Transhumanités/Transhumanities

Mis à jour le 14 juin 2013
Journées d’étude dans le cadre d’un projet de partenariat entre
l’université Paris 8 Vincennes Saint-Denis et l’Institut Ewha pour les
Humanités, Séoul, Corée du Sud (Labex Arts-H2H et projet STAR
France-Corée), organisée par Pierre Cassou-Noguès (EA 4008), Claire Larsonneur (EA 1569) et Arnaud Regnauld (EA 1569).
Les 18 et 19 juin 2013
Salle D 143
Genetic engineering and digital technologies do not merely enhance human intellectual and physical abilities. For better or for worse, they may profoundly transform the very notion of what it means to be human. Symptomatically such a metamorphosis of the human may already be perceived in a wide variety of discourses — philosophy, literature, art, technology and cultural theory— addressing, for instance, the issue of individual and group identities, the distinction between our various cognitive faculties, the place of humans in nature. We will focus more specifically on the idea of shifting boundaries : boundaries that technology may displace or blur entirely, boundaries separating humans, animals, and machines, as well as body and mind, the artificial and the natural, the born and the made, reality vs. virtuality. Are we living in a period of transition ? Will technology, or the ideology that it produces, remove and de facto solve the mind/body issue, or even subsume under a single notion the inadequate triangle in which humans, animals and machines have been living since at least the time of Descartes ?
Contact : Pierre Cassou-Noguès (pierre.cassou-nogues@univ-paris8.fr), Claire Larsonneur (claire.larsonneur@univ-paris8.fr), Arnaud Regnauld (aregnauld@univ-paris8.fr)
l’université Paris 8 Vincennes Saint-Denis et l’Institut Ewha pour les
Humanités, Séoul, Corée du Sud (Labex Arts-H2H et projet STAR
France-Corée), organisée par Pierre Cassou-Noguès (EA 4008), Claire Larsonneur (EA 1569) et Arnaud Regnauld (EA 1569).
Les 18 et 19 juin 2013
Salle D 143
Genetic engineering and digital technologies do not merely enhance human intellectual and physical abilities. For better or for worse, they may profoundly transform the very notion of what it means to be human. Symptomatically such a metamorphosis of the human may already be perceived in a wide variety of discourses — philosophy, literature, art, technology and cultural theory— addressing, for instance, the issue of individual and group identities, the distinction between our various cognitive faculties, the place of humans in nature. We will focus more specifically on the idea of shifting boundaries : boundaries that technology may displace or blur entirely, boundaries separating humans, animals, and machines, as well as body and mind, the artificial and the natural, the born and the made, reality vs. virtuality. Are we living in a period of transition ? Will technology, or the ideology that it produces, remove and de facto solve the mind/body issue, or even subsume under a single notion the inadequate triangle in which humans, animals and machines have been living since at least the time of Descartes ?
Contact : Pierre Cassou-Noguès (pierre.cassou-nogues@univ-paris8.fr), Claire Larsonneur (claire.larsonneur@univ-paris8.fr), Arnaud Regnauld (aregnauld@univ-paris8.fr)
Événements passés
18 juin 2013
: 15h54
- 16h54
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Journées d’étude dans le cadre d’un projet de partenariat entre l’université Paris 8 Vincennes Saint-Denis et l’Institut Ewha pour les Humanités, Séoul, Corée du Sud (Labex Arts-H2H et projet STAR France-Corée)
Lieu : Salle D 143