{"id":67853,"date":"2016-05-21T16:44:24","date_gmt":"2016-05-21T20:44:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/humanism-and-transhumanism-the-new-atlantis\/"},"modified":"2016-05-21T16:44:24","modified_gmt":"2016-05-21T20:44:24","slug":"humanism-and-transhumanism-the-new-atlantis","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/transhumanist\/humanism-and-transhumanism-the-new-atlantis\/","title":{"rendered":"Humanism and Transhumanism &#8211; The New Atlantis"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Fred    Baumann  <\/p>\n<p>    The name of the movement known as    transhumanism may suggest that it arises out of humanism. At    the very least, it is a descendant of what was once known as    humanism, and could be seen as just one more utopian humanism.    But the trans is the operative part of the term, and it    should be taken seriously. Transhumanism is not simply utopian    in the same way as the humanisms of Marx or B.F. Skinner;    rather, it is qualitatively different in that it goes beyond,    avowedly disregarding and leaving behind human beings    themselves  the very beings that were the central concern of    all previous humanisms.  <\/p>\n<p>    The history of these humanisms is extraordinarily rich and    complex. But because transhumanism cheerfully transcends all    of it, we can cheerfully omit much of the detail here. In    brief, humanism meant looking at the world from the point of    view and the interests of the human being, as opposed to the    subhuman (that is, the material or natural) or the superhuman    (that is, the divine).  <\/p>\n<p>    In its most utopian forms, inspired by the technical    possibilities of applied natural science, humanism sought the    utter transformation of the world to fit human needs. Marxs    communism, however much he denied that it was utopian, is a    good case in point. Marx understood that human beings would    change in the new communist world  but he believed that the    change would be of their own choice and in their own power. The    world of communism would in fact be a realm of freedom instead    of one in which external necessity ruled: a freely developed    culture that would put an end to class war.  <\/p>\n<p>    But once it was taken seriously and developed further, the    prospect of fully using human freedom to conquer nature evolved    into another, and in some ways opposite, prospect: the perfect    accommodation of human beings to nature. Consider the utopian    vision of B.F. Skinner, the mid-twentieth century father of    behaviorist psychology. In his 1948 novel     Walden Two, Skinner depicted a community of    that name completely controlled by operant conditioning.    Everyone in it, without exception, is happy. They have all been    conditioned so as to respond perfectly to their constraints,    and they only face constraints that are necessary. Living in    what reminds one of Rabelaiss fictional aristocratic abbey of    Thlme, they pursue knowledge, art, culture, and leisure in    perfectly governed harmony (rule by experts, no democracy    here).  <\/p>\n<p>    There is an unintentional creepiness about Walden Two  not    just because the universal sunniness of the testimonials makes    one wonder about drugs in the water or inquisitorial dungeons    beneath the ground, but, above all, because of the apparent    absence in any of the happy Waldensians (with the possible    exception of the maladjusted founder) of what we might call    inwardness. For Skinner, it appears that the demands of the    body can be met by comfort, and the demands of the soul by    interesting things to do and find out about. Not just    democracy, but also capitalism, the family, and formal    education are considered antiquated. Institutional religion,    needless to say, is absent as well. Remarkable also in its    absence is the whole realm of reflection about ones self,    ones expectations of oneself, ones feelings as they conflict    with ones reasonings, and so forth, giving the book and its    project an air of the overly bright, overly defined unreality    that one finds in some of the stranger genres of animated film    and TV.  <\/p>\n<p>    Perhaps this absence of inwardness is just what you would    expect from this exponent of behaviorism  the basic premise of    which is to ignore the existence of inwardness. It seems    doubtful, however, that this absence in itself played much of a    role in the failure of Skinners particular brand of utopian    humanism. Marxs utopianism never got far because the    historical process that was to lead to it never materialized:    the proletariat just wasnt up to its assigned mission of    becoming the salvific, universal class (as Lenin ruefully    discovered, its consciousness never got beyond trade unionism).    By contrast, the reason that almost nobody attempted Skinners    brand of utopia was perhaps because its unnerving creepiness    hinted at a violation of normal notions of freedom and dignity     notions that Skinner considered outmoded, as he argued in his    famous 1971 book     Beyond Freedom and Dignity. Moreover, it    seems likely that behavioral conditioning might not have had    the power to alter people as deeply as Skinner thought.    Stronger tools were needed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Today, stronger tools than were    dreamt of in Skinners philosophy are not only imagined but in    common use. Mind control through chemistry is a commonplace.    The infertile bearing children  sometimes genetically their    own, sometimes not  raises no eyebrows, and seems to most like    unambiguous good news. Mammals can be cloned, and so, in    principle, humans may be too. Some crucial bodily fluids, like    insulin, can already be synthetically produced. The possibility    of advanced nanotechnological machines going inside human    bodies, the possibility of linking human brains and nervous    systems to computer networks, the possibility, in short, of the    complete overcoming of the distinction between the human and    the mechanical  all of these may be on the horizon, and the    most enthusiastic proponents of such projects, like the eminent    inventor Ray Kurzweil, keep emphasizing how soon it is all    coming. After all, as Kurzweil (whose name in German literally    means short time, seeming to imply not only imminence but    impatience and mortality) likes to point out, the rate of    technological change keeps increasing; we cannot go by our old    timelines.  <\/p>\n<p>    In one sense, the new science is merely a continuation of the    old. It continues the Baconian project of control over nature    for human betterment. But at the point that it becomes    transhumanism, the name indicates that this science has    changed its object in the process. When the original humanism    allied with science, it did so in order to transform the world    to make it suitable for human life. But what if we could,    following Skinner, change human beings to fit the world? Even    conceiving of this project would, of course, mean treating    human beings as material for transformation.  <\/p>\n<p>    The famous Frankenstein story emerged out of the Romantic,    originally Rousseauian, horror at the implications of treating    man as mere matter. But the failure of the post-Rousseauian    project of moral freedom, by which Kant and others sought to    overcome the merely empirical through the power of the will,    ultimately seems to have made possible a new science that    accepts reductionist materialism as a matter of course, both as    an account of nature and of man. Its followers are remarkably    free of the kinds of concerns that plagued those who, from the    eighteenth century on, were horrified by the notion of        Lhomme Machine (man as a machine),    popularized by a 1748 book of that title by La Mettrie.  <\/p>\n<p>    A bit of the flavor of the clash between the older view and the    new reductionism can be found in an exchange in    Commentary magazine. As part of an April 2007 essay    called Science,    Religion, and the Human Future, Leon R. Kass, a University    of Chicago professor and former chairman of the Presidents    Council on Bioethics, challenged the materialist conception of    the human being that denies the immateriality of the soul. One    of those criticized, Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker,    replied in     a letter published in the July\/August 2007 issue alongside    a rebuttal from Kass. Pinker denies Kasss charge that he    reduces mind to brain; mind is, however, what the brain    does (his emphasis). Therefore, on Pinkers    account, what needs to be studied is the brain, and so is    material. Nothing is gained by emotive talk of the soul, he    says; if all that archaic term refers to is the software of    the brain, then why not say so and be done with it? If we are    computers, then so be it.  <\/p>\n<p>    This reductionism is not in and of itself transhumanism, but it    paves the way for it. The new science isnt squeamish about man    as machine; transhumanism goes a step further and embraces    mans becoming a different machine, or any number of kinds of    machines. If that were to come to pass, even if only among    elites, it would be a change of world-historical proportions,    because it would mean that the new science was no longer merely    seeking to transform the world to suit human beings, but rather    transforming human beings into whatever they chose.  <\/p>\n<p>    Contemporary libertarians, viewing    society as composed of transactions between autonomous actors,    seem to expect that these transformational choices will be    individual in nature. But as has been cogently argued by a    number of critics, individual choice will probably not be    decisive. Once the enhanced set the standards, it will pretty    much be impossible for the unenhanced not to have to try to    keep up, if only because their life chances, and ultimately    even their continuing recognition as members of society, will    be at stake. So rather than choices made by independent    rational actors, the decisions about radical enhancement are    more likely to be either collective or to be imposed from above    by an elite, as predicted by Aldous Huxley and C.S. Lewis,    among others. Or it may be that the choice will not be made    intentionally at all, but simply imposed by realized    technological possibility  a progression hinted at by the    spread of steroid use among athletes today.  <\/p>\n<p>    The attachment of some libertarians to transhumanism is deeply    misguided, for at least two reasons. First, the phenomenon that    Richard J. Herrnstein got so much grief for pointing out in his    1973 book     I.Q. in the Meritocracy     namely, that true egalitarianism and meritocracy tend to    produce, through the marriage of the smart with the smart, a    genetic aristocracy, almost a genetic caste  would likely    deepen dramatically in the future the transhumanists desire,    with consequences for the liberty of the unenhanced. At some    point, those who celebrate the liberty of human beings will    have to face the fact that liberty will look very different    when we are no longer merely human. Second, our enhanced    offspring might have to confront novel existential threats,    such as the problem of an artificial intelligence bent on the    destruction of humanity, or of self-replicating nanobots run    amuck  guarding against which would likely require the    governance of some massively powerful and intrusive entity like    the World Controller in     Huxleys Brave New World. The rule of bureaucrats    and experts, which has already started small in Europe and    which elites seem to be pushing for throughout the West, would    probably evolve apace with the rapidly expanding new science    into the rule of experts at all levels.  <\/p>\n<p>    Still, however one reacts to the transhumanist project  and it    is probably only a technical question as to how far it can go    and how fast  it means that the most powerful weapon in the    traditional anti-utopian arsenal may no longer have much power.    