Going Beyond: Software and and the Future of Human Potential
By Bruce Eisner
Imagine a future in which your personal computer becomes a doorway
into a world of enhanced intelligence and creativity, emotional
stability and previously unrealized personal success. In this world,
the computer has become more than just a word processor or a web
browser; it has become both an instantaneous communication tool for
contacting seminar leaders or personal therapists and an interactive
councilor that uses artificial intelligence to provide personal
coaching and wise guidance. Or even further in the future, computer
aided methods of transformation of human consciousness.
Could that colorful screen upon which you may be reading this become
that door? This is a question that has intrigued those who have
studies the potential of the PC, and the answer may be that this
reality is closer than we realize. Before we look ahead and examine
the possibilities, let's take a brief glimpse backward at the history
if the mind/computer connection.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF "MIND TOOLS" The notion that computers could be
tools for mental development and transformation goes back further than
the personal computer. Joseph Weisenbaum, a professor at MIT in the
1960's developed a program on a mainframe that he called Eliza, which
imitated a psychotherapist of the Rogerian school by rephrasing what
the user said or sometimes posing a oddball question about his or her
mother - from out of the blue. Although meant to be a kind of joke, a
comment on artificial intelligence, he was astounded to find people
having real conversations with his newly created program, and some
found that they liked talking to it better than their flesh-and-blood
"shrink."
The earliest company to harness the earliest PCs, Macs, Commodores and
Apples in the early `Eighties was Human Edge --founded by Dr. James
Johnson, a former psychology professor from the University of
Minnesota and a salesman for IBM. Johnson's company developed a
program called Mind Prober, still the most successful mind-related
software ever sold with an amazing one-quarter million sold in the
world of 1985, when there were only perhaps only four million PC's in
the entire world. This would be the equivalent of selling five million
programs in today.
Mind Prober was and is simply a computerized personality profile. It's
the descendent of tests like those you probably took in school but
never got to see the results - or the MMPI test that is used to
classify people with mental disorders. What is so remarkable about
Mind Prober and its descendents is that with the answering of a short
questionnaire, they reveal so much about your own personality of the
personality of someone you've known for only a short while. This is
because they are based on one of the most solid parts of the mostly
unsystematic study called psychology -psychometrics.
Psychometrics is the basis of personality testing, and can measure and
describe personality by comparing answers to the test on paper or, in
this case, in the computer program with groups of people with known
personality attributes. The unique way that specific personality type
answers certain questions gives the personality test program uncanny
insight into what seem to be hidden dimensions of an individual.
These early psychological programs were text-based CGA graphic
programs. But both programs proved fascinating to many people with
psychological curiosity including a graduate student named Bruce
Ehrlich, who was just about to complete a Ph.D. in psychology and who
had collected a series of programs he called Mindware.
Ehrlich published his first collection of mind software in the Spring
1988 Mindware catalog. It probably is no accident that two of the most
popular programs in that catalog were a modern version of Eliza for
the PC (the first ones only ran on mainframes)
Now availabe in an update version,
and Mindviewer, an upgrade to Mind Prober. Another popular program was
Calmpute! manufactured by Thought Technology of Toronto, Canada - a
biofeedback program that measured galvanic skin response. A special mouse
measured your GSR and displayed the results on a computer screen. By
discovering what kind of things you did to make the display graph change,
you could learn to control your levels of stress and relaxation.

The Mindware catalog continued in its print version from 1988 until
1994 when it reached a circulation of a half million catalogs..
Programs became inc program used the Kahler Process
Model first developed by Dr. Tabi Kahler for NASA to provide deep
psychological insight. Unfortunately, the company that developed the
program over a four-year period -Three-Sixty, Inc. of San Jose -- was
forced to take the program off the market when Dr.Kahler's wife, who
had won control of the test in divorce, blocked continued sales.
