Humans, Animals, Machines

Blurring Boundaries

By Glen A. Mazis

Subjects: Phenomenology, Deep Ecology, Heidegger, Philosophy, Animal Behavior
Paperback : 9780791475560, 286 pages, September 2008
Hardcover : 9780791475553, 286 pages, September 2008

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Table of contents

Acknowledgments
1. Approaching Humans, Animals, and Machines
     Blurred Boundaries
     Where Are the Machines?
     Are Humans Not Animals?
     Are We Not Confused about Definitions?
     Doing Away with Hierarchy Can Preserve Uniqueness
     Ambiguity, Openness to Experience, Phenomenology, and Nondualism
     Embodiment as Cooperation with the Surround
     Meaning-Bearing Matter

2. The Common Ground between Animals and Humans: Prolonged Bodies in Dwelling Places
     The Elusive Boundaries among Humans, Animals, and Machines
     Avoiding Reductive Senses of Overlaps of Humans, Animals, and Machines
     New Ways to See Overlaps and Differences: Living Space and “Understanding” One’s Place
     Animal and Human Worlds and False Boundaries: Heideggerand von Uexküll
     The Lack of an Expanded Sense of Embodiment and Animality in Heidegger
     How Another Sense of Embodiment Opens These Dimensions
     Differing Spaces, Bodies, and Differing Worlds, but Open to Each Other

3. Machines Finding Their Place: Humans and Animals Already Live There
     If Bodies Are Relations to Surrounds, Are Artificially Intelligent Machines Gaining Bodies?
     Embodied Understanding, Movement, and Meaning: Robots and Embodied Artificial Intelligence
     Enmeshed Worlds: Cochlear Implants and Michael Chorost’s Sense of Being a Cyborg
     Making a Cochlear Implant Work and Perceptual Faith, Attention Flow, and Emotional Connection
     Indeterminacy Is Openness to the Overlap
     Plain Machines and How We Are All in This World Together: Humans, Animals, and Machines
     Dangers of Imploded Boundaries and the Need for Ambiguity

4. Drawing the Boundary of Humans with Animals and Machines: Greater Area and Depth
     Can We Even Draw Boundary Lines?
     “The Rational Animal” Using Tools, Speaking, and Passing the Turing Test
     Thinking “Substance” and How It Feels to Meet a Thinker with a Face
     Human Thought Extended by Machines
     Humans Locate and Direct Themselves in Mood, Emotion, Feeling, and Thought
     “We Feel” and the Emotional Valence
     Neural and Material Plasticity and Open Systems
     Brains as Process, Emotions as Integrating, and Selves both Inside and Out

5. Drawing the Boundary of Humans with Animals and Machines: Reconsidering Knowing and Reality
     Juxtapositions, Brain Hemispheres, Brains as Observer/Observed, and the Logic of Yin/Yang
     Quantum Minds and Nondualistic Reality
     Nonlocal Quantum Reality, “Phenomenality,” and Magic in Emotion           
     Imagination, Being Moved, and the Virtual Dimension of Human Life
     The Storytelling Communal Animal, Integrated Brains/Selves, and Human Excellence
     Ambiguity and Boundaries among Networks
     Inside and Outside Ourselves Simultaneously, Freedom, Interbeing
     Humans Witness the World’s Depth in Multivalent Apprehension

6. Animals: Excellences and Boundary Markers
     The Problem of Understanding Animals’ Perspectives from Within
     The Thickness of Animal Perception versus a Reductive Mechanical Model
     Animals and Prereflective, Perceptually Grounded Selves
     Animal Perceptual Sensitivity Meshes with Ecological Niches, Not Human Enclosures
     Instinct as the Life of the Dream
     The Expressive Spontaneity of Animals as Embodied Dialogue
     Animals in the Slower Time We Call Nature

7. Machines: Excellences and Boundary Markers
     Machines and Solid, Impervious Materiality
     Machines, Consistency, and the Time of the Earth
     Machines, Power, Precision, and Machine Beauty
     Machines, Speed, and the Lack of Place for Deeper Time
     Machines, the Arbitrary, and Dissonant, Arrhythmic Time
     Machines as Woven into the Fabric of the Surround

Conclusion: Toward the Community of Humans, Animals, and Machines
     Is There Personhood for Animals and Machines?
     Obligations to Sacrificing Animals and Helping Machines, Good and Bad Persons, and Guardianship
     An Ecospirituality of Humans, Animals, and Machines

Notes
Index

Examines the overlap and blurring of boundaries among humans, animals, and machines.

Description

In the twenty-first century, the boundaries between both humans and machines and humans and animals are hotly contested and debated. In Humans, Animals, Machines, Glen A. Mazis examines the increasingly blurring boundaries among the three and argues that despite their violating collisions, there are ways for the three realms to work together for mutual thriving. Examining Merleau-Ponty, Heidegger, and Haraway; artificial intelligence that includes "MIT Embodied AI"; newer holistic brain research; animal studies; the attachment theory of psychologist Daniel Siegel; literary examples; aesthetic theory; technology research; contemporary theology; physics; poetry; machine art; Taoism; and firsthand accounts of cyborg experience, the book reconsiders and dares to propose a new type of ethics and ecospirituality that would do justice to the overlapping relationships among humans, animals, and machines.

Glen A. Mazis is Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at Penn State at Harrisburg and the author of Earthbodies: Rediscovering Our Planetary Senses, also published by SUNY Press.

Reviews

"…[Mazis] discusses and combines insights from a remarkably wide range of sources such as Buddhist philosophy, cognitive science, ethology, theoretical biology, and more recent AI research. " — Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences

"…what most sets Mazis' work apart from the majority of thought on the shared and distinct capacities of humans, non-human animals, and machines … is his intense interest in the present and potential future of these capacities as opposed to their transhistorical or traditional forms. " — JAC

"This is a book of powerful ideas … it does provoke. That, perhaps, is ultimately its strength. " — Metapsychology

"…this book manages to relate a wealth of initially disparate-seeming material in a thought-provoking way. " — CHOICE

"One of the great virtues of this book is its ability to draw upon different domains—philosophy, artificial intelligence, ethology, psychology, anthropology, and art—and to do so in a rigorous and creative manner. " — Edward S. Casey, author of The World at a Glance