L’immortalité et ses impatients

The end of mortality due to biological aging is announced, and with it, great upheavals of the human condition, traditionally characterized by its finitude. Transhumanism, either as a futuristic fantasy or a concrete endeavor, is identified as the banner under which biologists, philosophers, geronto...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gabriel Dorthe
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Éditions de la Sorbonne 2015-09-01
Series:Socio-anthropologie
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/socio-anthropologie/2208
Description
Summary:The end of mortality due to biological aging is announced, and with it, great upheavals of the human condition, traditionally characterized by its finitude. Transhumanism, either as a futuristic fantasy or a concrete endeavor, is identified as the banner under which biologists, philosophers, gerontologists or entrepreneurs forge this revolution. This article considers transhumanism primarily as a movement of ideas, in which its activists promote the future of humanity, transformed by technology. Then it shows that the epistemology thus mobilized by transhumanists in their promotion of immortality is guided by an avid curiosity. It is also founded on a cumulative knowledge, which remains inherently patchy. Finally, it proposes to consider transhumanism, not as a fantasy of human omnipotence, but as a fragile trust in latecomers technical objects, traces of a recalcitrant future.
ISSN:1276-8707
1773-018X