Every utopia that came before was a no-place (the literal    meaning of the word utopia) because it abstracted to some    degree from human nature as it had always been, and so the    perfect world it imagined could not exist. Thus, utopias could    be divided, as Leo Strauss    has suggested, into two kinds. There were the philosophical    and theological utopias, those which knowingly described an    impossible world but nevertheless used the narrative to focus    on certain aspects of humanity in order to clarify goals and to    offer moral encouragement to improve. And then there were the    ones like Skinners, modern utopias of social engineering that    navely bought into the possibility of radically changing human    life by simply ignoring crucial aspects of it as it exists now.    Both of these kinds of utopias could be reliably predicted to    fail (were they to be tried in practice) because they were    contrary to human nature.  <\/p>\n<p>    Given that limitation, the Baconian scientific project in its    liberal form can be considered the most successful of the    latter kind of utopia, perhaps because it did not emphasize its    potentially utopian ends, but also in large part because it was    satisfied with incremental (though unending) gain. Indeed, its    dependence on the gradual progress of science required    concentrating on the next step rather than the end of the road.    But quantitative change can become qualitative, and now the    Baconian project offers us the serious prospect of changing    humanity in ways that can be seen as beneficial to the beings    we are now, but that would likely turn us into quite different    beings over time  and not necessarily such a long time.  <\/p>\n<p>    Why not, then? Why not be the best we can be? The reply to this    question used to be that the notion of the best human being,    by definition, implies limits to what one can seek  the limits    of the human. But that reply is increasingly regarded as    meaningless. The new answer is that the best we can be means    the best at doing what we want to do. And what we want will    itself be a mixture of what our restless desires want and what    the wanting of others compels us to want.  <\/p>\n<p>    So it is worth looking at the kinds of things that the    transhumanists are anticipating us being able to do. For    Kurzweil, posthumanity is about extending power and control to    the point where we merge into everything non-human. He says, in    his 2005 book     The Singularity Is Near, that the essence of    being human is not our limitations  although we do have many     its our ability to reach beyond our limitations. Along the    way to the realm outside our limitations, this will mean things    like being able to participate in a business meeting in one    place while simultaneously participating in group sex in    another. But Kurzweils true interest lies in his conviction    that the pace of technological growth will explode so rapidly    that it will bring about a transformation dubbed the    Singularity (after the mathematical point at which a function    quickly shoots up to infinity). In this unbounded future, we    will increase our power until the entire universe is at our    fingertips:  <\/p>\n<p>      the matter and energy in our vicinity will become infused      with the intelligence, knowledge, creativity, beauty, and      emotional intelligence (the ability to love, for example) of      our human-machine civilization. Our civilization will then      expand outward, turning all the dumb matter and energy we      encounter into sublimely intelligent  transcendent  matter      and energy. So in a sense, we can say that the Singularity      will ultimately infuse the energy with spirit.    <\/p>\n<p>    Kurzweils fantastical vision may in fact belong less to    science than to a kind of humanistic theology, reminiscent of    the last act of George Bernard Shaws 1921 play        Back to Methuselah, where humans become mere    vortices of pure thought. But the goals of power and of    knowledge  understood, in a Faustian way, as a means    to power  are common to the general forecasts of technological    evolution. Infertile people want to have babies, unattractive    people want to be loved by attractive ones, old people want to    live longer and be youthful, sick people want to be cured; all    limitations are to be overcome. And this is not to be thought a    problem, because it is just our nature to overcome any and all    limitations.  <\/p>\n<p>    Again, as with Skinner, there is in Kurzweils ideology    precious little of inwardness. This claim might seem    quizzical, given Kurzweils obsession with maximizing the    pleasures available to consciousness, and his rhetorical    overtures to intelligence, knowledge, creativity, beauty, and    emotional intelligence, not to mention spirit. Yet    inwardness arises from reflection on the self; from struggling    with the challenges the world presents to you and you present    to yourself; from meeting those challenges or failing to meet    them; from working to make sense of them; and from the result    of all these things: the progressive unfolding of the self over    time. Inwardness, then, requires necessities, and    arises in no small part from accepting them and reflecting on    the difficulties inherent in them. Even the outward push to    change the terms of a problem so that it no longer exists as a    problem requires accepting that the change will produce new    problems. This lesson underlies the latent utopianism of the    good-old American pragmatism that directs us forever outward,    solving ever new problems. This sort of utopianism can thus    present itself as  and can indeed mostly just    be  ordinary, sensible, practice.  <\/p>\n<p>    And it is just this fact, that a latent utopianism is already a    matter of ordinary practice in American society, that makes the    intellectual argument about preserving the soul, or the self,    or inwardness, or something about us that is more than just    control of the outside, so very difficult to make today. If one    can no longer insist on the necessity of certain limits, then    dialogue over such matters invariably begins to look like a    rehash of Mark    Twains A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthurs    Court, with the transhumanists as the sensible,    enlightened Yankee, and the traditionalists as the    superstitious, cowardly Merlin. (Indeed, it is striking that in    C.S. Lewiss 1945 novel     That Hideous Strength, his polemic against    the transhumanists of his day  whom he identifies as agents of    the Devil, and to whose think tank he gives the wonderful    acronym of N.I.C.E., the National Institute for Co-ordinated    Experiments  he brings Merlin back from the dead as the    wreaker of divine vengeance, as though he were refuting and    reversing Twain.)  <\/p>\n<p>    The incremental character of the    changes moving us towards the transhumanist horizon is not a    reason for relief but for greater concern. It may seem to be    all very well and good to say that we dont want to go to    Kurzweilian extremes but would just like to improve mans lot    concretely. But it is nearly impossible to stop short when    every further step promises convenience, pleasure, and greater    physical well-being. Once you say, Whats wrong with curing    diseases?, you will be tempted to add, Anyway, isnt a man    with a hearing aid already a cyborg? That is, you will have    taken the stance of transhumanism while defending some humane    application. Moreover, there are always prices to be paid that,    however justifiable, nonetheless become increasingly invisible    as technologies grow and spread, even as that growth means the    prices become ever greater. Thus it is hard to oppose anything    that may result in curing diseases, and techniques that once    seemed very novel and strange, such as replacing defective    organs, become the new normal.  <\/p>\n<p>    But, again, following Marx, at some point quantitative change    becomes qualitative  and qualitative change is the professed    goal of the self-proclaimed transhumanists, who want us to    change into beings entirely different from what we are now.    What is the likely nature of this change? And what is the price    to be paid for technological growth? Among other things, as our    lives become more free and less determined by nature, there is    a certain cost that gets paid in terms of the value necessity    has for us. (As James Boswell purported Samuel Johnson to have    said, if perhaps more pointedly than quite needed for this    discussion: When a man knows he is to be hanged in a    fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully.) At a certain    point, the relation one has to ones self  which is certainly    in large part a matter of ones vulnerable, mortal, finite    body, its moods and appetites and physical capacities, and    these things as they come into harmony and conflict with our    reasons and longings  would necessarily change if it became a    consumer option, one that could be ordered up like a car from a    dealer. Our progress would loosen that relation and ultimately    our sense of our own identity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Virtual reality and     neuroelectronics likewise involve eliminating the    limitations that shape our selves. Aside from the narrow    therapeutic case for virtual reality and brain implants to help    the disabled, the case for these technologies is mainly based    on the satisfaction of desires, the overcoming of boredom, and    maybe even, once our nervous systems are hooked into computers,    increased calculating powers and the ability to multitask like    crazy (in perhaps both senses of the word). We may someday    approach becoming what George Orwell called, in        The Road to Wigan Pier, a brain in a    bottle, a being that can ever more control all its feelings    and outcomes. Todays video gamers arent there yet, but for    those of them who spend most of their waking hours immobile and    immersed in their screens, its not for lack of trying.  <\/p>\n<p>    Today, of course, it is still the case that students need to    get away from video games and get to class, and adults need to    head off to work, at least if they want to graduate or keep    their jobs. But if those requirements can become optional, if    reality and virtual reality become increasingly    indistinguishable, then that Orwellian dreamlike state will    become real  long before such Kurzweilian fantasies as a    single self inhabiting multiple bodies, or multiple selves    inhabiting one body, become real (or virtually real: by that    point there will be no difference). It seems certain that this    indistinguishability would involve a flattening out, or a    relaxation of the tension  to use Nietzsches image of the bow     that constitutes peculiarly human existence. To be sure,    there are challenges in virtual reality, as there are in video    games. But they all have the quality that the late sociologist    Philip Rieff already    notes as present in modern culture: they are heroic myths    enacted as diversions, ironically. They divert boredom from    itself and thereby paradoxically increase it. And while they    do, through this hasty pattern of boredom and distraction, they    simultaneously make it almost impossible to transform the time    on your hands into the leisure required for serious reflection    about the world or the self. This is not only because    distraction has an addictive character, but also because  as    anyone familiar with the phenomenon probably knows  it creates    a kind of feeling of helplessness and despair.  <\/p>\n<p>    As an example, I am struck by the enthusiastic descriptions of    devotees of the computer game World of Warcraft.    Underneath all the Tolkien-esque, quasi-feudal adventure    fantasy apparently lies an utterly mind-numbing program of    bourgeois accumulation of commercial credits, made all the more    tedious by the fact that there are apparently no meaningful    risks in the game: death itself just means starting to    accumulate all over again, and so amounts to less than    bankruptcy. Here is another of the ironies of the transhumanist    tomorrow: we are promised that vaunted ability of    multitasking, but many of the tasks we will be    engaging in will be empty of any meaningful purpose.  <\/p>\n<p>    The contrast between what we are and what the world around us    demands of us, rightly or wrongly, and the question of what we    are from moment to moment as we act and fulfill and betray    ourselves  these make up much of the intellectual life of the    human being. That inner life depends on a fairly clear sense of    the separation between self and world. The absence of this    inwardness, the lack of the capacity for serious    self-reflection, characterizes many of the symptoms of what    psychologists call narcissistic personality disorder. So it is    perhaps not so hard to understand why the incapacity for    serious self-reflection is so often accompanied by a lack of    consideration for others. If the success of transhumanism means    the perpetual expulsion of the self into ever further immersion    into the world, then inwardness would be in peril. However    great our powers could become, would it really be an    improvement for humanity to lose that inwardness, to become    narcissistic? Would that really amount to progress? We would be    very good at doing things to ourselves and to the world  but    ultimately in the name of what, other than the doing of them?  <\/p>\n<p>    For various reasons, the case    against these new utopians has had little effect; few people    seem to see that our technological motion ought to have some    sensible guidance rather than continuing its relentless and    blind inertia forward. In order to strengthen that case, let us    first examine four of the kinds of arguments often leveled by    critics of the transhumanist project  and why each of those    arguments has less effect than it might deserve. First there is    what we might call the practical argument, which seeks    to highlight inconsistencies, contradictions, and other    failings in the transhumanists vision. For example, reviewing    in these pages John Harriss book     Enhancing Evolution (see Beyond    Mankind, Fall 2008), Charles T. Rubin argues that    enhancement will not remain a free choice; or that, if it does,    it will lead to a stratification of society between the    enhanced and the unenhanced that will make the gulf between    Brahmin and untouchable seem like an Elks picnic. Then, he    cautions about Harriss claim that we have a moral obligation    to participate in enhancement research, showing the opening    that Harris allows for experimentation on the non-consenting.    Finally, he examines with some psychological care the likely    consequences of the extension of the lifespan to millennia,    which Harris calls the Holy Grail of enhancement. What would    bodily continuity of multiple personalities over time really    mean? And if it came down to choosing some arbitrary limit to    our lifespan, which Harris calls fair innings and suggests    might be in the realm of 5,000 years, would we be any readier    to go after 4,990 years than after 70?  <\/p>\n<p>    Rubins approach of asking the reader to bring the specific    consequences to mind has the great merit of slowing down the    sense of inevitability for some of the goals of the    transhumanist movement. But it faces the classic pragmatist    response: We can fix that. The transhumanist will confidently    assert that we will somehow work out the practical problems of    near-immortality  after all, if were smart enough to make    those problems, surely well be able to fix them. The effect of    this response is to reinstate the sense of inevitability,    pushing the hard questions further off toward the bright    horizon.  <\/p>\n<p>    The critics second approach is the appeal to    orthodoxy. Here my example comes from political science    professor Robert Kraynak of Colgate University. In a volume    entitled Human    Dignity and Bioethics, published in 2008 by    the Presidents Council on Bioethics, Professor Kraynak has an    exchange with Daniel Dennett, the Tufts University philosophy    professor known for his writings about evolution, the mind, and    atheism.In the     essay kicking off the exchange, Dennett attempts to deal    with the problem that the purely scientific understanding of    human beings tends to loosen our grip on our understanding of    and adherence to morality. And while Dennett is firm in his    contempt for belief in the immortal soul, arguing that there is    no more scientific justification for believing in it than    there is for believing that each of your kidneys has a    tap-dancing poltergeist living in it, he grants that our    belief environment is important for human morale and    shouldnt just be shattered. Thus he is willing to try to    understand what human nature is. Ours is, Dennett writes, the    only species with language, and art, and music, and religion,    and humor, and the ability to imagine the time before our birth    and after our death, and the ability to plan projects that take    centuries to unfold, and the ability to create, defend, revise,    and live by codes of conduct, and  sad to say  to wage war on    a global scale. Somehow, those qualities, when affirmed    reassuringly by life sciences, are supposed to establish the    basis for a humane morality that science needs to respect.  <\/p>\n<p>        Professor Kraynak begins his response by contrasting    Dennetts scientific materialism with his idealistic moral    principles. Dennett claims that the universe has no purpose,    but [that] man still has a moral purpose; if only Dennett had    the humility to recognize that he is actually assuming    something like a rational soul. Then Kraynak draws out, with    great clarity and erudition, the classical Greek account of the    rational soul, and updates it by referring to a contemporary    scientist, Paul Davies, who thinks that nature is directed    toward intelligent life. He then goes on to outline the    Biblical account of man as a rational creature made in the    image of God. His conclusion points to a preference for that    account. Philosophy tells us about the rational soul united to    the body; but religion takes us into the mysterious realm of    the divine image of eternal destiny in each human being.  <\/p>\n<p>    In     his rejoinder, Dennett says that his acceptance of the    rational soul is, contra Kraynak, no problem.    