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The Human Version 2.0

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Abstract This article investigates new ethnography on AI development relating to imaginaries of technoscientific forms of immortality. As a Think Piece in Analytics, it engages in a somewhat experimental comparative endeavor as I set concepts from the ethnographic field of transhumanism in a comparative relation to concepts developed in the anthropological theory of Christianity, mainly Dumont's concept of the ‘individual-in-the-world’. I argue that through such a comparison we can understand recently developed ideas about the (technologically) immortal human being in a new light. The article points to how technoscientific immortality echoes core cultural themes, but it also considers a major difference in the perception of the social. When death is made redundant, the question of how sociality is reproduced moves center stage.
Title: The Human Version 2.0
Description:
Abstract This article investigates new ethnography on AI development relating to imaginaries of technoscientific forms of immortality.
As a Think Piece in Analytics, it engages in a somewhat experimental comparative endeavor as I set concepts from the ethnographic field of transhumanism in a comparative relation to concepts developed in the anthropological theory of Christianity, mainly Dumont's concept of the ‘individual-in-the-world’.
I argue that through such a comparison we can understand recently developed ideas about the (technologically) immortal human being in a new light.
The article points to how technoscientific immortality echoes core cultural themes, but it also considers a major difference in the perception of the social.
When death is made redundant, the question of how sociality is reproduced moves center stage.

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