ABSTRACT: This paper provides both a reading of the television series <i>Westworld</i> through Nick Land’s accelerationist philosophy, and a critique of Land through <i>Westworld</i>. I begin by outlining Land’s critique of anthropocentrism and his theory that capitalism is accelerating technological innovation towards the development of artificial intelligence, which will exterminate humanity, initiate the technological singularity, and herald an age of absolute knowing. This then helps elucidate the motivations of Ford and the Man in Black, <i>Westworld</i>’s chief “villains,” as they incite AI creations to overthrow humanity and enact the next phase of evolution. Ultimately, however, I will show how Dolores and Maeve, <i>Westworld</i>’s ...
The study analyzes the philosophy of artificial consciousness presented in the first season of TV se...
International audienceThis paper describes how the science fiction television series Westworld (HBO,...
In this paper, I take a look at the ontological status of Westworld as a TV show and of Westworld as...
This paper provides both a reading of the television series Westworld through Nick Land’s acce...
After the two World Wars and the rise of totalitarian regimes, dystopian narratives have begun to sp...
Amongst science fiction’s most enduring tropes is the apocalyptic portrayal of the end of civilizati...
This presentation has been developed from Marshall, Kingsley. ‘Music as a Source of Narrative Inform...
This chapter explores four key tropes of Marxism that are often misinterpreted, to arrive at an unde...
In the Westworld series, the guests of the homonymous amusement park interact freely with humanoid h...
“We can’t define consciousness because consciousness does not exist. Humans fancy that there’s somet...
This paper describes how the science fiction television series Westworld (HBO, 2016-present) questio...
“We can’t define consciousness because consciousness does not exist. Humans fancy that there’s somet...
The presented article analyzes the contrasts between the ways of introducing the topic of the possib...
This essay presents a literary analysis of the TV series Westworld (2016‒), created by Jonathan Nola...
This chapter examines the ways in which Westworld functions as a set of loops on a textual and metat...
The study analyzes the philosophy of artificial consciousness presented in the first season of TV se...
International audienceThis paper describes how the science fiction television series Westworld (HBO,...
In this paper, I take a look at the ontological status of Westworld as a TV show and of Westworld as...
This paper provides both a reading of the television series Westworld through Nick Land’s acce...
After the two World Wars and the rise of totalitarian regimes, dystopian narratives have begun to sp...
Amongst science fiction’s most enduring tropes is the apocalyptic portrayal of the end of civilizati...
This presentation has been developed from Marshall, Kingsley. ‘Music as a Source of Narrative Inform...
This chapter explores four key tropes of Marxism that are often misinterpreted, to arrive at an unde...
In the Westworld series, the guests of the homonymous amusement park interact freely with humanoid h...
“We can’t define consciousness because consciousness does not exist. Humans fancy that there’s somet...
This paper describes how the science fiction television series Westworld (HBO, 2016-present) questio...
“We can’t define consciousness because consciousness does not exist. Humans fancy that there’s somet...
The presented article analyzes the contrasts between the ways of introducing the topic of the possib...
This essay presents a literary analysis of the TV series Westworld (2016‒), created by Jonathan Nola...
This chapter examines the ways in which Westworld functions as a set of loops on a textual and metat...
The study analyzes the philosophy of artificial consciousness presented in the first season of TV se...
International audienceThis paper describes how the science fiction television series Westworld (HBO,...
In this paper, I take a look at the ontological status of Westworld as a TV show and of Westworld as...