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The Disembodiment of Digital Subjects and the Disappearance of Women in the Representations of Cyborg, Artificial Intelligence, and PosthumanThe Disembodiment of Digital Subjects and the Disappearance of Women in the Representations of Cyborg, Artificial Intelligence, and Posthuman

Other Titles
The Disembodiment of Digital Subjects and the Disappearance of Women in the Representations of Cyborg, Artificial Intelligence, and Posthuman
Authors
구연정
Issue Date
Dec-2020
Publisher
아시아여성연구원
Keywords
non-biological thinking; disembodiment; mind uploading; posthuman; relational subject
Citation
Asian Women, v.36, no.4, pp.23 - 44
Journal Title
Asian Women
Volume
36
Number
4
Start Page
23
End Page
44
URI
http://scholarworks.bwise.kr/ssu/handle/2018.sw.ssu/40082
DOI
10.14431/aw.2020.12.36.4.23
ISSN
1225-925X
Abstract
With the expected feasibility of smart technologies of the fourth industrial revolution, various techno-philosophical discourses and representations of human digitization have garnered attention. Examples of this include Mind Transfer (Moravec, 1988) and Mind Uploading (Kurzweil, 2005), which describe robots or computers equipped with human intelligence. This study examines the intelligence-driven logic inherent in the above-stated male-led technology-oriented discourse and clarifies that the information-centric approach to digitized humans tends to reduce the human to its mind and to regard the body as unnecessary. This discourse contradicts Hayles’ pioneering posthuman concept, which defines future digitized humans as material-informational entities (1999). After Hayles, Kurzweil’s idea of digitized humans as “non-biological thinking” seems dangerous, as this concept prioritizes cognition and mental faculty over the body and renders the body meaningless in pursuit of the “transcendent reason/mind.” Such a concept of digitized humans could result in the disappearance of a woman’s identity, based on a “plural and fluid” body that affirms their differences and bodily singularity. This article addresses the erasure of sexual and gender differences, and ultimately, the disappearance of women as problems caused by the vision of anthropocentric and Kantian male-led discourses on human digitization. Further, this article attempts to propose an alternative posthuman concept based on feminist (techno-) philosophical discourses led by Hayles, Braidotti, and Haraway.
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