Covid-19, Philosophy and the Leap Towards the Posthuman

被引:3
|
作者
Lamola, Malesela John [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa
关键词
Artificial Intelligence (AI); Covid-19; philosophical anthropology; philosophy of technology; technological posthumanism; transhumanism;
D O I
10.25159/2413-3086/8581
中图分类号
B [哲学、宗教];
学科分类号
01 ; 0101 ;
摘要
A discursive canon around transhumanism and posthumanism as beliefs in the efficacy and necessity of technology as the beneficial transformer of human life "for the better" is well-established in the Western philosophical tradition. However, none of the theorists and protagonists of this technological reconfiguration of humanity could ever have predicted that what they envisaged would be propelled into manifestation with as dramatic and phenomenal momentum such as has been ushered in by the mainly technology-driven interventions introduced in various measures globally to curb the SARS-CoV2 virus. The effect of these responses to the pandemic, it is here demonstrated, have set humanity into a technogenesis, a transformative ontological process headed towards a machinistic and de-anthropic life idealised by posthumanists. Apropos, a set of three intertwined tasks are here executed. Firstly, I explicate my foregoing claim, namely, how at the helm of the variety of measures to control Covid-19 is a discernible socio-scientific movement that is directed at inaugurating and regularising a posthumanist consciousness and de-anthropic modes of sociality. Secondly, I venture a critical understanding of "the Covid-19 moment" that exposes the quadripartite alliance of a postmodernist Western philosophy, technoscience, commercial interests, and politics as the systemic drivers of this technocratic philosophical anthropology. Thirdly, or rather concurrently, taking the work of Nick Bostrom as the theoretical heuristic advocating human technological transformation, I normatively alert of the ramifications of this emerging human ontology.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Covid-19 and Greek Philosophy
    Smith, Martin Ferguson
    [J]. TPM-THE PHILOSOPHERS MAGAZINE, 2020, (90): : 54 - 57
  • [2] More eyes on COVID-19: Perspectives from Philosophy How philosophy bears on COVID-19
    Metz, Thaddeus
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, 2020, 116 (7-8) : 5 - 5
  • [3] Philosophy in times of Covid-19 and post-pandemic: towards a new humanity
    Paris Albert, Sonia
    [J]. THEMATA-REVISTA DE FILOSOFIA, 2022, (65): : 317 - 339
  • [4] POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY BEFORE COVID-19
    Lopez Baroni, Manuel Jesus
    [J]. REVISTA INTERNACIONAL DE PENSAMIENTO POLITICO, 2020, (15): : 123 - 125
  • [5] COVID-19 and a priori lieutenants of philosophy
    Castro Cordoba, Ernesto
    [J]. REVISTA DE OCCIDENTE, 2021, (476) : 89 - 108
  • [6] Making publics in a pandemic: Posthuman relationalities, 'viral' intimacies and COVID-19
    Pienaar, Kiran
    Flore, Jacinthe
    Power, Jennifer
    Murphy, Dean
    [J]. HEALTH SOCIOLOGY REVIEW, 2021, 30 (03): : 244 - 259
  • [7] Thymosin α1 for COVID-19: Look before You Leap!
    Divatia, Jigeeshu, V
    [J]. INDIAN JOURNAL OF CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2022, 26 (08) : 892 - 893
  • [8] COVID-19 Pandemic Management: A Review of the Digitalisation Leap in Malaysia
    Arif, Mohd Firdaus Bin Mohd
    Ta, Goh Choo
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (11)
  • [9] COVID-19 is viewed as severe as tumor and HIV; perceptions towards COVID-19
    Menebo, Mesay Moges
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGY HEALTH & MEDICINE, 2022, 27 (01) : 237 - 248
  • [10] DOES COVID-19 INFECTION AFFECT ATTITUDES TOWARDS COVID-19 VACCINATION?
    Yun, James
    Habashy, Paul
    Habashy, Nardeen
    Hennessy, Jillian
    Koirala, Archana
    [J]. INTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL, 2023, 53 : 35 - 35