TY - JOUR
T1 - Transhumanism and the wisdom of old genes; Is neurotechnology a source of future happiness?
AU - Bergsma, A
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Technological progress seems to open ways for redesigning the human
organism. This means that the affective system that is built into the brain by evolution
can be redesigned with intent. One of the consequences will be that the word progress
will get a newmeaning. Progresswon’t be confined to enhancing the conditions of living,
but it will change the way we react to the world. These possibilities are explored
in a new kind of biological utopism called ‘transhumanism’. This school foresees that
a restructured human brain will give rise to ‘more varied experience, lifelong happiness
and exhilarating peak experiences everyday’. This essay considers the reality
value of that expectation in the light of the current psychology of affects, in particular
of presumed functions of hedonic experience. It is concluded that transhumanism
overlooks that happiness will lose its meaning if it is treated as an isolated feeling.
The affective system in our brain needs strong ties with the on-going interaction of
the individual with its environment. Making people happier without enhancing the
grip on their life will be contra-productive.
AB - Technological progress seems to open ways for redesigning the human
organism. This means that the affective system that is built into the brain by evolution
can be redesigned with intent. One of the consequences will be that the word progress
will get a newmeaning. Progresswon’t be confined to enhancing the conditions of living,
but it will change the way we react to the world. These possibilities are explored
in a new kind of biological utopism called ‘transhumanism’. This school foresees that
a restructured human brain will give rise to ‘more varied experience, lifelong happiness
and exhilarating peak experiences everyday’. This essay considers the reality
value of that expectation in the light of the current psychology of affects, in particular
of presumed functions of hedonic experience. It is concluded that transhumanism
overlooks that happiness will lose its meaning if it is treated as an isolated feeling.
The affective system in our brain needs strong ties with the on-going interaction of
the individual with its environment. Making people happier without enhancing the
grip on their life will be contra-productive.
UR - http://grootstegeluk.nl/index.php?option=com_rubberdoc&view=category&id=34&Itemid=73
U2 - 10.1023/A:1010016532529
DO - 10.1023/A:1010016532529
M3 - Article
VL - 1
SP - 401
EP - 417
JO - Journal of Happiness Studies
JF - Journal of Happiness Studies
SN - 1389-4978
ER -