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Libertarian transhumanism is a political ideology synthesizing libertarianism and transhumanism.[1] Self-identified libertarian transhumanists, such as Ronald Bailey of Reason magazine and Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit, are advocates of the asserted "right to human enhancement" who argue that the free market is the best guarantor of this right since it produces greater prosperity and personal freedom than other economic systems.[2][3]
[edit] Beliefs
Libertarian transhumanists believe that the principle of self-ownership is the most fundamental idea from which both libertarianism and transhumanism stem. They are rational egoists and ethical egoists who embrace the prospect of using emerging technologies to enhance human capacities, which they believe stems from the self-interested application of reason and will in the context of the individual freedom to achieve a posthuman state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity. They extend this rational and ethical egoism to advocate a form of "biolibertarianism".[1] As strong civil libertarians, libertarian transhumanists hold that any attempt to limit or suppress the asserted right to human enhancement is a violation of civil rights and civil liberties. However, as strong economic libertarians, they also reject proposed public policies of government-regulated and -insured human enhancement technologies, which are advocated by democratic transhumanists, because they fear that any state intervention will steer or limit their choices.[2][4][5] Extropianism, the earliest current of transhumanist thought defined in 1988 by philosopher Max More, initially included an anarcho-capitalist interpretation of the concept of "spontaneous order" in its principles, which states that a free market economy achieves a more efficient allocation of societal resources than any planned or mixed economy could achieve. In 2000, while revising the principles of Extropy, More seemed to be abandoning libertarianism in favor of liberalism and anticipatory democracy. However, many Extropians remained libertarian transhumanists.[1] [edit] CriticismsCritiques of the techno-utopianism of libertarian transhumanists from progressive cultural critics include Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron's 1995 essay The Californian Ideology; Mark Dery's 1996 book Escape Velocity: Cyberculture at the End of the Century; and Pauline Borsook's 2000 book Cyberselfish: A Critical Romp Through the Terribly Libertarian Culture of High-Tech. Barbrook argues that proponents of the Californian Ideology, like libertarian transhumanists, embrace the goal of reactionary modernism: economic growth without social progress.[6] Furthermore, they are unknowingly appropriating the theoretical legacy of Stalinist communism by substituting, among other concepts, the “vanguard party” with the “digerati”, and the “new Soviet man” with the “posthuman”.[7] Dery coined the dismissive phrase “body-loathing” for those in the cyberculture, like libertarian transhumanists, who want to escape from their “meat puppet” through mind uploading.[8] Borsook takes libertarian transhumanists to task for indulging in a subculture of selfishness, elitism and escapism.[9] Sociologist James Hughes is the most militant critic of libertarian transhumanism. While articulating democratic transhumanism as a sociopolitical program in his 2004 book Citizen Cyborg,[10] Hughes sought to convince libertarian transhumanists to embrace social democracy by arguing that:
Klaus-Gerd Giesen, a German political scientist specializing in the philosophy of technology, wrote a critique of the libertarianism he imputes to all transhumanists. While pointing out that the works of Austrian School economist Friedrich Hayek figure in practically all of the recommended reading lists of Extropians, he argues that transhumanists, convinced of the sole virtues of the free market, advocate an unabashed inegalitarianism and merciless meritocracy which can be reduced in reality to a biological fetish. He is especially critical of their promotion of a science-fictional libertarian eugenics, virulently opposed to any political regulation of human genetics, where the consumerist model presides over their ideology. Giesen concludes that the despair of finding social and political solutions to today's sociopolitical problems incites transhumanists to reduce everything to the hereditary gene, as a fantasy of omnipotence to be found within the individual, even if it means transforming the subject (human) to a new draft (posthuman).[11] [edit] References
[edit] External links
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