The paper intends to propose a reading of Ian McEwan’s latest novel, Machines Like Me (2019), qua insightful reflection on the topic of Artificial Intelligence and its bearings on different aspects of human life, from interpersonal relationships to moral behaviour. At the same time, the novel also engages in a reflection on the value and the prospects of literature, whose very premises might be called in question in a posthuman context. Set in a 1980s world whose contours radically deviate from historical facts – the atomic bomb was never dropped; Kennedy was not killed in Dallas; the Beatles are still a band; and Alan Turing has survived the conviction for homosexuality and successfully carried on his studies on AI – the novel introduces t...
This book explores what science fiction can tell us about the human condition in a technological wor...
“What makes us human?” Throughout time, people have been preoccupied with this question, believing t...
Adam Wiśniewski-Snerg (1937-1995) was a Polish science fiction writer. In his novel Robot (1973), he...
Fictional narratives concerning science and technology, and specifically science fictionnarratives, ...
As Advanced Robotics and Artificial Intelligence are on the rise, there is the greater importance th...
As Advanced Robotics and Artificial Intelligence are on the rise, there is the greater importance th...
This research paper contributes to speculative fiction creative writing practice through its investi...
From a science-fiction play that introduced the word “robot” over a century ago to a dystopian sci-f...
This thesis investigates the way artificial life in science fiction is used to explore what it means...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the formulation of posthuman subjectivity in contemporary s...
Artificialities: From Artificial Intelligence to Artificial Culture Subjectivity, Embodiment and Te...
The article sketches the philosophical theories of consciousness of the 2010s inspired by neuroscien...
In the landscape of twentieth century science fiction, Philip K. Dick’s 1968 novel Do Androids Dream...
https://www.glass-bead.org/article/machines-and-the-ethics-of-miscegenation/?lang=enviewPublished ve...
Bringing together literary scholars, computer scientists, ethicists, philosophers of mind, and schol...
This book explores what science fiction can tell us about the human condition in a technological wor...
“What makes us human?” Throughout time, people have been preoccupied with this question, believing t...
Adam Wiśniewski-Snerg (1937-1995) was a Polish science fiction writer. In his novel Robot (1973), he...
Fictional narratives concerning science and technology, and specifically science fictionnarratives, ...
As Advanced Robotics and Artificial Intelligence are on the rise, there is the greater importance th...
As Advanced Robotics and Artificial Intelligence are on the rise, there is the greater importance th...
This research paper contributes to speculative fiction creative writing practice through its investi...
From a science-fiction play that introduced the word “robot” over a century ago to a dystopian sci-f...
This thesis investigates the way artificial life in science fiction is used to explore what it means...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the formulation of posthuman subjectivity in contemporary s...
Artificialities: From Artificial Intelligence to Artificial Culture Subjectivity, Embodiment and Te...
The article sketches the philosophical theories of consciousness of the 2010s inspired by neuroscien...
In the landscape of twentieth century science fiction, Philip K. Dick’s 1968 novel Do Androids Dream...
https://www.glass-bead.org/article/machines-and-the-ethics-of-miscegenation/?lang=enviewPublished ve...
Bringing together literary scholars, computer scientists, ethicists, philosophers of mind, and schol...
This book explores what science fiction can tell us about the human condition in a technological wor...
“What makes us human?” Throughout time, people have been preoccupied with this question, believing t...
Adam Wiśniewski-Snerg (1937-1995) was a Polish science fiction writer. In his novel Robot (1973), he...