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from
ExtremeTech Website
Biology has a simple answer:
Other schools of science might classify humans by their sociological or psychological behavior, but again we know that actually being human is more than just the sum of our thoughts and actions.
You can also look at being human as a sliding scale. If you were to build a human from scratch, from the bottom up, at some point you cross the threshold into humanity - if you believe in evolution, at some point we ceased being a great ape and became human.
Likewise, if you slowly remove parts from a human, you cross the threshold into inhumanity.
Again, though, we run into the same problem:
At first glance these questions might sound inflammatory and hyperbolic, or perhaps surreal and sci-fi, but don't be fooled:
Transhumanism is a cultural and intellectual movement that believes we can, and should, improve the human condition through the use of advanced technologies.
One of the core concepts in transhumanist thinking is life extension:
Likewise, transhumanists are interested in the ever-increasing number of technologies that can boost our physical, intellectual, and psychological capabilities beyond what humans are naturally capable of (thus the term transhuman).
Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), for example, which speeds up reaction times and learning speed by running a very weak electric current through your brain, has already been used by the US military to train snipers.
On the more extreme side, transhumanism deals with
the concepts of mind uploading (to a computer), and what happens
when we finally craft a computer with greater-than-human
intelligence - the technological singularity (see:
How to create a
mind, or die trying.)
In the case of life extension, if every human on Earth suddenly stopped dying, overpopulation would trigger a very rapid and very dramatic socioeconomic disaster.
Unless we stopped giving birth to babies, of course, but that merely rips open another can of worms:
Likewise, if only the rich have access to
intelligence- and strength-boosting drugs and technologies, what
would happen to society? Should everyone have the right to boost
their intellect? Would society still operate smoothly if everyone
had an IQ of 300 and five doctorate degrees?
This philosophical and ethical complexity stems from the fact that transhumanism is all about fusing humans with technology - and technology is advancing, improving, and breaking new ground very, very quickly.
Humans have always used technology, of course - our ability to use tools and grasp concepts such as science and physics are what set us apart from other animals - but never has society been so intrinsically linked and underpinned by it.
As we have seen in just the last few years, with the
advent of the smartphone and ubiquitous high-speed mobile networks,
just a handful of new technologies now have the power to completely
change how we interact with the the world and people around us.
In just the last 100 years, we've doubled our life span again, created bionic eyes and powered exoskeletons, begun to understand how the human brain actually works, and started to make serious headway with boosting intellectual and physical prowess.
We've already mentioned how tDCS is being used to
boost cranial capacity, and as we've seen in recent years,
sportspeople have definitely shown the efficacy of physical doping.
It is due to this jarring juxtaposition - the historical slowness of human and societal evolution vs. the breakneck pace of modern technology - that many find transhumanism to be unpalatable.
After all, as I've described it here, transhumanism is almost the very definition of unnatural.
You're quite within your rights to find transhumanism a bit, well, weird.
And it is weird, don't get me wrong - but so are most emerging technologies.
Do you think that your great grandparents weren't wigged out by the first television sets? Before it garnered the name "television," one of its inventors gave it the rather spooky name of "distant electric vision."
Can you imagine the wariness in which passengers
approached the first steam trains? Vast mechanical beasts that could
pull hundreds of tons and moved far faster than the humble - but
state-of-the-art - horse and carriage.
If you were born 500 years ago, odds are that you wouldn't experience a single societal-shifting technology in your lifetime - today, a 40 year old will have lived through the creation of the PC, the internet, the smartphone, and brain implants, to name just a few life-changing technologies.
It is unsettling, to say the least, to have the rug repeatedly pulled out from under you, especially when it's your livelihood at stake.
Just think about how many industries and jobs
have been obliterated or subsumed by the arrival of the digital
computer, and it's easy to see why we're wary of transhumanist
technologies that will change the very fabric of human civilization.
While you or I might balk at the idea of a brain-computer interface that allows us to download our memories to a PC, and perhaps upload new memories a la The Matrix, our children - who can use smartphones at the age of 24 months, and communicate chiefly through digital means - will probably think nothing of it.
For the children of tomorrow, living through a series of disruptive technologies that completely change their lives will be the norm.
There might still be some resistance when I opt to
have my head spliced onto a robotic exoskeleton, but within a
generation children will be used to seeing Iron Seb saving people
from car crashes and flying alongside airplanes.
We have been augmenting our humanity - our strength, our wisdom, our empathy - with tools since prehistory. We have always been spooked by technologies that seem unnatural or that cause us to act in inhuman ways - it's simply human nature. That all changes with the children of today, however.
To them, anything that isn't computerized, digital, and touch-enabled seems unnatural.
To them, the smartphone is already an extension of the brain; to them, mind uploading, bionic implants and augmentations, and powered exoskeletons will just be par for the course.
To them, transhumanism will just seem like natural
evolution - and anyone who doesn't follow suit, just like those
fuddy-duddies who still don't have a smartphone, will seem
thoroughly inhuman.
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