Aristotle is just fine by him, it appears. And then Dennett,    with a certain glee, launches into a familiar attack on    religion, using Kraynaks introduction of the concept of    mystery to claim that Kraynak must believe that freedom    cannot be natural, must be a sort of magical    abridgement of the laws of nature (his emphasis). Dennett here    seems to be misunderstanding Kraynak by conflating his separate    accounts of Aristotelian thought and the Bible into one, and    one might expect that Kraynak would correct this in     his final rebuttal. Instead, Kraynak offers the very    insightful point that Dennetts materialist humanism is ... a    residue of Christian humanism. And he gets later to what it    seems that he really wants to ask: Why is [Dennett] so sure    that belief in the human soul is discredited? And what    alternative does Dennett offer? It seems that Kraynak chooses    to pursue the discussion in terms of the soul, rather than by    taking up Dennetts claim that we can base morality in the    life sciences, because he agrees with Leo Strauss that    between reason and revelation, philosophy and faith,    tertium non datur: that is, there is no    third possibility. To take the clear stand for faith is a    position of great intellectual clarity and integrity. In fact,    it may well preserve the seriousness of a faith which otherwise    becomes diluted to the point of unrecognizability by those who    seek to engage in dialogue with hardline atheists.  <\/p>\n<p>    This choice of revelation over reason was what historically    always characterized orthodoxy. The effect of this choice, as    Strauss observed in     Philosophy and Law, was to create impregnable    fortresses that withstood the tide of the Enlightenment. But if    they withstood the tide, they did not much impede it. In fact,    by a polemic against those silent fortresses, which could by    design hardly be answered by those who were within, members of    the Enlightenment were able to make their cause appear    victimized and heroic. Indeed, as Strauss also said, the    mockery of orthodoxy did not follow upon its refutation; it    was its refutation. And it seems likely that some of    the tart tone of Professor Kraynaks responses to Dennett, a    mocker if ever there was one, is because Kraynak knows that    full well.  <\/p>\n<p>    When it comes to the prospect of transhumanism, however, the    maintenance of a saving remnant in the fortress may not either    be sufficient to answer its attackers, or even be possible. If    the orthodox refuse to accept enhancement, they may simply    become the slaves  or, perhaps worse, the pets  of their    (avowedly) soulless, enhanced former fellows.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dennetts apparent openness to classical views might appear to    provide an opportunity for finding common ground with those    critics of transhumanism who contest philosophically with the    moderns by means of the ancients. This is, in fact,    the third line of argument some critics take up. These are    powerful and compelling Aristotelian arguments on behalf of the    human  and yet there is a worrisome sense that these arguments    are not having the effect they should. One example is Leon    Kasss case for the wisdom of repugnance, the famous yuck    factor argument. It is an attempt to appeal to that substrate    of our humanity that is easily ignored because, as substrate,    it is simply taken for granted, never paid attention to. The    trouble is twofold, however, as Kass and others have themselves    acknowledged from the outset. First, the wisdom of repugnance    is heavily culturally conditioned. It is easy for its    progressive opponents to show, with some moral indignation,    that in previous generations people found interracial marriage    or the eating of raw fish yucky. Why should we, they ask, be in    the least bothered by the fact that certain things offend our    tastes now? Well get used to them. The second problem is that    these critics are in a sense right about that last point     after all, if we couldnt overcome our innate horror of human    cloning (the focus of Kasss original essay) then there    wouldnt be much need to invoke the yuck factor.  <\/p>\n<p>    Properly understood, what the wisdom of repugnance is getting    at is that there is some inarticulate wisdom in our tastes and    that if we reason them away or habituate ourselves against    them, we may well lose what we are. The problem is that this    will have no effect on people who say (to borrow a line from    one of Bertolt Brechts characters), I dont want to be a    human being! Furthermore, the Aristotelian language which    classical philosophy uses is qualitative and as such has a hard    time getting through to people who have absorbed  if not with    their mothers milk, then at least from their high school    science classes  scorn for qualitative language. Such    language, the average educated Westerner thinks, is    superstitious, unscientific, and even embarrassing. It is hard    for him to give the very form of such talk a serious hearing.    Yet the whole argument is precisely about the importance of    qualities, so that mere incremental, quantitatively increased    control over nature can be seen at some point to pose a    qualitative and fundamental problem. It is precisely the power    of Aristotelian thought that it makes us aware of quality, not    just quantity. But it is hard to get past Cartesian prejudices    in making the case that way. Arguments like the wisdom of    repugnance will only persuade  indeed, will only be    intelligible to  those people not scornful of qualitative    language, but they probably dont need convincing anyway.  <\/p>\n<p>    A fourth line of argument, which also has its difficulties, is    the appeal to human dignity. And here, paradoxically, the    problem is one of apparent agreement. It isnt exactly as if    the transhumanists and their critics are arguing about whether    or not there is such a thing as human dignity. In fact, in the    view of the transhumanists, they are advocating enhancing not    just human capabilities but thereby dignity of a sort that many    would still consider human. Taken to its most extreme    conclusion, as in the vision of Kurzweil, man will morph into    the whole of the universe, now made intelligent. That is, our    mission is to become God  whether the Biblical one before He    creates the world or some Platonic deity that moves in a    perfect motion while thinking itself. What greater dignity    could one imagine?  <\/p>\n<p>    Even aside from Kurzweils far-out idea, it is striking that    even at the level of contemporary technology, advocates of the    new science seem to speak as if they believe they are promoting    human dignity. To do this, however, they have to alter older    views of human dignity. For Kant, human dignity meant the    capacity to transcend the merely empirical by the force of    moral will  as when Schiller sees the moral sublime depicted    in the statue of Laocon, maintaining his poise even while    being torn apart by a sea monster. But for the Euthanasia    Societies of Great Britain and America, relief is required from    the indignity of deterioration, dependence, and hopeless    pain. The demand for a dignified death of the body, understood    as a death without suffering, is actually predicated on an    understanding of man that makes the true dignity of suffering    accepted impossible. This is a point made eloquently by Paul    Ramsey in his 1974 essay The Indignity of Death    with Dignity. Ramsey shows that indignity has come to    mean the suffering of the body rather than the defamation of    the spirit. There is a concomitant rise of talk of death as a    natural part of life, along with the proviso that it be as    little unpleasant as possible  the same talk parents give    their children when the family dog is put down  indicating    that our understanding of dignity is becoming more about    ourselves as bodies and less about what is essentially human.    Arguments appealing to older conceptions of human dignity will    fail to convince transhumanists, and may sound archaic even to    non-transhumanists.  <\/p>\n<p>    If these four approaches to    criticizing the transhumanist project are likely to have little    effect, perhaps there may be another way in, via the apparent    contradiction pointed out by Robert Kraynak  namely that    scientific materialists like Daniel Dennett who wish us to    think of ourselves as mere potential for transformation still    somehow cling to a certain moral idealism, at once denying and    affirming human dignity. To draw out this point, we may reflect    on the thought of Michel de Montaigne, a non-utopian humanist.    As David Lewis Schaefer has shown, Montaigne was very    sympathetic to modern science, especially biology and medicine.    But he was also deeply interested in understanding what it is    to be human. Of course, Montaigne is a notoriously cryptic    writer whose     Essays can be read in widely differing ways,    and so what follows is but one possible (but hopefully useful)    interpretation of him.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the third essay of his first book, Our Feelings Reach Out    Beyond Us, Montaigne points out that we human beings are never    simply present with ourselves. We are always elsewhere:    thinking about the future, about how we look to others, about    our past and what it means for our future. We are never in the    moment the way an animal is. (We need self-help gurus to    teach us to live in the moment; dogs always    do.) Montaignes first book of essays explores the implications    of the fact that we self-conscious beings are always both    what we are and what we are not  because in    formulating what we are to ourselves, we are also the    formulator and as such not formulated in the formulation. The    main implication of this idea is for our mortality. Montaigne    engages in what seems to be a spoof of the Stoic opinion that    we can take a rational view of our own death. Even as one seeks    to conceive of the point in time when one no longer exists, one    still implicitly imagines the conceiver as the thing in the    future grasping at its own nonexistence; the conceiver    continues to exist as a given in the mind, and so we fail, and    all the Stoic consolations fail to console.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yet, by the beginning of Montaignes third book, he says that    while he is never at home, he is never far from it. We    may understand the Montaignean project to be about learning how    to come back, to return to the home base of the human    situation, while acknowledging that we cannot stay there    entirely  that we will always, through reason and imagination,    go outwards from it. That is, Montaigne acknowledges the    inevitability of that pressing eternally outwards that we find    in the new science, but he teaches how to return as well. That    this is a lifes project, that it is possible for very few, and    that it is in many ways dependent on an aristocratic life    devoted to contemplation rather than labor, are all true. Nor    can or should we all aspire to become Montaignes. His is a    version, and a rather Socratic one at that, of the philosophic    life, and it is not for most of us. But in Montaignes    understanding that we are always, as human, double  that we    are always problematic in ways that no other being, subhuman or    superhuman, is  there is a starting point for pushing back    against transhumanism.  <\/p>\n<p>    Like the Aristotelian approach, Montaignes also seeks to    reveal and describe the substrate, the part of us that is    essentially human, which we all know about because we are    human. Yet it does so not by using the sort of qualitative    language that Aristotle found appropriate for addressing noble    Athenians, but through psychological observation and specific    examples that are graspable by contemporaries without much    translation from one rhetoric to another.  <\/p>\n<p>    Moreover, Montaignes approach gives an initial answer to that    cheerful historicism of scientific progress which denies there    is such a thing as human nature, and which is happy for us to    transform ourselves in any way that works. That answer is    that, yes, human beings are in part about pushing outwards and    struggling with limits, but we are also inward beings that    reflect on, worry about, imagine about, and at root understand    ourselves in relation to those limits. Indeed, Montaigne    enables us to comprehend at least the bare minimums of    limitation that are necessary for us to function in the world    as humans. Without necessities like death, being one person    rather than another, and doing one thing rather than anything,    life becomes truly dreamlike: a state of being where all    reality is virtual, capable of being changed at will, but where    nothing really tells the will what to change. One student of    mine said that such a prospect caused him vertigo. It is a    different form of nausea than yuck, but it will perhaps do    for starters.  <\/p>\n<p>    In addition, Montaignes teaching about the duality of human    beings perhaps provides a clue as to how to take advantage of    the scientific materialists lingering high-minded moral    idealism. It is one thing to show that their moral idealism    contradicts their materialism. But it might be altogether more    productive to encourage them to think seriously about their    ideals  to ask those who still believe in dignity why they are    so eager to assure us that we are not simply machines for the    accumulation of pleasurable experiences. Perhaps if one could    get past the simplistic Enlightenment propaganda about freedom    of choice and maximization of control, it might be possible to    begin to show how the overcoming of limits is indeed one    element of human dignity, but that therefore they themselves in    the end really want there to be limits.  <\/p>\n<p>    It is worth juxtaposing Montaignes humanism with Leo Strausss    argument, in Thoughts on Machiavelli, that humanism is    impossible because man is the being that transcends himself or    falls below himself. Montaignes humanism seems to begin where    Strausss rejection of humanism is at its most decisive. It is    as though he were to say to Strauss, Your remark makes a    wonderful photograph, but an inadequate movie. You are right;    man is the being who always transcends, so man cannot be the    measure. But man is also the being who always comes back to the    original situation of being in-between, semi-determined, of    seeking through knowledge or control to free himself from    control. Humanism as traditionally conceived  the remaking of    the world to suit man  is, as you say, an impossibility.    Pursued in full seriousness, it will actually produce the    opposite: It will transform man to suit the world, thereby    taking us away from that equivocal, double position that is    characteristically human. But humanism properly understood is    not a project of world transformation but of human    self-understanding.  <\/p>\n<p>    Montaignean humanism is Socratic but differs from Platos    humanism. Montaigne says that, whereas Plato feared our hard    bondage to pain and pleasure because it attaches the soul too    much to the body, Montaigne himself fears it because it    detaches and unbinds it. That is, Montaigne wanted to bring    body and soul together into a whole being: the human being.    Such a humanism can seemingly be (as it traditionally was)    directed against the excesses of spirituality  against a    Christianity that went further even than Plato in denying the    body for the sake of the soul. But it also may be useful    against the excesses of the body, the body theorized and    mutated, the body seeking to transform the world and thereby    transforming itself into mere world.  <\/p>\n<p>    Curiously, from the point of view of the original humanism, the    project of transhumanism looks remarkably    theological. After all, Kurzweils ultimate dream is of men    made into gods. In this it shares much with the modern,    stridently secular humanism that followed Hegels discovery of    God in history. And, perhaps more than any of its predecessors,    the transhumanist vision makes clear what is at least implicit    in all those earlier utopias, even in Marxs apparent    celebration of human emancipation and possibility: namely, how    profoundly hostile such ambitions are to human life  even when    they present themselves as liberating, improving, or merely    assisting it. Human beings, by their very nature, are never    entirely at home in a world of things, much less in a world    ruled by gods. To make the world wholly safe for man, as the    earlier utopian humanisms sought, turns out to be impossible    because man is not univocal and, as Montaigne says, isnt where    he is and doesnt believe what he believes. To make human    beings wholly suitable to the world, and ultimately to make    them merge into each other, all in the name of human    liberation, is in fact to reduce man into a beastly godhead. To    clearly see that transformation for what it is  to see the    degradation in the divinization  we need to remind ourselves    of who we really are and what we really need.  <\/p>\n<p>      Fred Baumann is a professor of      political science at Kenyon College. This essay is adapted      from a lecture given at Colgate Universitys Center for the      Arts and Humanities.    <\/p>\n<p>      Fred Baumann, \"Humanism and Transhumanism,\" The New      Atlantis, Number 29, Fall 2010, pp. 68-84.    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>The rest is here:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.thenewatlantis.com\/publications\/humanism-and-transhumanism\" title=\"Humanism and Transhumanism - The New Atlantis\">Humanism and Transhumanism - The New Atlantis<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Fred Baumann The name of the movement known as transhumanism may suggest that it arises out of humanism. At the very least, it is a descendant of what was once known as humanism, and could be seen as just one more utopian humanism. But the trans is the operative part of the term, and it should be taken seriously.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/transhumanist\/humanism-and-transhumanism-the-new-atlantis\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[15],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-67853","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-transhumanist"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/67853"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=67853"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/67853\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=67853"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=67853"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=67853"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}