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The Abolition of Man

John Gray warns about the dangers of science that attempts to enhance human abilities. He says such knowledge can jeopardize the very things that make us human.

John Gray warns about the dangers of science that attempts to enhance human abilities. He says such knowledge can jeopardize the very things that make us human.

More than 70 years after C.S. Lewis wrote "The Abolition of Man", John Gray argues that Lewis' questions are even more relevant today than they were then. "The scientists of Lewis's generation were dissatisfied with existing humankind" he writes. "Using new techniques, they were convinced they could design a much improved version of the species".

But Gray says that while the scientific knowledge needed to remould humanity hardly existed then, it is rapidly developing at the present time.

He believes that the sciences of bioengineering and artificial intelligence carry serious risks. "If at some unknown point in the future it becomes feasible to remould ourselves according to our dreams" he writes, "the result can only be an impoverishment of the human world".

Producer: Adele Armstrong.

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10 minutes

Last on

Sun 6 Sep 2015 08:48

A Point of View: Is it ever right to try to create a superior human being?

A Point of View: Is it ever right to try to create a superior human being?

People have long dreamed of improving humanity through science, but what results might no longer be human, argues the philosopher John Gray.

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter John Gray
Producer Adele Armstrong

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  • Fri 4 Sep 2015 20:50
  • Sun 6 Sep 2015 08:48

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