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In Hokkaido (the northern island) I visited the Meme
Meme Laboratory at the University of Sapporo, led by
Professor Yuzuru Tanaka, and gave a lecture on "The
evolution of meme machines".
As described in Tanaka's book,
their research aims to develop meme media architectures which
will allow people to reedit and redistribute intellectual
resources through the Internet by direct manipulation -
including not just information, but tools and services as
well.

Students at the Meme Media Laboratory
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If this were achieved, it would be a remarkable leap for
memetic evolution because it would allow the
recombination of
programs and tools, and parts of
programs and tools. I have
previously argued (in The
Meme Machine) that an evolving
system based on copying and recombining products (organisms,
artefacts, texts or any
kind of product) is inferior to one
based on copying and recombining the instructions for making
such products. Biological systems are, of course, based on
copying
genetic information which is instructions for making
proteins. Tanaka's work would, I think, be a step in this
direction. I look forward to discussing these implications
further. |
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A two day memes event was organised by
Tsunehiko Suzuki as part of the world fair Expo
2005 in Aichi.
The memes event included exhibitions, discussions and
lectures, and a symposium with the theme of "memes and
sustainability". This took place in the beautiful Noh
Theatre in Nagoya and was transmitted live by satellite to the
Expo site in Aichi. The other participants were Osamu Sakura,
Yoichiro Kawaguchi, Yuzuru Tanaka and Makoto Kawada.
We discussed the role of memetics in science and social
policy, in business and finance, and we heard from artists and
musicians who use the idea of memes in their work.
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