion,

150 million dollars,
last year 100 million dollars.

It’s the best return on investment
they ever received. (Laughter)

CA: And the best news of all, I guess,

is this.

MR: Yes. Jenesis is an absolutely
brilliant young lady.

She’s alive, healthy today at 30.

You see me, Bina and Jenesis there.

The most amazing thing about Jenesis

is that while she could do
anything with her life,

and believe me, if you grew up
your whole life with people

in your face saying
that you’ve got a fatal disease,

I would probably run to Tahiti and just
not want to run into anybody again.

But instead she chooses to work
in United Therapeutics.

She says she wants to do all she can
to help other people

with orphan diseases get medicines,

and today, she’s our project leader
for all telepresence activities,

where she helps digitally unite
the entire company to work together

to find cures for pulmonary hypertension.

CA: But not everyone who has this disease
has been so fortunate.

There are still many people dying,
and you are tackling that too. How?

MR: Exactly, Chris. There’s some 3,000
people a year in the United States alone,

perhaps 10 times that number worldwide,

who continue to die of this illness

because the medicines
slow down the progression

but they don’t halt it.

The only cure for pulmonary hypertension,
pulmonary fibrosis,

cystic fibrosis, emphysema,

COPD, what Leonard Nimoy just died of,

is a lung transplant,

but sadly, there are only enough
available lungs for 2,000 people

in the U.S. a year
to get a lung transplant,

whereas nearly a half
million people a year

die of end-stage lung failure.

CA: So how can you address that?

MR: So I conceptualize the possibility

that just like we keep cars and planes

and buildings going forever

with an unlimited supply
of building parts and machine parts,

why can’t we create an unlimited supply
of transplantable organs

to keep people living indefinitely,

and especially people with lung disease.

So we’ve teamed up with the decoder
of the human genome, Craig Venter,

and the company he founded

with Peter Diamandis,
the founder of the X Prize,

to genetically modify

the pig genome

so that the pig’s organs will not
be rejected by the human body

and thereby to create an unlimited supply

of transplantable organs.

We do this through our company,
United Therapeutics.

CA: So you really believe that within,
what, a decade,

that this shortage of transplantable lungs
maybe be cured, through these guys?

MR: Absolutely, Chris.

I’m as certain of that as I was
of the success that we’ve had

with direct television
broadcasting, Sirius XM.

It’s actually not rocket science.

It’s straightforward engineering away
one gene after another.

We’re so lucky to be born in the time
that sequencing genomes

is a routine activity,

and the brilliant folks
at Synthetic Genomics

are able to zero in on the pig genome,

find exactly the genes
that are problematic, and fix them.

CA: But it’s not just bodies that –
though that is amazing.

(Applause)

It’s not just long-lasting bodies
that are of interest to you now.

It’s long-lasting minds.

And I think this graph for you
says something quite profound.

What does this mean?

MR: What this graph means,
and it comes from Ray Kurzweil,

is that the rate of development
in computer processing

hardware, firmware and software,

has been advancing along a curve

such that by the 2020s, as we saw
in earlier presentations today,

there will be information technology

that processes information
and the world around us

at the same rate as a human mind.

CA: And so that being so, you’re actually
getting ready for this world

by believing that we will soon
be able to, what,

actually take the contents of our brains
and somehow preserve them forever?

How do you describe that?

MR: Well, Chris, what we’re working on
is creating a situation

where people can create a mind file,

and a mind file is the collection
of their mannerisms, personality,

recollection, feelings,

beliefs, attitudes and values,

everything that we’ve poured today
into Google, into Amazon, into Facebook,

and all of this information stored there
will be able, in the next couple decades,

once software is able
to recapitulate consciousness,

be able to revive the consciousness
which is imminent in our mind file.

CA: Now you’re not just
messing around with this.

You’re serious. I mean, who is this?

MR: This is a robot version of
my beloved spouse, Bina.

And we call her Bina 48.

She was programmed
by Hanson Robotics out of Texas.

