CHAPTER 11 Automata, Man-machines and Embodiment: Deflating or Inflating Life?

C. Wolfe
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Abstract

Early modern automata, understood as efforts to ‘model’ life, to grasp its singular properties and/or to unveil and demystify its seeming inaccessibility and mystery, are not just fascinating liminal, boundary, hybrid, crossover or go-between objects, while they are all of those of course. They also pose a direct challenge to some of our common conceptions about mechanism and embodiment. They challenge the simplicity of the distinction between a purported ‘mechanistic’ worldpicture, its ontology and its goals, and on the other hand an attempt to understand ourselves and animals more broadly as flesh-and-blood, affective entities (that is, not just breathing and perspiring, but also desiring and ‘sanguine’ machines, as La Mettrie might have put it). In what follows I reflect on the complexity of early modern mechanism faced with the (living) body, and its mirror image, contemporary theories of embodiment. At times, embodiment theory seems to be governed by a fascination with what the Artificial Life researcher Ezequiel Di Paolo has called ‘biochauvinism’ (Di Paolo, ‘Extended Life’): an unquestioned belief that ‘living bodies are special’. Yet how does the theorist define this special status? The question is apparently a simple one, or at least promptly yields an aporia which appears simple: to borrow a provocative phrase from Terry Eagleton, embodiment theory is obsessed by the body but terrified of biology. Yet at the same time, at least since Hubert Dreyfus and Andy Clark’s groundbreaking works, embodiment has been a legitimate part of cognitive science, yielding the even more recently emerged field of ‘embodied cognition’ (see the work of Larry Shapiro), which seeks to depart from traditional cognitive science, especially the latter’s understanding of cognition as computational, in order to instead underscore ‘the significance of an organism’s body in how and what the organism thinks’, in Shapiro’s words.
第11章自动机、人机与化身:让生命膨胀还是让生命膨胀?
早期的现代自动机,被理解为“模拟”生活的努力,掌握其独特的属性和/或揭开和揭开其看似不可接近和神秘的面纱,不仅仅是迷人的界限,边界,混合,交叉或介于两者之间的对象,尽管它们当然都是这些。它们也对我们关于机制和体现的一些共同观念提出了直接挑战。他们挑战了所谓的“机械论”世界图景、本体论和目标之间的简单区别,另一方面,他们试图更广泛地将我们自己和动物理解为有血有肉、有情感的实体(也就是说,不仅仅是呼吸和出汗,还有欲望和“乐观”的机器,正如拉·梅特里(La Mettrie)所说的那样)。在接下来的内容中,我反思了早期现代机制面对(活的)身体的复杂性,以及它的镜像,当代的具体化理论。有时,具体化理论似乎受到人工生命研究者埃兹奎尔·迪保罗(Ezequiel Di Paolo)所谓的“生物沙文主义”(Di Paolo,“延长生命”)的迷恋所支配:一种毫无疑问的信念,即“生命的身体是特殊的”。然而,理论家如何定义这种特殊地位?这个问题显然很简单,或者至少立刻引发了一种看似简单的不安:借用特里·伊格尔顿(Terry Eagleton)的一句挑衅性的话来说,化身论痴迷于身体,却害怕生物学。但与此同时,至少从休伯特·德雷福斯和安迪·克拉克的开创性作品开始,具体化已经成为认知科学的一个合法部分,产生了最近出现的“具身认知”领域(参见拉里·夏皮罗的作品),它试图脱离传统的认知科学,尤其是后者对认知的理解是计算的,以强调“有机体的身体在有机体如何思考和思考什么方面的重要性”。用夏皮罗的话来说。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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