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Photos: Young Palestinians in Gaza turn plastic into fuel

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Features   来源:TV  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Moscow Railway alleged on Telegram that the Bryansk bridge came down as a result of "illegal interference".

Moscow Railway alleged on Telegram that the Bryansk bridge came down as a result of "illegal interference".

The initiative, titled 'I would be here if I could', has seen the Mirrorbox travel all over the country and it will be in Bristol and Glastonbury in the coming weeks.ME causes extreme tiredness and can be so severe that patients are left bed-bound and unable to complete even simple tasks.

Photos: Young Palestinians in Gaza turn plastic into fuel

Other symptoms include problems with memory and concentration, muscle and joint pain, dizziness and sensitivity to light and sound.When her illness is at its worst, Ms Larkman can only stay awake for three-hour windows."Your imagination is huge and you can lay in bed and travel to all sorts of places and think about things whereas you can't do them," she said.

Photos: Young Palestinians in Gaza turn plastic into fuel

"That's one of the questions I would think - 'where would I be if I could?'"For Ms Larkman, the answer is always watching the hustle and bustle of London's Victoria Station from the top of the escalators on the way to visit her sister, but for others it was as simple as being able to see their children on the swings at the park.

Photos: Young Palestinians in Gaza turn plastic into fuel

"During this project I have met so many other people trying to manage what is essentially a fluctuating condition and also the shock of realising how bad ME is," she said.

"You just don't see people who are bed-bound, or who are on oxygen, and because you don't see them, even though I'd had it for years, it's been a real revelation."The more immediate problem, though, could be how the illusion of machines being conscious affects us.

In just a few years, we may well be living in a world populated by humanoid robots and deepfakes that seem conscious, according to Prof Seth. He worries that we won't be able to resist believing that the AI has feelings and empathy, which could lead to new dangers."It will mean that we trust these things more, share more data with them and be more open to persuasion."

But the greater risk from the illusion of consciousness is a "moral corrosion", he says."It will distort our moral priorities by making us devote more of our resources to caring for these systems at the expense of the real things in our lives" – meaning that we might have compassion for robots, but care less for other humans.

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