Metaman: The Merging of Humans and Machines Into a Global Superorganism

Metaman: The Merging of Humans and Machines Into a Global Superorganism
ISBN-10
067170723X
ISBN-13
9780671707231
Category
Philosophy (General)
Pages
365
Language
English
Published
1993
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Author
Gregory Stock

Description

In this visionary book, Gregory Stock gives us a new way of understanding our world and our future. He develops the provocative thesis that human society has become an immense living being - a global superorganism in which we humans, knitted together by our modern technology and communication, are like the cells in an animal's body. Drawing on impressive research, Stock shows this newly formed superorganism to be more than metaphor; it is an actual living creature, which he has named "Metaman", meaning "beyond and transcending humans". This name acknowledges humanity's key role in the superorganism but also stresses that Metaman is more than humanity alone. Our increasing reliance on new technologies has joined us inextricably to our technology, while at the same time it has bound humanity together. The examples are all around us: our medical equipment and drugs, high-yield crop strains, superhighways, power and telecommunications networks. All these are part of Metaman. The implications of the new global culture and economy, the evolution of machine intelligence, and the advent of genetic engineering are vast. Through Metaman, life on earth is entering a new phase in its evolution, says Stock. Understanding Metaman tells us that the environmental problems of today are not carrying humanity toward destruction; that war between major powers is unlikely ever to occur again; that technology is not in conflict with the "natural" realm but is an extension of it; and that the very nature of human existence is being redefined, to our benefit. Metaman offers a profoundly hopeful vision of humanity's future. Stock doesn't ignore present-day problems but examines them from a completely newperspective, convincingly arguing that these are flee "birth pains" of Metaman. This is one of those rare books that can change the way we look at ourselves.

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