Reinterpreting human in the digital age: From anthropocentricism to posthumanism and transhumanism

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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAttribution 3.0 United Stateshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/Tarih
2023Üst veri
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This paper builds its arguments on the (re)interpretation of ‘human’
and its entanglements with nonhumans in the digital age. Since the
concept of humanness has prominently transformed into something
innovative because of immense improvements in science and
technology, and thereby society, terms such as human, nonhuman,
posthuman, and transhuman including cyborgs, have emerged as
concepts that require to be reinterpreted in the digital age. In a planet
where cryptocurrency, artificial intelligence, 5G technology,
autonomous vehicles, quantum computers, genetic engineering, edge
computing, microchips, green tech, and hydrogen fuel cells are
commonly regarded as innovative inventions of the 21st century, the
positions of humans are decentralized and displaced from centralized
to more peripheric spheres. Beginning from anthropocentrism,
broadly defined as a thought process that makes humans the primary
measure of everything, this paper exposes the (trans)formation of
humans from anthropocentricism to posthumanism and
paradoxically from posthumanism to transhumanism by drawing
upon the philosophical discussions of Donna Haraway, Rosi
Braidotti, Cary Wolfe, Francesca Ferrando. By interrogating the
socio-cultural existence of humans through epistemological and
ontological viewpoints, this paper attempts to (re)define the place of
humans in the digital age with a focus on the relationship between
human and nonhuman beings and their entanglements.
Kaynak
Journal of Educational Technology and Online LearningCilt
6Sayı
4Koleksiyonlar
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