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Transhumanism:
billionaires want to use tech to enhance our abilities – the outcomes could
change what it means to be human
Published:
January 16, 2024 6.47pm CET
Author
Alexander
Thomas
Programme
Leader, Media, Fashion & Communications, University of East London
Disclosure
statement
Alexander
Thomas does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any
company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed
no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Many
prominent people in the tech industry have talked about the increasing
convergence between humans and machines in coming decades. For example, Elon
Musk has reportedly said he wants humans to merge with AI “to achieve a
symbiosis with artificial intelligence”.
His company
Neuralink aims to facilitate this convergence so that humans won’t be “left
behind” as technology advances in the future. While people with disabilities
would be near-term recipients of these innovations, some believe technologies
like this could be used to enhance abilities in everyone.
These aims
are inspired by an idea called transhumanism, the belief that we should use
science and technology to radically enhance human capabilities and seek to
direct our own evolutionary path. Disease, aging and death are all realities
transhumanists wish to end, alongside dramatically increasing our cognitive,
emotional and physical capacities.
Transhumanists
often advocate for the three “supers” of superintelligence, superlongevity and
superhappiness, the last referring to ways of achieving lasting happiness.
There are many different views among the transhumanist community of what our
ongoing evolution should look like.
For example,
some advocate uploading the mind into digital form and settling the cosmos.
Others think we should remain organic beings but rewire or upgrade our biology
through genetic engineering and other methods. A future of designer babies,
artificial wombs and anti-aging therapies appeal to these thinkers.
This may all
sound futuristic and fantastical, but rapid developments in artificial
intelligence (AI) and synthetic biology have led some to argue we are on the
cusp of creating such possibilities.
God-like
role
Tech
billionaires are among the biggest promoters of transhumanist thinking. It is
not hard to understand why: they could be the central protagonists in the most
important moment in history.
Creating
so-called artificial general intelligence (AGI) – that is, an AI system that
can do all the cognitive tasks a human can do and more – is a current focus
within Silicon Valley. AGI is seen as vital to enabling us to take on the
God-like role of designing our own evolutionary futures.
Anti-aging
therapy.
Advanced
anti-aging therapies are one area that could deepen inequality. Africa Studio
That is why
companies like OpenAI, DeepMind and Anthropic are racing towards the
development of AGI, despite some experts warning that it could lead to human
extinction.
In the short
term, the promises and the perils are probably overstated. After all, these
companies have a lot to gain by making us think they are on the verge of
engineering a divine power that can create utopia or destroy the world.
Meanwhile, AI has played a role in fuelling our polarised political landscape,
with disinformation and more complex forms of manipulation made more effective
by generative AI.
Indeed, AI
systems are already causing many other forms of social and environmental harm.
AI companies rarely wish to address these harms though. If they can make
governments focus on long-term potential “safety” issues relating to possible
existential risks instead of actual social and environmental injustices, they
stand to benefit from the resulting regulatory framework.
But if we
lack the capacity and determination to address these real world harms, it’s
hard to believe that we will be able to mitigate larger-scale risks that AI may
hypothetically enable. If there really is a threat that AGI could pose an
existential risk, for example, everyone would shoulder that cost, but the
profits would be very much private.
A familiar
story
This issue
within AI development can be seen as a microcosm of why the wider transhumanist
imagination may appeal to billionaire elites in an age of multiple crises. It
speaks to the refusal to engage in grounded ethics, injustices and challenges
and offers a grandiose narrative of a resplendent future to distract from the
current moment.
Our misuse
of the planet’s resources has set in train a sixth mass extinction of species
and a climate crisis. In addition, ongoing wars with increasingly potent
weapons remain a part of our technological evolution.
There’s also
the pressing question of whose future will be transhuman. We currently live in
a very unequal world. Transhumanism, if developed in anything like our existing
context, is likely to greatly increase inequality, and may have catastrophic
consequences for the majority of humans.
Perhaps
transhumanism itself is a symptom of the kind of thinking that has created our
parlous social reality. It is a narrative that encourages us to hit the gas,
expropriate nature even more, keep growing and not look back at the devastation
in the rear-view mirror.
If we’re
really on the verge of creating an enhanced version of humanity, we should
start to ask some big questions about what being human should mean, and
therefore what an enhancement of humanity should entail.
If the human
is an aspiring God, then it lays claim to dominion over nature and the body,
making all amenable to its desires. But if the human is an animal embedded in
complex relations with other species and nature at large, then “enhancement” is
contingent on the health and sustainability of its relations.
If the human
is conceived of as an environmental threat, then enhancement is surely that
which redirects its exploitative lifeways. Perhaps becoming more-than-human
should constitute a much more responsible humanity.
One that
shows compassion to and awareness of other forms of life in this rich and
wondrous planet. That would be preferable to colonising and extending
ourselves, with great hubris, at the expense of everything, and everyone, else.

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