Pure Human
The Hidden Truth of Our Divinity, Power, and Destiny
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- 54,99 zł
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- 54,99 zł
Publisher Description
In an age where technologies such as AI threaten to supplant human intelligence, an award-winning scientist offers a radical new view of our innate human technology and what we're truly capable of.
There are rare moments in time when we make choices that irreversibly change the world, and our lives, forever. Today is one of those moments.
Scientists, engineers and philosophers alike warn us that without a radical shift in our thinking, we are on track to be the last generation of pure humans that the world will know. Within a single generation we will devolve into a hybrid species of synthetic bodies, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and computer chips that limit our ability to think, to love, and to adapt to the conditions of the emerging world in a healthy way. In doing so we will also lose our capacity for emotion, empathy, intimacy, and forgiveness—the very qualities that we value and cherish in our humanness.
The question that we face is simple: Do we love ourselves enough to preserve the gift of our humanness? Our answer is based upon the way we’ve been taught to think of ourselves.
This book is a compelling journey of self-discovery that will catapult you beyond conventional thinking when it comes to your origins, your limits and, most importantly, the abilities that have been hidden from you for centuries, and the extraordinary potential that awaits as you embrace them.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this pseudoscientific treatise, Braden (Human by Design) contends that humanity is being slowly poisoned by advanced technology. According to the author, the 20th century saw the rise of "transhumanists" who sought to harness "the logic, speed, and efficiency" of technology—for example, by developing mRNA vaccines that "reprogram" the immune system—to perfect the human body with the goal of achieving immortality. Such actions interfere with natural design and stamp out the "imagination, intuition, innovation, and creativity" that makes humans special, Braden contends. In one of many instances of convoluted logic, he uses a kabbalistic system of assigning Hebrew letters to elements that comprise DNA to "prove" that God has "encoded" into humans a message that "our bodies are... biological temples" that technology threatens to spoil. Just as troublesome is the lack of any concrete evidence of the transhumanists' supposed plot to merge "humans and machines into a unified digital landscape called the singularity." This paranoid cri de coeur fails to persuade.