Cyborgs, Legaborgs, Finaborgs, Mediborgs Meet the extraterrestrials - them is us

 Introduction

Discussion of the identity of the modern human being tends to be relatively simplistic, requiring little comment. However the extreme

dependency resulting from industrialization and development has effectively modified that identity in ways of which there is only a limited

degree of recognition. This is an exploration of how the human being has already been effectively transformed into a cyborg through

immediate dependence on technology in daily life -- with the technology becoming an extension of that identity. As argued here, using

"cyborg"as a cognitive template, similar transformations of identity are associated with human dependence on legislation, finance and

medicine -- through which identity is effectively defined.

Whilst cyborgs are a theme of imaginative science fiction, possibly characteristic of extraterrestrials (as with reference to the "Borg

Collective" of Star Trek fame), the perspective to be explored in what follows is that those imagined characteristics are now a feature of

human identity to an unexpected degree. Rather than anticipating extraterrestrials "from elsewhere", development has engendered

"extraterrestrials" on planet Earth -- and "them is us" (adapting the much-cited phrase of Pogo: We have met the enemy and he is us).

Transformation of humans into cyborgs

Cyborg, according to Wikipedia, is an abbreviated expression for "cybernetic organism", namely a being with both organic and

cybernetic parts. The term is often applied to an organism that has enhanced abilities due to technology, notably as actively explored by

the military. The term is already used to refer to a human with bionic, or robotic, implants -- as with current prosthetic applications (Ben

Popper, Cyborg America: inside the strange new world of basement body hackers, The Verge, 8 August 2012). Wikipedia offers sections

on cyborg proliferation in society, in terms of medicine, the military, art, and body modification. It may be understood as human

enhancement. and include powered exoskeletons.

Framed in this way, the transformation of humans is seemingly confined in a very particular manner -- to devices attached directly and

physically to the body, at least semi-permanently. For individuals so directly "enhanced", the appellation may well be (jokingly)

accepted -- as with dentures, spectacles, or even a wristwatch. Much more subtle is the manner through which identity is extended by

the use of technology on which there is regular if not permanent dependence. In this case, the indirect attachment to devices is

primarily psychological, as with regular use of familar tools which need not be attached to the body, even when employed.

Tools of any kind, freely taken up, are well recognized as a means of extending the capacity of a human (Sam Lilley, Men, Machines and

History: the story of tools and machines in relation to social progress, 1948; Teresa McCormack, et al., Tool Use and Causal

Cognition., 2011). Identification with tools is an acknowledged process, although less clear is how identity is (unconsciously) extended

through the use of tools which come to define the person in the eyes of others -- and in their own sense of identity. How artificial is the

boundary between an individual unclothed and one defined through particular clothing, or through a wardrobe of possibilities? Is a person

a larger "complex" when identified with an automobile -- effectively a cyborg? With a weapon?

Arguably there is a spectrum of degrees of attachment by which the common sense of "cyborg"can be usefully extended to encompass

identity extended through expertise in use of tools. When is a tool-user to be distinguished as a cyborg on this spectrum? Interesting

cases are offered by those controlling earthmoving equipment, or the remote control of unmanned aerial vehicles (drones).

The argument applies most evidently in the case of portable communication equipment (smartphones, etc) without which the person may

feel "lost"and "bereft" -- even "undressed". The operating identity of the modern human is increasingly to be identified "through" such

equipment from which disassociation is problematic, most obviously in the case of social networking and the associated online identity.

How much of an individual"™s virtual identity, is "really real" is explored by Tina Indalecio (Exploring Identity in the Virtual World - Is

that REALLY you? Psychology Today, 30 April 2010).

A particular concern in the design of such environments, especially for simulations and video games, is ensuring a sense of telepresence

("virtual presence"). This allows a person to feelas if they were present, to give the appearance of being present, or to have an effect, via

telerobotics, at a place other than their true location. At what stage is such engagement to be understood as a key transition in the

transformation of a human being into a cyborg? This would appear to be a function of the person's dependence on that modality -- on

their identification with it.

The argument that the device can be removed in some way obscures the continuing dependence on its presence as a vehicle for identity.

The individual is no longer to be defined without an array of such devices. Many people are clearly dependent on an array of such

devices in the home -- most evidently the intensive users of electronic equipment.

Intercourse with others may be significantly determined by their enhancements as cyborgs -- if any. Inequality in enhancements may

severely inhabit effective communication. This condition highlights the question of how to engage with an individual independently of

such technology.

