Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 1. Jan. 2021 · Book PDF Available. Our Posthuman Future: Redesigning Humans and Human Enhancement. January 2021. Edition: Paperback. Publisher: Sweek Publishing. Editor: Ralf Kreizmann and John M....

    • Cebo Daniel
  2. Francis Fukuyama, Our Posthuman Future: Consequences of the Biotechnology Revolution, New York: Ferrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2002. In this book, Francis Fukuyama argues that as a result of biomedical advances, we are facing the possibility of a future in which our humanity itself may be altered beyond recognition.

  3. 1. Mai 2003 · Arguing that our greatest advances still to come will be in the life sciences, Fukuyama now asks how the ability to modify human behavior will affect liberal democracy. To re-orient contemporary...

    • 0374706182, 9780374706180
    • Francis Fukuyama
    • Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003
  4. 4 " OUR POSTHUMAN FUTURE images from each individual household to a hovering Big Brother. The telescreen was what permitted the vast centralization of social life un­ der the Ministry of Truth and the Ministry of Love, for it allowed the government to banish privacy by monitoring every word and deed over a massive network of wires.

  5. Francis Fukuyama. Macmillan, 2003 - Medical - 272 pages. A decade after his now-famous pronouncement of "the end of history," Francis Fukuyama argues that as a result of biomedical advances, we are...

  6. Our Posthuman Future: Consequences of the Biotechnology Revolution is a 2002 book by Francis Fukuyama. In it, he discusses the potential threat to liberal democracy that use of new and emerging biotechnologies for transhumanist ends poses. [1] [2] Human nature.

  7. tind.wipo.int › record › 12955Our posthuman future

    In 1989, [the author] made his now-famous pronouncement that because "the major alternatives to liberal democracy had exhausted themselves," history as we knew it had reached its end. Ten years later, he revised his argument: we hadn't reached the end of history, he wrote, because we hadn't yet reached the end of science. Arguing that our greatest advances still to come will be in ...