There’s the centerfold
from National Geographic magazine

with one of her caregivers,

and she roams the web

and has hundreds of hours
of Bina’s mannerisms, personalities.

She’s kind of like a two-year-old kid,

but she says things
that blow people away,

best expressed by perhaps

a New York Times Pulitzer Prize-winning
journalist Amy Harmon

who says her answers
are often frustrating,

but other times as compelling as those
of any flesh person she’s interviewed.

CA: And is your thinking here,
part of your hope here, is that

this version of Bina can in a sense
live on forever, or some future upgrade

to this version can live on forever?

MR: Yes. Not just Bina, but everybody.

You know, it costs us virtually nothing
to store our mind files

on Facebook, Instagram, what-have-you.

Social media is I think one of the most
extraordinary inventions of our time,

and as apps become available
that will allow us

to out-Siri Siri, better and better,

and develop consciousness
operating systems,

everybody in the world,
billions of people,

will be able to develop
mind clones of themselves

that will have their own life on the web.

CA: So the thing is, Martine,

that in any normal conversation,
this would sound stark-staring mad,

but in the context of your life,
what you’ve done,

some of the things we’ve heard this week,

the constructed realities
that our minds give,

I mean, you wouldn’t bet against it.

MR: Well, I think it’s really nothing
coming from me.

If anything, I’m perhaps a bit
of a communicator of activities

that are being undertaken
by the greatest companies

in China, Japan, India, the U.S., Europe.

There are tens of millions of people
working on writing code

that expresses more and more aspects
of our human consciousness,

and you don’t have to be a genius
to see that all these threads

are going to come together
and ultimately create human consciousness,

and it’s something we’ll value.

There are so many things
to do in this life,

and if we could have a simulacrum,
a digital doppelgänger of ourselves

that helps us process books, do shopping,

be our best friends,

I believe our mind clones,
these digital versions of ourselves,

will ultimately be our best friends,

and for me personally and Bina personally,

we love each other like crazy.

Each day, we are always saying, like,

“Wow, I love you even more
than 30 years ago.

And so for us, the prospect of mind clones

and regenerated bodies

is that our love affair, Chris,
can go on forever.

And we never get bored of each other.
I’m sure we never will.

CA: I think Bina’s here, right?
MR: She is, yeah.

CA: Would it be too much, I don’t know,
do we have a handheld mic?

Bina, could we invite you to the stage?
I just have to ask you one question.

Besides, we need to see you.

(Applause)

Thank you, thank you.

Come and join Martine here.

I mean, look, when you got married,

if someone had told you that,
in a few years time,

the man you were marrying
would become a woman,

and a few years after that,
you would become a robot –

(Laughter) –

how has this gone? How has it been?

Bina Rothblatt: It’s been really
an exciting journey,

and I would have never
thought that at the time,

but we started making goals
and setting those goals

and accomplishing things,

and before you knew it,
we just keep going up and up

and we’re still not stopping,
so it’s great.

CA: Martine told me something
really beautiful,

just actually on Skype before this,

which was that he wanted
to live for hundreds of years

as a mind file,

but not if it wasn’t with you.

BR: That’s right,
we want to do it together.

We’re cryonicists as well,
and we want to wake up together.

CA: So just so as you know,
from my point of view,

this isn’t only one of the most
astonishing lives I have heard,

it’s one of the most astonishing
love stories I’ve ever heard.

It’s just a delight to have you
both here at TED.

Thank you so much.

MR: Thank you.

(Applause)

克里斯安德森:所以我想
我们要做的是

谈论你的生活,


使用你与我分享的一些照片。

我认为我们应该从
这里开始。

好的,现在这是谁?

Martine Rothblatt:这是我
和我们的大儿子 Eli。

他大约五岁。

这是在

参加
华盛顿特区律师考试后立即在尼日利亚进行的。

CA:好的。 但这
看起来并不像 Martine。

正确先生。 那是我作为男性
的我,我是这样长大的。

在我从男性转变
为女性,从马丁转变为马丁之前。

CA:你是从小马丁·罗斯布拉特长大的。

先生:正确。

CA:在这张照片之后大约一年,
你娶了一个漂亮的女人。

这是一见钟情吗?
那里发生什么了?

