La idea más peligrosa del mundo : hacia una crítica de la antropología transhumanista
Keywords:
Transhumanism, Philosophical anthropology, Philosophy of technology, Genetic engineeringAbstract
In this paper I examine some philosophical aspects of transhumanism, in particular its assumptions about human nature (“philosophical anthropology”) and the philosophy of technology implicated in them. I focus on genetic engineering and “directed evolution”, a central narrative in the promotion of a “posthuman” future that (according to the transhumanists) will bring wide-ranging benefits to humanity. I argue that transhumanism advances a deliberative theory of value in the context of a market model for the commercialization and distribution of the goods promised by reprogenetics. This deliberative theory, in turn, is supported on an anthropological vision heavily anchored on the humanist tradition. I argue that this strategy leads us to profound contradictions, since the individualist-mercantilist model cannot lead to any global benefit for human “nature”.Downloads
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Published
02/14/2019
How to Cite
Vaccari, A. (2019). La idea más peligrosa del mundo : hacia una crítica de la antropología transhumanista. Tecnología Y Sociedad, 1(2), 39–59. Retrieved from https://erevistas.uca.edu.ar/index.php/TYS/article/view/1580
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.