* IQ Builder --A program developed by Russian-born programmer Vladimer
Asinovsky which measures 53 components of human intelligence
* Insight -- a psychometric testing program that was the first to take
advantage of increases in computer graphics. The program used the Kahler
Process Model first developed by Dr. Tabi Kahler for NASA to provide deep
psychological insight. Unfortunately, the company that developed the
program over a four-year period -Three-Sixty, Inc. of San Jose -- was
forced to take the program off the market when Dr.Kahler's wife, who had
won control of the test in divorce, blocked continued sales.

* Dream Analyzer - a test which allowed people to analyze the contents of
their dreams developed by Dr. James Johnson (Note: Mind Media publishes
this program and it is included in Mind Prober 3.0)
* PC Therapist - a program by Joseph Weintraub which did Eliza one better,
winning the Loebner award by beating the famous Touring Test, in which a
British cybernetics expert in the 'Fifties suggested a test for machine
intelligence which consisted of the ability to fool people into believing
they were talking to a real human over a teletype device.
* Idea Generator Plus - a program developed by Roy Nierenberg, founder of
Experience-In-Software. The Program is
based on Gerard Nierenberg's (the founder's father), book The Art of
Creative Thinking and presents an interactive process based on exercises
from the book, for developing new ideas on the user project of choice.
Mind Software Today
In 1994, Ehrlich moved the Mindware catalog to the
World Wide Web and began to focus on publishing some of his best
sellers from the Mindware catalog as the Mental Edge software series
and creating a web site which has evolved into the Mind Media Life-
Enhancement Network. Ehrlich plans to
develop this site into the central source for products and information
about the mind software technology on the Web.
Ehrlich's Mindware catalog was the first direct mail catalog to offer
CD-ROM players and CD-ROMs to the public by direct mail. Ehrlich
understood that the greater amounts of multimedia information held by
CD-ROMs would contribute to mind software that was both more effective
and that would provide users a richer, friendlier experience.
On his Mind Media Life-Enhancement Network site, he launched an
electronic version of his print catalog -- Mindware Interactive Online
Catalog -- which lists many
of these new CD-ROMs. Mind Media's Complete Guide to Self-Improvement
and Mental Development on the Web. The latter a "Yahoo-like"
directory and search engine for the entire scope of self-help, self-
improvement and mental development sites on the Web, features some of
the web sites we mention below.
About a year ago, David Marshall's Journeyware New Media published a
CD-ROM, Your Mythic Journey.
The software presented a seminar-on-a-
disk by best-selling psychology author Sam Keen. The program used a
multimedia authoring system called Macromind Director, which allows
the disk to be used by both Windows and Macintosh systems.
It works by combining video visits with Sam Keen, (who beams down like
a Startrek officer using the "transporter" into a series of beautiful
graphic environments) with interactive exercises designed to explore
the past, present and future of your personal mythic journey through
life. What makes the program especially enjoyable is the graphical
environments created by David Marshall's brother, a highly creative
computer artist..
With the introduction of this CD-ROM, mind software had taken a giant
step forward, with the user finding that they can continue to gain
value through exploring their lives. A series of other CD-ROM titles
began to be released. Already author John Gray, Ph.D. based on his
best-selling book, Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, a
relationship seminar-on-a-disk. And mutlimedia success seminars such
as Manage Your Time published by the highly regarded music software
company -- MidiSoft -- is available to help you utilize our most
precisious
resource.
In addition to these new CD-ROM based interactive multimedia
presentations, a number of new software programs with increased
features have been released. One program, from called ThinkFast, measures and coaches users
on increasing a variety of mental abilities including memory,
cognitive abilities and reflexes. Using a high quality graphical
interface running in the Windows environment, programs like these and
those that follow may become "mind gyms", a term that Bruce Ehrlich of
Mind Media began using around 1990 to describe the potential of this
type of mind software and worked with a Russian programmer, Vladamir
Assinovsky in the development of IQ Builder published by Mind Media.
