SNS: Linking Machine Learning To New Perspectives On Human Evolution
 
 
SNS Subscriber Edition • Volume 22, Issue 8 • Week of February 20, 2017

 THE STRATEGIC NEWS SERVICE ©
GLOBAL REPORT ON
TECHNOLOGY AND
THE ECONOMY

Linking
Machine Learning
To New
Perspectives On
Human Evolution



 


 
 
 
 
 

SNS: Linking Machine Learning to
New Perspectives on Human Evolution

[Please open the attached .pdf for best viewing.]

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This Week's Favorite Book:

Zero Day: China's Cyber Wars

by T.L. Williams

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51O%2BUx7OW%2BL._SX322_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

This thriller by a CIA veteran has been vetted by the Agency without harming its documentary-quality level of information. While the plot is invented, most of the details on policies, threats, and cyber activity are real, and quite current. - mra.

In This Issue
Week of 2/20/2017 Vol. 22 Issue 8

FEATURE:

 

 

Linking Machine Learning to New Perspectives on Human Evolution

If one thinks about it, evolution is the highest form of learning, and survival the ultimate educational reward.

What Is a Human?

Thanks to pioneers (and SNS members) Craig Venter, Larry Smarr, Rob Knight, and many others, we know today what we did not know just a few years ago: a human body is composed of about 10% human cells and 90% nonhuman cells. Most of the latter belong to what is called the microbiome, or human biota: a community of thousands of species of bacteria and viruses.

These microbes live in (mostly in the gut) and on the human body. They have co-evolved with us over millions, perhaps tens of millions, of years. As we have recently learned, they operate in symbiosis with human cells and the human body, playing important roles in a rapidly growing list of health functions, from immune response to mood swings.

What should we call this organism made of thousands of species, which to us looks like only one? Perhaps we should call it the "human multi-species system." But whatever we call it, we now know beyond a doubt that having a healthy, balanced, and complete microbiome population is an integral aspect of human health. In fact, it is an integral aspect of the human species.

The human being is a community, a parliament of cells, in which our own species does not even have a majority vote.