Certainly, from a Pc perspective, chips are far from 'perfected'.... they are simply altered for marginal performance and maximum sellibility.
For example, Intel gave the Pentium 4 a 16-stage pipeline. At this number of stages, there is no benefit from the pipelining - handling hazards actually slows down the Pc so that many more cycles are required per instruction. But it gives a bigger GHz rating, so Intel went ahead and did it.
Perfection? i don't think so.
Define perfection. All that matters is the direction we are moving in. You can think of this "perfection" more as a limiting value than a true end, but the fact is, that more and more of the world is becoming dependent on these computers over time, and there is no reason why the same cannot be said of any other technological advance.
In case you hadn;t noticed, water is a fundamental requirement for human life - our very body is 70% water. We can't grow 'less dependent on it', and more than we can grow less dependent on haemoglobin.
And what technology has been developed that can grow and feed a cow (for example) without some form of natural process - be it grazing, grain feedmeal, etc?
The principle reason this planet is slowly dying - due to pollution, etc - is because the human race is blinded towards the rest of this planet. i'm not advocating we go all luvvy-duvvy and become hippie, but we have to recognise we are slowly killing what is, really, a wonderful place to live.
I did mention water in there. By the time we actually run out of fresh water on Earth (which will take a long time) we will have the technology at least to move around in our star system, which is quite abundant in water for our needs. Why would we need cows at all? And a wonderful place? Sure, it's better than some other locations in the universe, but it is really nothing right now compared to what it could be.
I'd like to think the human race can rise beyond considering itself parts of a solely self-interested machine, that we can be more than 'parts' in the system.
Well, you can "like to think" anything, but the ideas need to be backed up by logical proof for use in an argument. When it comes to this level, how indeed are we any different from the cells that make up our bodies? And to rise beyond a "self-interested machine" is to have a large collection of less advanced self-interested machines?
It becomes a small step from not cvaring about those thing we don't need, to destroying those we don't want. If we are willing to destroy the natural world because we don't need it, waht's to stop us exterminating the disabled, or the low-Iq, or the simply average because they do not 'enhance the gene pool'?
hitler believed in social Darwinism, you know.........
Hitler believed in a system of "races" based on birth, and only his random instincts determined which race was "superior." But we are going by thinking capacity and cognitive ability here. Effectively, that's how the world is working
even today. People do not have to be physically strong, as the machines are beginning to take over those tasks, but look at the way that the social systems of today operate: the people with the mental ability get to the top, while the people without it stay at the bottom of the social ladder. (this can include many types of capacities, including political acuteness) This is inevitable in any civilization that is made up of components that all have different thinking processes. Still, the average mental capacity of each individual is similar to some extent; it is the core assumptions that differ.
Let me think. Several hundred million people living in abject, squalid conditions. Billions going into weapons programs. If it wasn't for the 'evil enemy', what would justify this expenditure?
Are you kidding me? The people are poor because the governments are spending money into military affairs? Look into the history of the two nations more closely and you will see that this factor is the least of their problems; India isn't spending all that much on military affairs at all when compared to other things, while Pakistan is, but even if they did spend the money on public welfare it would not amount to much considering the monmental task before their and their dead economy. In fact, the only countries where one could have said this would be Nazi Germany and the USSR, neither of which exist today. But none of this has anything to do with "justification;" why would either country feel the need to justify anything they do in the first place? Remember that there is little overall opposition to the governments (especially the Indian one), and people in the rural villages are quite content with lives despite any poverty.
Moving on to the next person...
Human beings are people first. They are numbers second. True, they form numerical units (not in values like mass though). However, really they are being expressed as numbers. They are not the same as numerical values except for purely statistical values. As has been said before, they have lives, potential and so on. You cannot justify killing humans for the 'greater social good' - if that has to be the case, then the social machine itself is faulty. As aldo said, disabled people do not benefit the social machine in ways that able-bodied people do; should we thus kill them?
Well, biological cells have lives, potential and so on as well, but it cannot really compare to that of the whole. And you can justify killing humans if they are going to disturb the peace of others, which is what the terrorist factions of today are doing. What is a "disabled person?" Do you mean physically or mentally disabled? As I said earlier, physical work is unimportant at this point in time, and if they cannot do mental work, then they are doomed to stay at the bottom of the social ladder anyway. (again, this is a general group rule and cannot be applied to individuals, so don't start giving me examples