The point is well recognized in the case of a face-to-face meeting between persons in which the dialogue is repeatedly interrupted by

electronic communications. However, rather than "interrupted", the dialogue may be understood as between a person enhanced with such

capacities. Removing them to facilitate dialogue would be considered as being as questionable as removing clothing in order to meet "in

the nude" -- although some meetings are specified as requiring people to switch off such equipments. Variants of the issue are evident in

various forms of internet chat and dialogue. The identity of the individual, possibly as an "avatar" is essentially buried in the

communication facilities and what can be expressed thereby. Rather than "cyborg", a more appropriate appellation could well be

"cyberborg". Wikipedia notes that social networking effectively defines a community as a collective form of cyborg -- resembling even

more closely the fictional "Borg Collective" of Star Trek fame.

Playful reference to "extraterrestrials" is appropriate in that it could be readily argued that, enhanced in this way, people are no longer

psychologically "grounded" (Sherry Turkle, Cyberspace and Identity, Contemporary Sociology, 28, 1999; J. R. Suler, Identity

Management in Cyberspace, Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies, 4, 2002). As many have already noted, they are beings of the

technosphere, if not of cyberspace. Their identities are no longer confined to the biosphere and their actual location in some "space" may

be a matter of debate -- possibly to be better understood in terms of non-locality. For individuals unenhanced in this way, the enhanced

are indeed "extraterrestrial".

The effective transformation of humans into cyborgs through medical implants and other prosthetic devices, helps to make the point that

"enhancement" may also be understood as use of technology as a "crutch". In this sense increasing numbers of people are effectively "on

crutches", of which spectacles may be the simplest example. Another simple example is the phenomenon of people using an automobile

to drive a block to a shopping centre -- through loss of ability or desire to walk, or the insecurity associated with exposure on the

roadway. Dependence on air conditioning and heating technology offers another example.

Curiously the process of industrial development may then be understood as the progressive transformation of individuals into cyborgs

Transformation of humans into legaborgs

Whilst recognition of the transformation into cyborgs is readily to be understood, that into "legaborgs" is quite another matter. However,

just as individuals are dependent on and defined by technology, they are also restrictively defined by legislation and the consequent civil

administration regulations. Examples include:

"male"and "female" -- but rarely transexual

"single", "married", "divorced" -- but rarely the intermediary categories through which people are typically obliged to survive

"employed", "unemployed" -- but rarely issues such as "underemployed", "long term unemployed", "bonded labour"and the like

"legal" or "illegal" -- especially as these may apply to immigrants and those "without papers", or "without an address"

"accredited" or "qualified" -- as required with respect to certain professions, or in order to undertake certain activities

"licensed" or "unlicensed" -- as with recognized capacity to drive a vehicle or engage in some practice (as with "accredited")

"criminal" -- as with those convicted of a crime, irrespective of their innocence or mitigating circumstances

These examples may be extended or reframed in terms of religious law or tribal law. In each case engagement with the individual may be

primarily determined by the legal framing -- effectively by the "enhancement"ensured by legislation. Those without "complementary"

legalenhancements may well be severely constrained in their ability to communicate effectively with each other.

The point to be made is that despite recognition of human identity, as framed by the variants of the Universal Declaration of Human

Rights, or because of them, human identity is defined legally -- and subject to legal interpretation. People are enabled to express their

identity through the legalattributes with which they are associated -- and possibly only through those. These may wellextend their

capacities beyond those available to those who are not appropriately "accredited" or "licensed" -- those who have not been legally

recognized as "citizens", for example. Such is the power of this framing, that (for whatever reason) some may even be legally defined as

"non-existent", reinforcing any social tendency to define them as "non-persons". Individuals without the requisite enhancements may well

experience themselves as non-persons.

It is interesting to note how individuals increasingly frame their existence through the network of legal provisions, extended by new

legislation and contractual provisions. They are defined by their "rights". These are enabling "vehicles" through which they can navigate

the network of social relationships. This legally defined network can be seen as corresponding to the electronic network enabling

individuals and groups as cyborgs. There is a profound irony to the possible need to recognize that legal recognition of "human rights"

merits interpretation as being effectively a degree of "instrumentalisation" of the human being. Such a framing is also evident through

legal instruments which effectively define human beings in any way.

The sense of "professional identity"effectively corresponds to that of virtual identity in electronic communication -- as an "avatar". This

may become especially obvious in interaction with the legal system whereby some are left with the overriding impression of the inherent

inhumanity of those with which they have to deal. There may be little sense that a human being lies within those legally enhanced to that

degree.

As with the case of cyborgs, the legal "enhancements"can also be usefully recognized as "crutches". Without them, as with legal

recognition of entitlements, an individual may be severely incapacitated, as is obvious with respect to social security provisions. A legally

enhanced individual is then appropriately to be understood as a "legaborg".

Those that have not been transformed in this way are increasingly unable to function and survive in modern society. Curiously the

process of industrial development, with the legislative support of the "rule of law", may be understood as the progressive transformation

of individuals into legaborgs.