MR:一见钟情。

我在洛杉矶的一家迪斯科舞厅看到了比娜,

后来我们开始同居,

但当我看到她的那一刻,
我只看到她周围有一种能量的光环。

我请她跳舞。

她说她看到
我周围有一股能量的光环。

我是一个单亲男性父母。
她是一位单身女性父母。

我们互相展示
了我们孩子的照片,

现在我们已经幸福地
结婚了三分之一个世纪。

(掌声)

CA:当时,你是
那种与卫星打交道的热门企业家

我认为你有两家成功的公司,

然后你开始

解决如何使用卫星
来彻底改变无线电的问题。

告诉我们。

正确先生。 我一直
很喜欢太空技术

,对我来说,卫星有点
像我们的祖先

第一次推出水中的独木舟。

所以我很高兴

成为天空海洋导航的一部分

,当我开发不同类型
的卫星通信系统时,

我所做的主要事情是发射
更大、更强大的卫星,


结果是 接收天线

可以越来越小

,通过
电视直播之后,

我想到如果我们可以制造
一个更强大的卫星

,接收盘可以小

到它只是
抛物面盘的一部分,

一个嵌入汽车车顶的扁平小板

,就有可能拥有
全国卫星广播

,这就是今天的天狼星XM。

CA:哇。 那么这里有谁使用过天狼星?

(掌声)

MR:感谢
您的每月订阅。

(笑声)

CA:尽管当时有
很多预测,但还是成功了。

这是一个巨大的商业成功,

但此后不久,在 1990 年代初期,

你的生活发生了重大转变
,你成为了 Martine。

先生:正确。
CA:那么告诉我,这是怎么发生的?

MR:这是在和Bina
和我们四个漂亮的孩子商量后发生的

,我和他们每个人都讨论过

我觉得我的灵魂永远是女性的
,作为一个女人,

但我害怕
如果我表达出来会被人嘲笑,

所以 我总是把它装在瓶子里

,只是展示我的男性一面。

他们每个人
对此都有不同的看法。

比娜说:“我爱你的灵魂

,不管外面
是马丁还是马丁,

我都无所谓,
我爱你的灵魂。”

我儿子说:“如果你变成了女人,
你还会做我父亲吗?”

我说,“是的,
我永远是你的父亲,

”我今天仍然是他的父亲。

我最小的女儿在五岁时做了一件非常
出色的事情。

她告诉人们,“我爱我爸爸
,她也爱我。”

所以她
对性别融合没有任何问题。

CA:几年后,
你出版了这本书:

“性的种族隔离”。

你在这本书中的论文是什么?

MR:我在这本书中的论点是,世界上
有 70 亿人

,实际上,有 70 亿种独特的方式
来表达一个人的性别。

虽然人们可能
有男性或女性

的生殖器,但生殖器并不能决定你的性别,甚至不能确定你的

性别认同。

这只是解剖学

和生殖道的问题,

如果人们不被社会强迫
分为男性或

女性,就像南非过去强迫人们
分为黑人或白人那样,人们可以选择他们想要的任何性别。

我们从人类学科学中
知道种族是虚构的,

尽管种族主义是非常非常真实的,

而且我们现在从文化研究

中知道,将男性或女性分开
是一种虚构的虚构。

现实是

一种跨越
从男性到女性的整个连续体的性别流动性。

CA:你自己并不总是
觉得 100% 是女性。

先生:正确。 我会说在某些方面

我改变我的性别
就像我改变我的发型一样频繁。

CA:(笑)好的,现在,这是
你漂亮的女儿,珍妮丝。

我猜她大约在这个年纪
发生了一件非常可怕的事情。

MR:是的,她发现自己
无法爬上

我们家的楼梯到她的卧室

,经过几个月的医生检查,

她被诊断出患有一种罕见的、
几乎总是致命的疾病,

称为肺动脉高压。

CA:那你是怎么回应的?