) There are enough of them that if we try to get rid of them, they will revolt and just cause us trouble in the end. As long as these masses can coexist with the rest, I say to let them do so, as they will become a dead force in the social machine over long periods of time anyway. (i.e. there are still these groups of tribal savages in various parts of the world, but they have no effect on the world)
Bull. America was desperate as hell to avoid getting involved in World Wra 2 and had Britain fallen sooner, and declaring war on Japan not meant declaring war on Germany, they wouldn't have become physically involved in Europe. America's economic might was bound to crush the Japanese; inevitably they would lose (as Yoshimoto himself acknowledged). In such a situation I doubt that the Americans would have been so willing to help their bosom buddies the Communists. Germany faced an insurmountable hurdle to invasion of the Americas: the sea. No plane could travel across it to bomb it, and beach landings would have been impractical given the distances involved. The US also had an ace up its sleeve: the atom bomb. Events would have developed into stalemate, so although Hitler would have controlled Europe, Africa and East Asia he wouldn't have 'ruled the world'.
Wait, but we are going under the premise here that the nations attempt to avoid war at all costs and peace is the ultimate, and so they would continue with this appeasement policy. You think he would have been "content" with the territory he had in Europe and Africa? He would have told the Soviet Union to surrender or be destroyed, and going by that assumption they too would have surrendered. What would be there to stop him from taking all of Asia and the rest of the world as well?
1. The domestic situation will be frozen - opposition to the government seen as inappropriate (see the cessation of suffragette actions in 1914). People will be focused on something else other than their grinding poverty and not bringing down the government.
Opposition to the government? There is hardly any opposition to the government in India, as most of the people couldn't care less about the outcome of such a conflict, and in Pakistan, the only opposition is coming from the terrorist groups, seeing as anyone else who opposes the government will not be alive the next day. There are very few of these "potential dissidents" in either country; as I said before, the average Indian or Pakistani does not care, and both the intellectual world and the religious fanatics in both countries are heavily pushing for such a war and have been doing so for many years now. Who is to say that anyone is more "childlike" than anyone else here?
By your definition, a perfect society would consist of indivuals engineered towards efficiency in all 'useful' aspects. You have already spoken of your disdain for emotion and love; they would be out of the door. However, unproductive tasks such as producing art would also be removed by your system - as would unused space, which is unproductive. You would destroy the Earth (or rather transform it) simply because you can, in order to make it more economically and academically productive.
Absolutely correct. But I just happen to like this system; if you look at the trends today, it can be seen that this end is
inevitable as a part of our advancing civilization. Technological progress is accompanied by social progress whenever dealing with people; we can see that the same was true for even life on Earth. When individual cells started to combine into larger organisms, they created something with far, far more potential than any of the individual units could have accomplished, and the same can be said to be true of human civilizations.
PS. Your randomly selected sample of people isn't ever so random - a nuclear war would target specific areas of value - ie. cities, because they contain not just workforce, but the government and intelligentsia.
Yes, alongside millions of common citizens. The lower and the upper classes would effectively cancel each other out when taking a sum, and the total would be roughly equal to that of any other city.
Next!

Shows your lack of experience in warfare, and shows your lack of maturity. You don't view yourself as one of these people that would be affected, so you don't know how it is not be threatened by someone. Not saying I have either, but you have to look at it like that. It is affecting them, not you. Lets see you fight in a war, and see if you think differently afterwards.
I bet I will, as my viewpoint will then be skewed further, but this "social machine" as a whole will not change one bit. I have said this numerous times earlier: do not think according to your common sense for this, as it will get you nowhere. And "maturity" is a matter of subjective definition, but it can boil down to having to be yet another member of the common masses, in which case I am quite glad I have at least tried to pursue a different solution and ditched this "maturity."

Some of my instincts are telling me to go against this, but I have long since learned not to rely on those at all.
You still refer to humans as just things. Would you like it if somebody took a gun and shot you in the head?
I would not like it, but the society would not care much. This is comparable to asking whether a dying cell in your body "likes it" when you get a cut or something. When we talk in such terms, individuals with their petty ambitions are of little importance.
There is no ICBM that has that sort of range. 10,000 is about as far as they can go.
Terrorist don't need ICBMs; remember, they do not need to employ the same tactics used by governments. The suitcase nuke is still one of the US government's greatest nightmares, and it is probably why they are not putting as much pressure on the nations as they could have been. And although neither of those countries have any, there certainly are ICBMs that can traverse the circumference of the entire planet.
None of this technology is proven. Especially on a distant planet, and by the way. How do you plan to get these people there?
If it was not proven, how did people manage to survive on the moon? Getting the people anywhere else will not be much of a problem when the demand comes up, as that will lower manufacturing costs due to necessity.
And one more coming up...
Back in the 60's they were saying we'd be far off exploring the galaxy by the year 2000, and we all know how it ended up. It simply isn't worth it. Computer technology has developed as far as it has because there's been a viable demand for it. Exactly the same thing happens during wars with military equipment; there's the demand for it. The demand for off-world colonization and mining is off by atleast 50-75 years, if not more. Even then we probably won't have the ability to sustain complete populations.
So, um, what's that supposed to mean? Of course that's true, but the demand does not exist now because there is no need right away. When the need arises, popular demand will increase along with it.
This is just so utter crap. We do not yet possess technology for any of the things you say we do, atleast not in the scale needed. Just because we can support a dozen astronauts in orbit with a funding of billions of dollars isn't enough. The technology doesn't only need to exists; it also has to be reliable, efficient and cheap enough. These requirements won't be fulfilled before off-Earth missions become profitable.
That will change over time. Do you think that the first computers were all inexpensive enough for individuals to buy? This is precisely what people said about the computer about 50 years ago, and look where we are today as far as that goes.
There's nothing stupid in environmentalism. It's one of the best ideologies in the history of mankind. Humans are very adjustable as a species, but we will never be independent of the environment. The fact is that we are just as dependable on the environment as we were 10,000 years ago.
Total nonsense. This is true only as long as we do not have the technology to change ourselves, and that is finally starting to change. Read what I said earlier. You are right that we will never be independent of the environment, but that is the "environment" of the universe as a whole - reality, if you will - and it has little to do with the Earth's biosphere.
envoronmental impact would be neglegable, I mean just how many nuckluar bombs did we set off in the atmosphere just for testing
That's true; there must have been hundreds of tests done by now.

Okay, now let's have some more responses.

But remember, it is harder to defend an emotional viewpoint rather than a rationalistic one when it comes to arguments, just as it is easier to accept the emotional one as an assumption.

(heck, emotionally, I do somewhat agree with all of you, but once again, I have learned to disregard those completely)