Posthuman Personhood
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2013
Summary
Posthuman Personhood takes up the ethical challenge posed by Francis Fukuyama’s work, Our Posthuman Future. Daryl J. Wennemann argues that the traditional concept of personhood may be fruitfully applied to the ethical challenge we facein a posthuman age. He draws upon Wilfrid Sellars’ treatment of the concept of a person within “the manifest image of man in the world.” Sellars proposed that we develop a stereoscopic view of reality that includes both a scientific understanding of the world and a meaningful place for persons living and acting in the world. Following Mary Anne Warren, Wennemann develops a distinction between two meanings of the term “human,” a biological meaning and a moral meaning, and maintains that all (biologically) humanbeings are persons. But, it is not necessarily the case that all personsmust be (biologically) human. After drawing on a contemporary version of Kant’s distinction between a theoretical possibility and a real possibility, the book posits that biologically non-human persons like robots, computers, or aliens are a theoretical possibility but that we do not know if they are a real possibility. Finally, Wennemann describes an ethic of self-limitation for the posthuman age.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2013
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-7618-6103-4
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-7618-6104-1
- Publisher
- Hamilton Books, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 157
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Preface No access
- Acknowledgements No access
- Chapter 1: Welcome to the Posthuman Age No access Pages 1 - 15
- Chapter 2: More Human Than Human No access Pages 16 - 34
- Chapter 3: Distinguishing Distinctions No access Pages 35 - 65
- Chapter 4: The Posthuman Age and PragmaCentrism No access Pages 66 - 92
- Chapter 5: Posthuman Impure Ethics No access Pages 93 - 111
- Chapter 6: The Anthropocene Age No access Pages 112 - 124
- Chapter 7: The PostHuman Predicament No access Pages 125 - 144
- Bibliography No access Pages 145 - 148
- Index No access Pages 149 - 156
- About the Author No access Pages 157 - 157