Transformation of humans into finaborgs

Just as individuals are defined (and define themselves) as legaborgs, a related transformation can be observed with respect to financial

enhancements. The identity of people is increasingly defined in terms of their financial status and the dependencies associated with it.

People have financial identities through their tax number or social security number, possibly even an employee identification number.

Membership of many organizations and commercial services may be identified in terms of a number with which financial obligations are

associated. The condition is evident with respect to bank account numbers and the like.

One consequence is that engagement of individual with daily life is through what their financial resources enable them to do. For the

well-endowed, many opportunities present themselves. They can move freely through the financial flows which characterize social

systems. Their identities are not to be understood as disassociated from their wealth which allows them to operate in particular ways.

For the less wellendowed, the ability to function within society is challenged. There are many opportunities which are not open to them.

Worse still is the case of those with very limited financial "enhancement". They face immense problems of survival on a daily basis --

evident in the case of minimum food or shelter.

This suggests that transformation of humans into "finaborgs" is increasingly a necessity for survival on planet Earth. More problematic,

intercourse with others may be significantly determined by their enhancements as finaborgs -- if any. Inequality in enhancements may

severely inhibit effective communication -- or discourage it completely.

As in the case of legaborgs, the sense of "professional identity"effectively corresponds to that of virtual identity in electronic

communication -- as an "avatar". This may become especially obvious in interaction with the financial system whereby some are left with

the overriding impression of the inherent inhumanity of those with which they have to deal. As became obvious during the subprime

mortgage crisis, and the repossession of homes by banks, there may be little sense that a human being lies within those financially

empowered to intervene in that way.

Especially interesting is the manner in which collectives now function. As with the fictionalexample of the "Borg Collective", collectives

are increasingly defined by the financial flows within them (membership, salaries, dividends, profits, investment, and the like). A primary

focus of communication within collectives is now with respect to such financial flows. Beyond the "bean counter"caricature, major

institutions are indeed to be understood through accounting spread sheets. This suggests unexplored possibilities for simulation

(Animating the Representation of Europe: visualizing the coherence of international institutions using dynamic animal-like structures,

2004).

Individuals, as finaborgs, engage with one another primarily in these terms -- effectively through budget line items and the constraints of

blancing accounts. Media reports relating to issues of governance give significant emphasis to these financial issues -- in terms of which

the enhancement or handicapping of individuals and collectives is defined. Discourse in other terms is increasingly of little consequence.

The preoccupation is with the "bottom line"and "at the end of the day".

Again, as with the case of cyborgs and of legaborgs, the financial "enhancements"can also be usefully recognized as "crutches". Without

them, as with recognition of financialentitlements as necessities, an individual may be severely incapacitated, as is obvious with respect

to social security provisions. A financially enhanced individual is then appropriately to be understood as a "finaborg".

Curiously the process of industrialization, with the development of financial systems, may be understood as the progressive

transformation of individuals into finaborgs. Those that have not been transformed in this way are increasingly unable to function and

survive in modern society.

Transformation of humans into mediborgs

To the above examples of human transformation and dependence can be added the ever increasing dependence on medical facilities,

whether in terms of health care more generally, or more specifically with respect to medication in all its forms. This dependence

suggests that humans are increasingly transformed into "mediborgs" -- ironically envisioned in terms of the extreme case of eventual

dependence on life support machines. This is of course a prospect for the elderly, and for those in quest of immortality through

systematic organ replacement.

A point to be stressed is the case of medication. Increasing proportions of the population are dependent on medication, or perceive

themselves so to be. Whether it is an occasional pill, or a complex mix of pills each day, this dependence contrasts with those of human

beings to whom these facilities are not available or by whom they are considered unnecessary. Those enhanced in this might be more

specifically termed "pharmaborgs", as a subset of mediborgs -- although this would not then include those that dependent on "alternative"

or "complementary" medication.

Curiously the process of industrial development, with the development of lifelong health care systems, may be understood as the

progressive transformation of individuals into mediborgs.

As with the cases above, intercourse with others may be significantly determined by the "complementarity" of their enhancements as

mediborgs -- if any. Mismatch in enhancements may severely inhabit effective communication -- as with those required to enhance the

senses (spectacles, auditory devices, and the like). This is notably only too evident in the case of those "on life support".

Conclusion

Convergent evolution? As a consequence of industrialization and modern lifestyles, the development of the above argument suggests a

degree of convergence in human transformation. Thus cyborgs, legaborgs, finaborgs, and mediborgs are on a course of rapid

convergent evolution. The distinctive characteristics are combined into a transformed human, appropriately recognized more generally as

a "borg" -- consistent with the cited account from science fiction.