Another area that has taken great leaps forward since
the early Mindware catalog days is the area of computers
and biofeedback. Biofeedback first became popular in the
`Sixties. Biofeedback was invented by Professor Joe
Kamiya, who first discovered that the brain could
actually control processes in the body and brain
previously thought only to be under control of the
autonomic nervous system, which was considered to be
completely unavailable to consciousness. By feeding back
signals from various body and brain processes, people
could learn to control how they felt and thought!
The earliest devices were simple ones that measured GSR or EEG and
gave a simple noise like a tone so that the user could learn to
control these body and brain functions. Because they were rather
boring to use and because they looked at only one modality of the
particular process they monitored, these biofeedback systems quickly
lost their popularity.
However biofeedback clinics continued to operate and help people with
a variety of tasks including stress reduction and control of migraine
headaches and even blood pressure control. With the invention and
increasing sophistication of the PC however, these tools have made
remarkable progress.
A number of biofeedback systems that interact with the personal
computer have been developed. These include such sophisticated new
products as the IBVA system, which includes a biofeedback system that
will read EEG or brainwaves, rather than the more simple GSR (Galvanic
Skin Response) systems which simply measured the skin's ability to
conduct electricity and allows for comparisons between the brain's
left and right hemisphere. The screen shows a three-dimensional graph
while speakers let you hear the sound of your brain waves rise and
fall. There are even a number of CD-ROM programs that allow you to use
the IBVA system in new and more useful ways.
There are several other computer based biofeedback systems including
the Neuolink developed by NLP expert Robert Dilts, the Stress Saver
Systems biofeedback system with mind games, and the WaveRider Pro
Biofeedback System with WaveWare 2.0 software. As you can see, we have
come a long way since the first Mindware catalog offered Calmpute!.
THE NEAR FUTURE
Bruce Ehrlich of Mind Media has plans for his Mind Media Life
Enhancement Network which give us an idea about where the field of
mind software may be heading in the next few years.

Ehrlich plans to begin broadcasting seminars with popular self-
improvement leaders and self-help writers using streaming audio and
video technology. This technology is already being successfully used
by companies like NetSeminar to
successfully broadcast educational seminars on a variety of topics.
You can actually interact with the seminar leaders online, making it
more than the passive experience presented by audio or video tapes or
reading a self-help book.
Ehrlich is also developing a new kind of CD-ROM seminar
that uses "hybrid" CD-ROM technology. This would allow
for continuous updates of content on CD-ROMS from the
Mind Media web site -- allowing the user for example to
get additional sessions and information from seminar
leaders whose CD-ROM they had purchased. One product,
The Emotional IQ Test, utilizes this concept to offer a
multimedia Emotional IQ Test developed by Virtual
Knowledge, Inc.
The Emotional IQ Test CD-ROM is based on the ground-breaking theory of
Emotional Intelligence introduced by world renowned psychologists Dr.
John Mayer of the University of New Hampshire and Dr. Peter Salovey of
Yale University and popularized by the New York Times Bestseller
"Emotional Intelligence" by Daniel Goleman. The CD-ROM was developed
by Virtual Knowledge using Mayer and Salovey's latest scientific
research in collaboration with leading management psychologist Dr.
David Caruso.
Dr. Hank Weisinger, leading authority on organizational psychology and
the application of Emotional Intelligence said, "this is an extremely
valuable tool that creates user awareness of crucial variables that
affect one's success in life." Dr. Weisinger is also the author of
"Emotional Intelligence at Work" published by Jossey-Bass.
