The Uncertain Future of Empathy

The Uncertain Future of Empathy
Title The Uncertain Future of Empathy PDF eBook
Author Elsa Bouet
Publisher
Pages 175
Release 2015
Genre Culture
ISBN

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The (Un)Certain Future of Empathy in Posthumanism, Cyberculture and Science Fiction

The (Un)Certain Future of Empathy in Posthumanism, Cyberculture and Science Fiction
Title The (Un)Certain Future of Empathy in Posthumanism, Cyberculture and Science Fiction PDF eBook
Author Elsa Bouet
Publisher BRILL
Pages 175
Release 2019-01-04
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1848883366

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Cyberculture, Cyborgs and Science Fiction

Cyberculture, Cyborgs and Science Fiction
Title Cyberculture, Cyborgs and Science Fiction PDF eBook
Author William S. Haney
Publisher Rodopi
Pages 203
Release 2006
Genre Art
ISBN 9042019484

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Addressing a key issue related to human nature, this book argues that the first-person experience of pure consciousness may soon be under threat from posthuman biotechnology. In exploiting the mind's capacity for instrumental behavior, posthumanists seek to extend human experience by physically projecting the mind outward through the continuity of thought and the material world, as through telepresence and other forms of prosthetic enhancements. Posthumanism envisions a biology/machine symbiosis that will promote this extension, arguably at the expense of the natural tendency of the mind to move toward pure consciousness. As each chapter of this book contends, by forcibly overextending and thus jeopardizing the neurophysiology of consciousness, the posthuman condition could in the long term undermine human nature, defined as the effortless capacity for transcending the mind's conceptual content. Presented here for the first time, the essential argument of this book is more than a warning; it gives a direction: far better to practice patience and develop pure consciousness and evolve into a higher human being than to fall prey to the Faustian temptations of biotechnological power. As argued throughout the book, each person must choose for him or herself between the technological extension of physical experience through mind, body and world on the one hand, and the natural powers of human consciousness on the other as a means to realize their ultimate vision.

Unveiling the Post-human

Unveiling the Post-human
Title Unveiling the Post-human PDF eBook
Author Artur Matos Alves
Publisher BRILL
Pages 199
Release 2020-04-28
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1848881088

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This electronic book gathers twenty papers presented at the 6th Global Conference Visions of Humanity in Cyberculture, Cyberspace and Science Fiction, which took place in the Mansfield College of Oxford, between the 12th and the 14th of July 2011.

After the Human

After the Human
Title After the Human PDF eBook
Author Sherryl Vint
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 289
Release 2020-12-10
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1108836666

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It showcases how posthumanism has transformed the humanities and what new work is now possible in light of this unsettling.

Our Posthuman Future

Our Posthuman Future
Title Our Posthuman Future PDF eBook
Author Francis Fukuyama
Publisher
Pages 256
Release 2002
Genre Biotechnology
ISBN 9781861972972

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Is a baby whose personality has been chosen from a gene supermarket still a human? If we choose what we create what happens to morality? Is this the end of human nature? The dramatic advances in DNA technology over the last few years are the stuff of science fiction. It is now not only possible to clone human beings it is happening. For the first time since the creation of the earth four billion years ago, or the emergence of mankind 10 million years ago, people will be able to choose their children's' sex, height, colour, personality traits and intelligence. It will even be possible to create 'superhumans' by mixing human genes with those of other animals for extra strength or longevity. But is this desirable? What are the moral and political consequences? Will it mean anything to talk about 'human nature' any more? Is this the end of human beings? Our Posthuman Future is a passionate analysis of the greatest political and moral problem ever to face the human race.

Future Asians

Future Asians
Title Future Asians PDF eBook
Author Claire Stanford
Publisher
Pages 165
Release 2022
Genre
ISBN

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In Future Asians: Orientalism and Posthumanism in Twenty-First Century U.S. Science Fiction, I investigate the representation of Asians and Asian Americans in contemporary American science fiction. There is broad scholarly consensus that American science fiction of the early to mid-twentieth century responded to fears over immigration and overpopulation with overtly racist portrayals of Asian characters. I argue that science fiction of the early twenty-first century responds to global economic and technological conflict with a more subtle - but nonetheless racially coded - portrayal of Asian bodies as no longer entirely human. By examining these iterations of Asian posthumanism, my project contends with American science fiction's persistent Orientalist discourse; ultimately, I assert that this seemingly fantastical genre reveals pressing U.S. anxieties about rising Asia and its competitive impact on both global trade and technological innovation. Working at the intersection of science fiction studies, Asian American studies, and critical race studies, Future Asians aims to illuminate larger questions of race and futurity. Specifically, my dissertation examines the notion of the technological and biotechnological posthuman, which I define as mechanical imitations of the human (robots, artificial intelligence) and forms of the human that still rely on incorporating normal biological functioning of the human (clones, cyborgs). While these posthuman forms are often considered non-raced entities, I argue that science-fictional portrayals of the posthuman are not non-raced at all, but rather directly contend with contemporary racial biases and injustices. By examining three major tropes of Asian posthuman representation - the virtual avatar, the non-singular self, and the android - Future Asians investigates how contemporary U.S. science fiction employs the image of the posthuman either to reinscribe negative racial histories and stereotypes or to counter these histories. As the posthuman becomes a widespread theoretical concept across the humanities and social sciences, my study poses a critical intervention, contributing to a more nuanced understanding of the posthuman that applies across the subfields of Latinx futurism, Afrofuturism and Africanfuturism, and Indigenous futurism. The first chapter, "Ready Player One and the Reassertion of United States Economic & Technological Supremacy" interrogates the posthuman trope of the virtual avatar. I argue that, by reducing the novel's Japanese characters to pre-modern Japanese tropes via their choice of samurai as their avatars, Ernest Cline portrays Japan as an economic and technological threat that has been contained, thus modeling a future in which American individualism wins out over Asian collectivism and reasserting U.S. supremacy. The second chapter, "Genre and the Generic Human in How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe," examines the posthuman trope of the non-singular self, represented in the novel through the science-fictional concept of the time-travel double. I argue that it is the very act of giving up the commitment to the Western notion of the individual self - through interacting with his time-travel double - that allows the protagonist to break free of the model minority myth and the pressures of assimilation for Asian immigrants to the U.S. Additionally, I argue that the novel's generic ambiguity challenges both the tropes of science fiction and the tropes of the immigrant narrative, formally underlining the novel's argument against assimilation by refusing to assimilate to either genre. The third chapter, "'In the future, no one is completely human': Posthuman Poetics in Sun Yung Shin's Unbearable Splendor and Franny Choi's Soft Science" looks at the posthuman trope of the android in two recent poetry collections. I argue that Shin and Choi subvert the tropes of the Asian posthuman through linguistic play, ultimately demonstrating a flexible notion of selfhood that not only transcends racial boundaries but also species boundaries and boundaries between the human and the mechanical. Finally, three interspersed interludes - Nuclear, Crispr, and Sex - consider contemporary - rather than science-fictional - technologies. In looking at nuclear technology, gene-editing technology, and sex doll/sex robot technology, I demonstrate that the posthuman is not purely a science-fictional concept, but rather is already ingrained in these contemporary technologies' relationship to the Asian body. By drawing on archival material, cultural criticism, and personal reflection, each of the three interludes grounding this project's concerns with the posthuman in the present - showing how the posthuman is not only relevant to our shared future, but to our current moment