Results for 'technonature'

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  1. Speaking Cyborg: Technoculture and Technonature.Anne Kull - 2002 - Zygon 37 (2):279-288.
    Two ways of self‐interpretation merged in Western thought: the Hebrew and the Greek. What is unique, if anything, about the human species? The reinterpretation of this problem has been a constant process; here I am referring to Philip Hefner and the term created co‐creator, and particularly to Donna Haraway and the term cyborg. Simultaneously, humans have been fascinated by the thought of transgressing the boundaries that seem to separate them from the rest of nature. Any culture reflects the ways it (...)
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    Wider die Technonatur. Rezension von: J. Weber: Umkämpfte Bedeutungen. Naturkonzepte im Zeitalter der Technoscience. Frankfurt a.M. / New York : Campus 2003. [REVIEW]Gregor Schiemann - 2003 - Sehepunkte. Rezensionsjournal für Die Geschichtswissenschaften (2003).
  3.  52
    The Image of God as Techno Sapiens.Antje Jackelén - 2002 - Zygon 37 (2):289-302.
    Suppose there comes a day when Homo sapiens has evolved into or been overtaken by techno sapiens. Will it then still make sense to speak of human beings as created in the image of God? What is the relevance of asking such a question today? I offer a sketch of the present state of development and discussion in artificial intelligence (AI) and artificial life (AL) and discuss some implications for the human condition. Taking into account both reality and fiction in (...)
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    The Cyborg as an Interpretation of Culture‐Nature.Anne Kull - 2001 - Zygon 36 (1):49-56.
    The idea of “nature” performs an important cultural work. The cyborg‐nature is an attempt to free ourselves from the features of the culturally authorized concepts of nature. The cyborg offers new metaphors to both academic and popular theorizing for comprehending the different ways that sciences and technologies affect our lives, subjectivities, and concepts. The cyborg is a lived reality and a metaphor. Paul Tillich deemed it necessary to have a mythos of technology to explain our technologies and ourselves. He offered (...)
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