What makes this a "hybrid" CD-ROM? Well first the software utilizes
the multimedia features presents the Emotional IQ Test with all the
bells and whistles that multimedia can bring to it (the founders of
Virtual Knowledge developed the first commercially sold multimedia CD-
ROM so they know how to do it right). Then you a hotlink allows you to
log onto the Emotiional IQ Test on the web where you can take more
indepth test, other kinds of tests dialog with others users about
emotiional intellgence as well as learn some other cutting edge
psychological concepts from the authors (Note: this probram is sold as
part of a 5 program suite of programs or individually
The use of on-line programs written in Java will make available on-
line pay-per-use versions of popular mind software. This pay-per-use
model is already being done on the BrainTainment Center web site. The whole genre of mind software for creativity,
problem solving, psychotherapy etc. will. be available on-line
anytime.
THE FURTHUR REALMS OF VITUAL MIND ENHANCEMENT
In 1990, Simon and Shuster published Would the Buddha Wear a Walkman?
by Judith Hooper and Dick Terisi, both editors at Omni magazine at the
time and co-authors of the best selling book, The Three-Pound
Universe.
In the chapter, "Using Your Computer to Expand Your Mind", they say:
The computer is more than a number crunching word processing,
artificial brain. In the right hands it's also a mind-expanding,
creativity-boosting, even mind-altering tool. We have already accepted
the microcomputer as a machine that can assume some of our tedious
menial chores. But it has a potential as a mind-enhancing device as
well. And the key is the software.
We have divided the field into five categories: smartware (which makes
you smarter, more organized, a better writer, a better negotiator),
psychological software (such as Eliza), stressware (aimed at reducing
anxiety), games/head trips (trips into alternative realities) and
spiritual software (intended to make you deeper).
Thus far we have looked at some of the kinds of software programs the
authors predicted. But as the technology of the compute leaps forward
and our understanding of the mind become increasingly better, some of
these other more far-out mind/computer software programs will become
possible.
Ehrlich, in the above-mentioned book, is written about as "The
Mindware Man: Bruce Ehrlich and Digital Psychology." In this section,
they write:
Ehrlich predicts that such software [mind software] will eventually
transform computer-human interactions. "The computer," he says," will
become a friend." He foresees a dramatic growth in future years in
what he calls "electronic Buddhas." This is a program designed to
enhance the users spirituality. Another growth area is "psychoactive
software
How can a computer become a wise Buddha or guide? Or become
psychoactive. Here are some of my wild-eyed guesses.
One of the most important theoretical areas in computer science
concerns artificial intelligence. One area of AI is expert systems.
For example, a computer is trained to emulate a medical doctor in
diagnosing a disease. These programs already exist, and have shown to
be superior to human doctors in many cases in pinpointing illnesses.
Imagine then the computer developing an expert system model of a Zen
master or psychotherapist. Expert systems that go far beyond Eliza's
simple trickery to programs that teach real wisdom.
Now combine this with biofeedback, the technology we have talked about
below. The most recent biofeedback breakthroughs have involved the
recording and training of actual altered states of consciousness
experiences. There actually has been recording flesh-and-blood Zen
Masters as they enter Samadhi, the highest state of being in the Zen
school.
Already, computers are giving us multimedia biofeedback rather than
the primitive tones of three decades ago. Certainly at the current
rate of technological progress, virtual reality will becomes available
as an interface on the home PC. Already there is a graphical VRML
(virtual reality markup language). Soon, goggles and gloves will
supplement screen and mouse.
Consider the power of a virtual reality computerized biofeedback
system. A system augmented by an artificially intelligent computer
coach. Or perhaps a real human guiding a group of people over the Web.
Still another possibility, a group of humans supporting each other in
their exploration consciousness linked up through a computer network.
Shades of virtual group therapy!
As we look to the future of software for enlarging the capacity of the
human mind and consciousness, we see
* The power of computers doubling every two years,
* The creation of a global community"-linking everyone's homes by PC
through interactive video and the World Wide Web
* New technologies such as biofeedback and virtually-reality ready for
primetime.
* The rapid and dramatic breakthroughs in our understanding of the
brain, consciousness and behavior.
Computers and software as an expander of human intellect, creativity
and consciousness has a glorious future that we only begin to imagine.