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More Than Human
by
Dr. Martin Erdmann |
Transhumanism is an
international intellectual and cultural
movement supporting the use of science
and technology to improve human mental
and physical characteristics and
capacities.
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DVD
PRICE R 159.00

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by Dr. Martin ErdmannThe human species can, if it wishes, transcend itself. We need a name for this new belief. Perhaps transhumanism will serve: man remaining man, but transcending himself, by realizing new possibilities of and for his human nature.
Julian Huxley
1st director of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (wrote nearly fifty years ago)
Transhumanism is a word that is beginning to bubble to the top of our prophetic studies and horizon. Simply described, transhumanism is an international intellectual and cultural movement supporting the use of science and technology to improve human mental and physical characteristics and capacities - in essence, to create a "posthuman" society.
This is not a passing fad. Transhumanist programs are sponsored in institutions such as Oxford, Standford, and Caltech. Sponsorships come from organizations such as Ford, Apple, Intel, Xerox, Sun Microsystems, and others. DARPA, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, a technical department within the U.S. Department of Defense is also involved in transhumanist projects.
This briefing pack contains 2 hours of teachings
Available in the following formats
DVD:
- 1 Disc
- 2 M4A Files
- Color, Fullscreen 16:9, Dolby Digital 2.0 stereo, Region 0 encoding (.This DVD will be viewable in other countries WITH the proper DVD player and television set.)
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Transhumanism and the
Enhancement of Man
More Than Human
by Dr. Martin Erdmann
In his
1922 science fiction novel, The
Chess Men of Mars, Edgar Rice
Burroughs describes a Mars whose
inhabitants are so advanced that
they prize contemplation above
all and exist simply as heads.
They have no need for oxygen or
food and move using the bodies
of headless creatures.
Burroughs’s popularity
demonstrates that people enjoy
imagining such fantastic
characters and societies. Many
scientists, doctors, and
philosophers today, however, say
such ideas have ceased to be
fantasy and are now realistic
prospects for the next several
decades.
The Mind Uploading Home Page,
for example, “is dedicated to
the putative future process of
copying one’s mind from the
natural substrate of the brain
into an artificial one,” and
speculates that “...[if mind
uploading were developed], body
manufacturing, sales, and rental
would be a large industry.”1
Human-machine integration is not
simply a dream of the scientific
and academic elite. In recent
years, the concepts of
intelligent machines and
computers manipulating a
person’s mind have become
popular through movies such as
Short Circuit, The Matrix, and
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless
Mind. The 2002 Star Trek film
Star Trek Nemesis proclaims that
to be human is to seek
self-enhancement.
In a world where hugely popular
fantasy movies hold audiences
captivated with their
entertaining capacities, a realm
of posthuman thought is thriving
and fast expanding in both
followers and research.
Widely noticed publications,
such as the NSF/DOC-sponsored
report “Converging Technologies
for Improving Human
Performance”2 and the final
report of the President’s
Council on Bioethics, “Beyond
Therapy: Biotechnology and the
Pursuit of Happiness,”3 have
given close attention to human
enhancement through technology.
From Repair to Enhancement
Cardiology is a strong adopter
of implants, some “dumb” like
stents, some “intelligent” like
implantable defibrillators, some
powerful like artificial hearts.
How-ever, cardiologists
currently use implants
exclusively for repair of
failing organs.
But medicine is no longer
restricted to healing.
Bio-technology’s popular uses
constitute a long list, among
them weight loss, hair growth,
birth control, teeth
straightening, and sex selection
of children.4
Transhumanism takes human
enhancement even further, by
morphing the vision of a perfect
man into a human-machine complex
properly called “posthuman.”
This is an effort to break every
human limitation and redefine
personhood. Nick Bostrom, Oxford
philosophy professor and
co-founder of the World
Transhumanism Association,
writes that posthumans will
realize eternal youth and
health, gain complete control
over their minds and emotions,
and “experience novel states of
conscious-ness” that present
human minds cannot imagine.5
Posthumans may even choose to
discard their bodies in favor of
life as “information patterns on
vast su-per-fast computer
networks.”6
Though this sounds bizarre, many
scientists, doc-tors, and
philosophers call it attainable
within decades. As the
President’s Council on Bioethics
wrote in their final report,
“Beyond Therapy: Biotechnology
and the Pursuit of Happiness,”
bioethics demands a current and
public discussion of “what it
means to be a human being and to
be active as a human being.”7
Asked whether transhumanism
tampers with nature, Nick
Bostrom replied: “Absolutely,
and it is nothing to be ashamed
of. It is often right to tamper
with nature.”8 According to
Bostrom, the attempt to retain
“humanness” would be bad.
Instead, all a posthuman would
need to do is to act humanely.9
Transhumanists distinguish the
value of human life from biology
and creation, and instead place
its value in human ideals and
experiences. This is because
values “come from minds.”10
Since a man’s values are but the
ones he chooses, opting for a
new ethical paradigm would allow
him to redefine all aspects of
life.11
In its “Transhumanist
Declaration,” the World
Trans-humanism Association
affirms “the feasibility of
redesigning the human condition”
in areas including “aging,
limitations on human and
artificial intellects, unchosen
psychology, suffering, and our
confinement to the planet
earth.”12
Converging Technologies
These scenarios and many more
could all become reality in this
century with the proper
investments in technology,
according to a report issued by
the National Science Foundation
and the Department of Commerce
of the United States government.
Titled “Converging Technologies
for Improving Human Performance:
Nanotechnology, Biotechnology,
In-formation Technology, and
Cognitive Science,” the 405-page
report could one day be
remembered as a seminal road map
to the future.