MR:嗯,我们首先试图让她
去看最好的医生。

我们最后去了华盛顿特区的国家儿童
医疗中心

儿科心脏病学负责人

告诉我们,他将转介她
进行肺移植,

但不抱任何希望,

因为
可用的肺非常少,

尤其是对于 孩子们。

他说得
了这个病的人都死了

,如果你们谁
看过电影《洛伦佐的油》,

有一个场景是

主人公滚下楼梯
哭泣哀悼儿子的命运,

我们就是这样。 对杰尼斯有感觉。

CA:但你不接受这
是你能做的极限。

你开始尝试研究
,看看你是否能以某种方式找到治疗方法。

先生:正确。 她一次在重症
监护病房住了几个星期

,我和 Bina 会标记
团队留在医院,

而另一个
看护其余的孩子

,当我在医院
并且她正在睡觉时,

我去 医院图书馆。

我阅读了所有
关于肺动脉高压的文章。

我没有学过任何生物学,
甚至在大学里,

所以我不得不从生物学教科书
到大学水平的教科书

,然后是医学教科书
和期刊文章,来来回回

,最终我知道的足够多,
认为它可能是

可能有人能找到治疗方法。

所以我们成立了一个非营利基金会。

我写了一个描述,
要求人们提交赠款

,我们会为医学研究付费。

我成为了这种情况的专家——
医生对我说,Martine,

我们非常感谢
你为我们提供的所有资金,

但我们无法
及时找到治愈方法

来拯救你的女儿。

然而,

Burroughs Wellcome 公司开发了

一种可以阻止
疾病进展的药物,

但 Burroughs Wellcome 刚刚
被葛兰素威康收购。

他们决定不开发

任何治疗罕见
病和罕见病的药物

,也许您可以利用您在卫星通信方面的专业知识

来开发这种
治疗肺动脉高压的方法。

CA:那么你到底是怎么
获得这种药物的呢?

MR:我去了 Glaxo Wellcome

,在被拒绝了 3 次之后
,门砰的一声关上了我的脸,

因为他们不打算
将药物

授权给卫星通信专家,

他们不打算将药物
发送给 任何人

,他们认为
我没有专业知识,

最后我能够说服
一小部分人与我合作

并建立足够的信誉。

我削弱了他们的抵抗力,顺便说一句

,他们甚至不希望这种药物
会起作用

,他们试图告诉我,
“你只是在浪费时间。

我们为你的女儿感到抱歉。”

但最后,为了 25,000 美元

并同意支付
我们可能获得的任何收入的 10%,

他们同意给我
这种药物的全球权利。

CA:所以你
以一种非常出色的方式将这种药物推向市场

,基本上是
收取使经济学发挥作用所需的费用。

MR:哦,是的,克里斯,但这真的
不是我最终得到的药物——

在我写了 25,000 的支票之后

,我说,“好吧,
Jenesis 的药在哪里?”

他们说,“哦,Martine,
没有治疗 Jenesis 的药物。

这只是我们在老鼠身上尝试过的。”

他们给了我
一个

装有少量粉末的塑料密封袋。

他们说,“不要把它给任何人”

,他们给了我一张纸
,上面写着这是一项专利

,我们必须从中找到
一种制造这种药物的方法。

美国顶尖大学的一百名化学家

都发誓,小专利
永远不能变成药物。

如果它变成了药物,
它就永远无法交付,

因为它的
半衰期只有 45 分钟。

CA:然而,一两年后,
你带着一种

对 Jenesis 有效的药物在那里。

MR:克里斯,令人惊讶的
是,这块毫无价值

的粉末

,为杰尼斯带来
了希望的希望,

不仅让杰尼斯
和其他人今天还活着,

而且每年产生近 15
亿美元的收入 .

(掌声)

CA:给你。

所以你把这家公司上市了,对吧?

并获得了绝对的财富。

顺便说一下,在那 25,000 美元之后,你付给葛兰素史克多少钱?

