Critical Humanism. Ken Plummer

Critical Humanism - Ken Plummer


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of his scientific account of what it means to be human. For him, the idea cannot be contested: he takes a strong essentialist line.

      Humanism as transhumanism

      The most well-known contemporary debate about humanity is that it is being enhanced and changed out of all recognition by new technologies. This becomes the challenge of transhumanism. Western Enlightenment ideas (and often secular humanism) evolve to show how new digital technologies, artificial intelligence, space travel, etc. are leading to a new humanity. We are becoming a supercharged, superintelligent, machine-based techno-animal. Transhumanism becomes ‘an intensification of humanism’.56 It leads to better health and a longer life, enhances our capacities, and increases our control over minds and bodies. We have already become quantified, data selves.57 But we have further to go: the machine (and singularity) will take over (and probably rightly so!). At its tipping point, we face superintelligence: machines will move far beyond the level of the existing human being. Today’s humanity will be superseded by the hyperintelligence of transhumanism.

      Humanism abolished: the posthuman

      In this argument, the central modern strategy of humanism is exposed as that of essentialism and racialization. It makes the nonhuman out to be a racialized being, the other. Exemplified in the appalling examples of indigenous peoples, slavery, the Jew and the Holocaust, it can also be found in the worldwide exploitation of lands and people through colonization. Here, large populations of the world have been subordinated (often slaughtered) by the invasion and rule of other (mostly European) countries. It was exemplified in the rise of scientific racism. And right now, often in the name of ‘humanitarian exceptionalism’, conflicts like those in Afghanistan have been waged, creating new dystopias.60 With seeming good reason, this is a growing argument that wants to abandon any kind of humancentric view of the world.

      That said, critical humanism cannot agree with any position whose ultimate conclusion is to announce the death of humanity and the human. I call this the fallacy of the end times. Once we announce the death of man, and the arrival of the posthuman, we are gone. There is little, maybe nothing, more to say about us. We have wished and written ourselves away. We are not here. End of Story. And these accounts ultimately do pronounce, even celebrate, this end of humanity.

      Again, a critical humanist can agree with some of this posthuman analysis. But it argues that posthumanism throws away the baby with the bathwater. Despite its many earlier sins, maybe now we have reached a key time when we can learn to think of the wide interconnectedness of humanity with all life, all things – with the world and the cosmos.

      Moving Humanism On: The Dynamics of Diverse Thought

       We move beyond an exclusive focus on the rationality of Enlightenment thought, to incorporate affect, feelings and bodies: the world is not simply a rational, progressive order.

       We move beyond a Western humanism to a global humanism. The monocultural ideas and structures of the dominant, colonizing and totalizing ‘male’ West need to be transcended by the multiplicities of world cultures, intersectional ties and the plural planet. It recognizes a pluriversal humanity, and the wide relational world of differences.

       We move beyond the religious and secular divide. Ultimately, we are on a journey to perpetually expand all our horizons of thinking about and experiencing the world in many directions.

       We move beyond the idea that science knows all the answers. Yes, science is making great strides in the advance of knowledge. But we need to be cautious of its overreach – it can become a dangerous divisive weapon. Debates about science must always be infused with debates about values.

       We move beyond an uncritical claim for human rights. It is not all good news. It has achieved much, but it has failed too. The same holds for ideas of dignity. As potentially key values for humanity, they need to work in conjunction with a world of other values, especially those of inequality, justice and care.

       We move beyond the idea that enhancing, modifying and developing the human endlessly and excessively (so that it no longer exists) is necessarily a good thing. We have to be cautious about human beings being ‘enhanced out of existence’!

       We move


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