
To Be a Machine
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Narrated by:
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James Garnon
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By:
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Mark O'Connell
About this listen
What is transhumanism? Simply put, it is a movement whose aim is to use technology to fundamentally change the human condition, to improve our bodies and minds to the point where we become something other, and better, than the animals we are. It's a philosophy that, depending on how you look at it, can seem hopeful, or terrifying, or absurd.
In To Be a Machine, Mark O'Connell presents us with the first full-length exploration of transhumanism: its philosophical and scientific roots, its key players and possible futures. From charismatic techies seeking to enhance the body to immortalists who believe in the possibility of 'solving' death, and from computer programmers quietly redesigning the world to vast competitive robotics conventions, To Be a Machine is an adventure in Wonderland for our time.
To Be a Machine paints a vivid portrait of an international movement driven by strange and frequently disturbing ideas and practices but whose obsession with transcending human limitations can be seen as a kind of cultural microcosm, a radical intensification of our broader faith in the power of technology as an engine of human progress. It is a character study of human eccentricity and a meditation on the immemorial desire to transcend the basic facts of our animal existence - a desire as primal as the oldest religions, a story as old as the earliest literary texts. A stunning new nonfiction voice tackles an urgent question...what next for mankind?
©2017 Mark O'Connell (P)2017 Random House Audioutterly fascinating and very well read
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The writing is sharp, witty, sceptical and insightful.
My only criticism is the foul language in places - not needed, adds nothing. Otherwise this is great romp to the future round the corner
Bonkers but Brilliant
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Interesting tour through transhumanism
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Towards the end I started to enjoy the book less as it veered towards case studies of various people. I was reminded of Grand Theft Auto’s Strangers and Freaks levels.
A good vocabulary helps the reader to appreciate the book too... you may not be familiar with words like eschatology.
Anyway, all good stuff and worth a few hours of your life, and don’t worry about the diminishing returns the book delivers as you progress.
Religion meets technology
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The author writes eloquently, and the narrator matches his style perfectly, so that the time spent among the often rather sad characters that he interviews does not feel wasted. We meet, for example, the man who is saving his viriginity for the sexbots that will service his needs when his mind is eventually uploaded into a machine. And then there's the group who implant sensors and switches, complete with painfully leaking batteries, under their flesh as a first step of their transformation into immortal robots.
The irony of people who are dissatisfied with their lives yet want to live forever is one of the running themes of the book.
Well written and read, but not what I expected
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Poetry, Levity, Emotionality, Acuity, Humanity...
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I loved this book! It dives into a world of technology crossing boundaries of human fragility, the physical and psychological. Humourous and sad by times, the author shows enough personality to complement the narrative without skewing it. I will be straight on to look at more titles by him.
Philosophy & the Machine!
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Author drones on as nauseum about himself, I made it to Ch9 at an accelerated speed while performing some basic manual tasks. I made one bkmk for a basic definition of transhumanism.
I've decided to cut my losses on it. I'm usually a suckee for the sunk cost fallacy.
Dull autobiography categorised under cut losses
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