MR:是的,嗯,我们每年支付他们
15 亿美元的 10%,

1.5 亿美元,
去年是 1 亿美元。

这是他们收到的最好的投资回报
。 (笑声)

CA:我想最好的消息

就是这个。

先生:是的。 Jenesis 绝对是一位
才华横溢的年轻女士。

她今天 30 岁还活着,很健康。

你看我,Bina 和 Jenesis。

Jenesis 最令人惊奇的

是,虽然她可以
用自己的生命做任何事

,相信我,如果你长大后
一辈子都面对着

说你得了致命疾病的人,

我可能会跑到大溪地然后 只是
不想再遇到任何人。

但相反,她选择
在 United Therapeutics 工作。

她说她想
尽其所能帮助其他

患有孤儿疾病的人获得药物

,今天,她是我们
所有远程呈现活动的项目负责人

,她帮助以数字方式
团结整个公司,

共同努力寻找肺动脉高压的治疗方法。

CA:但并不是每个患有这种疾病的
人都这么幸运。

还有很多人正在死去
,你也在解决这个问题。 如何?

MR:没错,克里斯。
仅在美国,每年就有大约 3,000 人,

可能是全世界人数的 10 倍,

他们继续死于这种疾病,

因为药物
减缓了进展,

但他们并没有阻止它。

肺动脉高压、
肺纤维化、

囊性纤维化、肺气肿、

慢性阻塞性肺病(Leonard Nimoy 刚刚死于此病)的唯一治疗方法

是肺移植,

但遗憾的是,美国每年只有
2,000 人的可用肺

才能获得肺 移植,


每年有近 50 万人

死于终末期肺衰竭。

CA:那你怎么解决这个问题?

MR:所以我构思了这样一种可能性

,就像我们

通过无限供应
的建筑零件和机器零件让汽车、飞机和建筑物永远运转一样,

为什么我们不能创造无限供应
的可移植器官

来让人们无限期地活下去

,尤其是 患有肺病的人。

因此,我们与
人类基因组解码器 Craig Venter

以及他


X Prize 创始人 Peter Diamandis 创立的公司合作,

对猪基因组进行基因改造,以

使猪的器官不会
被人类排斥。 人体

,从而创造出无限供应

的可移植器官。

我们通过我们的公司 United Therapeutics 做到这一点

CA:所以你真的相信
,在十年之内,

这种可移植肺的短缺
可能会通过这些人得到治愈?

MR:当然,克里斯。

我确信这一点,就像我
确信我们在直接电视广播上所取得的成功一样

,Sirius XM。

这实际上不是火箭科学。

这是
一个接一个地工程化掉一个基因的简单方法。

我们很幸运出生在
基因组测序

是一项常规活动的时代

,Synthetic Genomics 的聪明

人能够对猪基因组进行归零,

准确找到
有问题的基因,并修复它们。

CA:但这不仅仅是身体——
尽管那是惊人的。

(鼓掌)你们

现在感兴趣的不只是长寿命的
身体。

是长久之计。

我认为这张图表对你
来说说明了一些非常深刻的东西。

这是什么意思?

MR:这张图表的意思是
,它来自 Ray Kurzweil,

计算机处理

硬件、固件和软件的发展速度

一直在沿着一条曲线前进

,到 2020 年代,正如我们
在今天早些时候的演讲中看到的那样,

有 将是一种信息技术

,它

以与人类思维相同的速度处理信息和我们周围的世界。

CA:既然如此,你实际上是
在为这个世界做好准备

,相信我们
很快就能,什么,

实际上拿走我们大脑的内容,
并以某种方式永远保存它们?

你怎么形容呢?

MR:嗯,克里斯,我们正在
努力创造一种情况

,人们可以创建一个思维档案

,一个思维档案
是他们的举止、个性、

回忆、感觉、

信仰、态度和价值观的集合

,我们的一切 ‘今天已经
涌入谷歌、亚马逊、Facebook

,所有这些存储在那里的信息
将能够在接下来的几十年中,

一旦软件
能够重述意识,

就能够恢复
我们脑海中迫在眉睫的意识 文件。

CA:现在你不只是在
玩弄这个。

你是认真的。 我的意思是,这是谁?

