A "Post-Human" Future?

Many observers recognize that human biotechnologies can pose serious risks to individuals and society. Others embrace a vision of a “post-human” or “transhumanist” future where people will be so dramatically transformed that they are no longer human. While this is a marginal view, transhumanist advocates are vocal proponents of “enhancing” physical and cognitive abilities through genetic modification, implants, and other techniques in hopes of transcending aspects of the human condition including death.


Biopolitical Times

Five years ago, Time magazine published the cover story illustrated at left: Can Google Solve Death? We have an answer: No. At least, not the way they thought they could. That’s a conclusion drawn from a new scientific paper describing a very large study that STAT summarized:

Life span has little to do with genes, analysis of large ancestry database shows

The company that Google set up for this task, Calico, has always been rather secretive and it...

Biopolitical Times

Transhumanist participation in electoral politics often seems like a complete farce, worthy of nothing but laughter. Sometimes, however, the transhumanist vision seems more like a dire warning of disasters ahead if we do not, as a society, change our course.

Zoltan Istvan was the founder of the U.S. Transhumanist Party, and still owns the trademark, though his own most recent run for President was as a Republican. The Transhumanist Party in 2020 nominated Johannon Ben Zion, apparently to...

Aggregated News

The ethical debate about what is now called “human gene editing” (HGE) began sixty years ago. At the time, eugenicist...

Aggregated News

The New York Times recently reported that financier and recently-arrested sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein apparently believes in a philosophical strain called transhumanism.
A woman of color holds a circular glass object in her opened left palm.

Aggregated News

A white baby in a business suit, leans in and points at a laptop screen.

CGS-authored

A male figure places his hands on a see-through digital screen. In the background are DNA strands and highlighted bones in the body.

Aggregated News

Black and white photo of human skull.

Aggregated News

Biopolitical Times
Bird's eye view of six petri dishes.

Aggregated News