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"Bureaucracies hide their mistakes, because people's careers are tied to those mistakes. Therefore, bureaucracies are a perfect mechanism for perpetuating mistakes."
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This is a really remarkable idea; in it we find the basis for much of today's experience economy. For example, when you go to Disney's Animal Kingdom, you can experience a safari. Well, not a real safari - but when you try to remember it days later, you have a remarkable and complete set of memories that were all "implanted" by Disney magic: you remember the loud diesel-powered engines (the vehicles are gas/electric, and silent at the right times), the smell of the diesel engine (only once, at the start - nobody wants to go on a 10 minute safari with that smell the whole time) and so on.
At Rekal, Incorporated, they have the technology to really make it work.
The novel also calls the process of implanting memories "vicarious surrogate retrospection."
This 1966 short story was the basis of the movie Total Recall, with Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Research has been done on implanting false memories. One study shows participants a set of 12 words, all of which are closely related to a common, emotional word. For example, you might use words like upset, unhappy, displeased, furious, etc. - every word but the common related word, namely, angry. The studies show that when participants are asked days later to recall the words, about 40% "remember" the word angry.
Compare to the movie pill from Ben Gleed, King of Speed (1939) by Don Wilcox. Comment/Join this discussion ( 0 ) | RSS/XML | Blog This | Additional
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'This robot is a creature... It is a manlike being. Therefore, like any other talking, thinking man, he is entitled to a court trial!'
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'...small electric motors at the principal joints worked the prosthetic framework by means of steel cables...'
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