MR:这是
我心爱的配偶 Bina 的机器人版本。

我们称她为 Bina 48。

她是
由德克萨斯州的 Hanson Robotics 编程的。

国家地理杂志

的插页是她的一位照顾者

,她在网络上漫游

,拥有数百小时
的 Bina 的举止和个性。

她有点像一个两岁的孩子,

但她说的话
让人大吃一惊,

也许纽约时报普利策奖获奖
记者艾米·哈蒙(Amy Harmon

)表达得最好,她说她的回答
常常令人沮丧,

但有时也令人信服
她采访过的任何有血有肉的人。

CA:你的想法,
你希望的一部分,是

这个版本的 Bina 可以在某种意义上
永远存在,或者

这个版本的一些未来升级可以永远存在?

先生:是的。 不只是比娜,每个人都是。

你知道,
将我们的思维文件存储

在 Facebook、Instagram 等网站上几乎没有任何成本。

社交媒体是我认为
我们这个时代最非凡的发明之一

,随着应用程序的出现
,我们

将超越 Siri,越来越好

,开发有意识的
操作系统,

世界上的每个人,
数十亿人,

将 能够开发
自己的思想克隆,

在网络上拥有自己的生活。

CA:所以问题是,Martine

,在任何正常的谈话中,
这听起来都非常疯狂,

但在你的生活背景下,
你所做的,

我们本周听到的一些事情

,构建 我的意思是
,我们的思想给出的现实

,你不会反对它。

MR:嗯,我认为这真的不是
来自我。

如果有的话,我可能是

中国、日本、印度、美国、欧洲最伟大的公司正在进行的活动的传播者。

有数以千万计的人
正在编写代码

来表达
我们人类意识的越来越多的方面,

你不必是天才
就能看到所有这些

线程将汇集在一起
并最终创造人类意识,

并且 这是我们会重视的东西。 这辈子

有很多事情
要做

,如果我们能有一个拟像,
一个我们自己的数字分身

,可以帮助我们处理书籍,购物,

成为我们最好的朋友,

我相信我们的思想克隆,
这些我们自己的数字版本,

最终将成为我们最好的朋友

,对我个人和 Bina 个人而言,

我们疯狂地相爱。

每天,我们总是说,

“哇,我爱你甚至
超过 30 年前

。所以对我们来说,思想克隆

和再生身体的前景

是我们的爱情,克里斯,
可以永远持续下去。

而且 我们永远不会对彼此感到厌烦。
我相信我们永远不会

。CA:我认为 Bina 在这里,对
吗?MR:她是,是的

。CA:会不会太多,我不知道,
我们有没有 手持麦克风?

Bina,我们可以请你上台吗?
我只需要问你一个问题。

此外,我们需要见你。

(掌声)

谢谢,谢谢。

来和Martine一起。

我的意思是,看, 当你结婚的时候,

如果有人告诉你
,再过几年,

你嫁的男人
会变成女人,

再过几年,
你就会变成机器人——

(笑声)——

这是怎么回事

Bina Rothblatt:这真的
是一段激动人心的旅程

,我
当时从未想过,

但我们开始制定目标
并设定目标

并完成事情

,在你知道之前,
我们只是 继续上升

,我们仍然没有停止,
所以这很棒。

CA:Martine 告诉我一件
非常美妙的事情

,实际上是在此之前在 Skype 上,

那就是他想

作为一个思维档案活数百年,

但如果没有你,他就不会。

BR: 没错,
我们想一起做。

我们也是冷冻专家
,我们想一起醒来。

CA:所以正如你所知,
从我的角度来看,

这不仅是我听过的最
惊人的生活之一,还是我

听过的最惊人的
爱情故事之一。

很高兴你们
俩都在 TED。

太感谢了。

先生:谢谢。

(掌声)