It calls for more research into
the intersection of these
fields. The payoff, the authors
claim, isn’t just better bodies
and more effective minds.
Progress in these areas of
technology could also play a key
role in preventing a societal
“catastrophe.” The answer to
human brutality and new forms of
lethal weapons, it suggests, is
a kind of technology-triggered
unity: “Techno-logical
convergence could become the
framework for human
convergence.”
The report, edited by Mihail
Roco, senior adviser for
nanotechnology at the National
Science Foundation, and William
Sims Bainbridge, acting director
of the Foundation’s Division of
Information and Intelligent
Systems, includes papers
submitted by various
participants as well as an
overview by Roco and Bainbridge.
In the overview, the editors
argue that a host of advances
can be achieved in the next 20
years alone. Among these are
wearable sensors that send
health alerts, much more useful
robots, invulnerable data
networks, and direct broadband
interfaces between our minds and
machines.
The report thinks big when it
comes to peering beyond the next
two decades to the rest of the
21st century. Taking visionaries
such as Ray Kurzweil—“The
Transcendent Man”13—seriously,
it imagines robots so advanced
they may deserve political
rights, building surfaces that
automatically change shape and
color to adjust to the weather,
and the prospect of personality
uploads that make death itself
ambiguous.
Merging human consciousness with
machines is tied to another
nearly incredible concept:
brain-to-brain connections. The
report discusses the possibility
of “local groups of linked
enhanced individuals” as well as
“a global collective
intelligence.”
Transhumanism and Christianity
A large contingent of
contemporary evangelicals has
embraced some aspects of the
technocratic ideals of
Transhumanism and is drawn by
its motivations. They embrace
the belief that Christians are
Christ’s “on-going incarnation
in the world.”
Their new focus is on an earthly
inheritance for the church. In
concrete terms this means that
Christians are called upon to
usher humanity into a new stage
of its existence. Through
individual Christians’ labor,
all the evils in society will
slowly be conquered until they
are no more. Only after the
Kingdom of God has been
established on earth by human
effort, they believe, will the
Second Coming of Christ occur.
The evangelicals who pursue
these and similar goals are
called Dominionists. They belong
to a diverse conglomerate of
movements, covering the entire
theological spectrum of
evangelicalism from the
charismatic Manifested Sons of
God to the neo-Puritan
Reconstructionists.
What is missing in their
thinking is the critical
realization that while
transhumanism aims at posthuman
perfection through technology,
it misses the true nature of
moral “perfection” (progressive
sanctification).
The transformation Christians
should be seeking is not the
physical or psychological
enhancement found in science,
reason, or technology, but
rather the trans-forming work
found only in God’s supernatural
work through His Spirit (2
Corinthians 3:18). Romans 12:2
says:
And be not conformed to this
world: but be ye transformed by
the renewing of your mind, that
ye may prove what is that good,
and acceptable, and perfect,
will of God.
Romans 12:2
This is the ultimate
transformation and the only kind
that can be truly attained with
God’s help in this world. The
goal is the post-judgment
attainment of perfect humanity
in heaven, not the attainment of
full technological perfection on
earth, as a quasi-divine being
(Philippians 3:20-21).
Christians need to be aware of
Transhumanism and its various
forms, but they need not concern
them-selves with seeking
something they cannot and should
not attain—autonomous perfection
in a utopian world society.
Man’s salvation is found only in
the perfect and complete atoning
sacrifice of Jesus Christ and
his promise of eternal life, as
a free gift, to those who
believe in him (Romans 3:23-26;
Ephesians 2:8-9).
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**NOTES**
1.
Joe
Strout,
“Business
and
Travel”,
The
Mind
Uploading
Home
Page.
http://www.ibiblio.org/jstrout/uploading.
2.
Mihail
C.
Roco
&
William
Sims
Bainbridge,eds.,
Converging
Technologies
for
Improving
Human
Per
formance
Nanotechnology,
Biotechnology,
Information
Technology
and
Cognitive
Science,
Kluwer
Academic
Publishers,
2003,
423
pp.
3.
President’s
Council
on
Bioethics,“Beyond
Therapy:
Biotechnology
and
the
Pursuit
of
Happiness”,
Washington,D.C.,
October
2003,
http://www.
bioethics.gov.
4.
President’s
Council
on
Bioethics,
Beyond
Therapy:
Biotechnology
and
the
Pursuit
of
Happiness,
chapter
one,
footnote
three
(October
2003);
http://
w w
w. b
i o
e t
h i
c s
.
gov/.
5.
Nick
Bostrom,
“The
Tra
n s
h u
m a
n i
s m
FAQ,”
#1.2,
World
Transhumanism
Association,
http://www.transhumanism.org/.
6.
Ibid.
7.
President’s
Council
on
Bioethics,
Beyond
Therapy,
chapter
one,
section
two.
8.
Nick
Bostrom,
“The
Tra
n s
h u
m a
n i
s m
FAQ,”
#4.2.
9.
Ibid.,
#4.3.
10.
N i
c k
B o
s t
r o
m ,
“
Transhumanism
and
the
True
Nature
of
Mind:
Creation
and
Discovery!”
World
Transhumanism
Association,
http://www.transhumanism.org/.
11.
Nick
Bostrom,
“The
Tra
n s
h u
m a
n i
s m
FAQ,”
#1.1.
12.
World
Transhumanism
Association,
“The
Transhumanist
Declaration,”
http://transhumanism.org/.
13.
http://transcendentman.com/
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