{"title":"Bases filosóficas para una crítica al transhumanismo","authors":"A. Marcos","doi":"10.14201/ART201872107125","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The present article aims at establishing a discussion with Antonio Dieguez’s recent book intituled Transhumanism. Transhumanism is an intellectual current trend that proposes the transformation of human beings by means of diverse technological interventions. Dieguez makes a very enlightening, informed and fair exposition of what the Transhumanism is, both in its bio and info proposals. In front of the transhumanist proposals, Dieguez adopts a very sensible position. He argues that we should avoid both technophobia and uncritical techophilia. We should neither accept nor reject the anthropotechnical projects en bloc, but we should judge them one by one (section 1). Obviously, a criterion is required to carry out this screening. Dieguez dismisses that the source of this criterion could be the notion of human nature. Instead, he proposes some ideas by the Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset. Let’s remember that according to Ortega “man has no nature, he has... history” (2004-2010, VI, 72; my trasnlation). I fully agree with Dieguez on the need of judging anthropotechnics one by one, but I disagree with his appreciation of both, the concept of human nature and the ideas of Ortega. Ortega’s philosophy of technique -original and suggestive as it is- becomes ultimately inoperative due to his anti-naturalist anthropology (section 2). On the other hand, Dieguez’s interpretation of the notion of human nature is - to put it shortly - platonic (section 3). Nevertheless, this concept also admits an Aristotelian interpretation, under which it becomes the best source of criteria for screening anthropotechnics (section 4). Finally, the conclusions of the article will be summarized in section 5.","PeriodicalId":259984,"journal":{"name":"ArtefaCToS. Revista de estudios sobre la ciencia y la tecnología","volume":"51 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-10-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"10","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ArtefaCToS. Revista de estudios sobre la ciencia y la tecnología","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14201/ART201872107125","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 10
Abstract
The present article aims at establishing a discussion with Antonio Dieguez’s recent book intituled Transhumanism. Transhumanism is an intellectual current trend that proposes the transformation of human beings by means of diverse technological interventions. Dieguez makes a very enlightening, informed and fair exposition of what the Transhumanism is, both in its bio and info proposals. In front of the transhumanist proposals, Dieguez adopts a very sensible position. He argues that we should avoid both technophobia and uncritical techophilia. We should neither accept nor reject the anthropotechnical projects en bloc, but we should judge them one by one (section 1). Obviously, a criterion is required to carry out this screening. Dieguez dismisses that the source of this criterion could be the notion of human nature. Instead, he proposes some ideas by the Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset. Let’s remember that according to Ortega “man has no nature, he has... history” (2004-2010, VI, 72; my trasnlation). I fully agree with Dieguez on the need of judging anthropotechnics one by one, but I disagree with his appreciation of both, the concept of human nature and the ideas of Ortega. Ortega’s philosophy of technique -original and suggestive as it is- becomes ultimately inoperative due to his anti-naturalist anthropology (section 2). On the other hand, Dieguez’s interpretation of the notion of human nature is - to put it shortly - platonic (section 3). Nevertheless, this concept also admits an Aristotelian interpretation, under which it becomes the best source of criteria for screening anthropotechnics (section 4). Finally, the conclusions of the article will be summarized in section 5.
本文旨在与安东尼奥·迪亚哥兹的新书《超人类主义》进行讨论。超人类主义是一种主张通过多种技术手段改造人类的思潮。Dieguez对什么是超人类主义做了一个非常有启发性的、见多识广的、公正的阐述,无论是在其个人简介还是信息提案中。面对超人类主义的提议,迭戈采取了非常明智的立场。他认为,我们应该避免技术恐惧症和不加批判的技术狂热。我们既不应该全盘接受也不应该全盘拒绝人类技术项目,而应该逐一进行评判(第1节)。显然,进行这种筛选需要一个标准。Dieguez驳斥了这一标准的来源可能是人性的概念。相反,他提出了西班牙哲学家Jose Ortega y Gasset的一些观点。让我们记住奥尔特加所说的“人没有本性,他有……”《历史》(2004-2010,VI, 72;我的trasnlation)。我完全同意Dieguez关于需要逐个判断人类技术的观点,但我不同意他对人性概念和奥尔特加思想的欣赏。奥尔特加的技术哲学——原创性和暗示性——由于他的反自然主义人类学(第2节)而最终变得无效。另一方面,迪亚格斯对人性概念的解释——简而言之——是柏拉图式的(第3节)。然而,这个概念也承认亚里士多德式的解释,在这种解释下,它成为筛选人类技术的最佳标准来源(第4节)。本文的结论将在第5节中进行总结。