An alternative framing is of course the affirmation of transhumanism regarding the possibility and desirability of fundamentally

transforming the human condition by developing and making widely available technologies to eliminate aging and to greatly enhance

human intellectual, physical, and psychologicalcapacities.

Instrumentalisation: For the modern citizen of a globalcivilization, the extent to which the evolutionary transformation has already

occurred can be recognized in the degree to which a human is at the nexus of an extensve array of "instruments". Indeed the

transformation may be understood as a process of "instrumentalisation". Unfortunately no estimates are made of the array of technical

instruments, legal instruments, financial instruments, or medical instruments at the core of which the modern human "operates" on a

daily basis.

The number of "instruments" in the toolkit (as more generally understood) of the enhanced human should not be difficult to count.

Observation of the executive of a corporation throughout the day would render this evident through the moment-by-moment dependence

on: technical instruments, legal instruments ("rights", "contracts", etc), financial instruments (accounts, shares, "numbers", etc), and

medical instruments (pacemakers, spectacles, medication, etc).

Imaginative depiction: It is perhaps extraordinary that the imaginative representation of horrific extraterrestrialcyborgs, in the daily diet

of comics strips and videos, may wellconstitute an unconscious depiction of the modern human. This depiction clearly resonates with

the imagination of the young. It may be indicative of a "naive" interpretation of the nature of the world in which the young now recognize

that they are expected to live -- in imitation of their parents.

Ironically it is the images and footage of heavily-equipped "frontline" foot soldiers in the war against terrorism which offer the closest

approximation to depictions of living cyborgs. Such depictions, focusing necessarily on tangible enhancements, are framed as heroically

courageous by military propaganda. The irony is all the greater in that Afghanistan offers insights into the final triumph of the "heavily

under-instrumentalised" -- dependent on a transcendent sense of what it means to be human. This sense might be understood as of

merely token significance to those who have successfully progressed their transformation into borgs.

Socialisation: Understood in this way, "us adults" have indeed transformed ourselves into "extraterrestrials". The young are being

imaginatively groomed to "instrumentalise" themselves in turn -- in an unexplored process analogous to socialisation.

Socialisation, consistent with the cybernetics of cyborgs, is now a matter of "getting with the programme". Development implies

working within one or more programmes by which action and identity are defined. The programme may involve use of technology, legal

obligations, financial obligations, or medical prescriptions -- or possibly some combination of such distinct programmes.

Failure to be "in a programme"can then be construed as a failure of socialisation. An educational programme and a training programme

offer the most typicalexamples -- as with a work programme, or even a prescribed diet. Industrialization requires programmed human

beings.

Problematicimplications: Possible reservations regarding specific "borg mentalities" have been separately considered in a speculative

vein (Beware of Legality, Accountability, Marketability, Security! Be where the Four Hoarsemen of the Apocalypse are not? 2012).

Of particular interest is the possibility of recognizing the exploitation of resources by various forms of borg mentality. The most striking

of these emerges from consideration of the transformation of drivers of automobiles into cyborgs -- through their dependent

identification with the mobility thereby achieved and the manner in which the vehicle is then a symbol of personal identity. The trauma of

"being without a car" offers an indication of the level of dependence -- possibly to be explored as "co-dependence".

The increasing dependence on limited petroleum resources then lends itself to comparison with a form of drug addiction by the emergent

cyborg identity -- consistent with exploration of the oil-drug metaphor (Christopher Bailey, Oil Addiction: diagnosis, not metaphor?

Ecopsychology, 2009). Such dependence may also be compared with the burgeoning fascination with vampire mythology, as

speculatively explored (Global Civilization of Vampires Governance through Demons and Vampires on Spin, 2005). Again the

fascination of the young with this mythology may be indicative of an unconscious recognition of the transformation of parents -- once

they have had "a taste" of the borg modality.

Cognitive "borg cloaking" interfaces: In principle it willcontinue to be possible to recognize the human being "under" the array of

enhancements -- as explored in fictionalaccounts of vampires. However any reframing of their identity as "superhuman", as a

consequence of enhancements, may confirm the sense in which they are as "alien"as "extraterrestrials".

Whilst the relative significance of enhancements may be framed like clothing (which the individual is free to use or not), it is clear that it

will be increasingly impossible for an individual to function in society without these enhancements. The example of clothing is significant

in that in many contexts it is unacceptable for people to appear unclothed, if not forbidden (as reinforced by law). Borg-like enhancement

may become a legal or social requirement -- for survival.

There is some irony to the fact that those "fully enhanced" may come to be regarded controversially as are the fully covered women of

the Islamic tradition (Facism as Superficial Intercultural Extremism: burkha, toplessness, sunglasses, beards, and flu masks, 2009). Will

there be a future call for "liberation" from cognitive exoskeletons -- and condemnation of those who sustain that culture?

Engagement with any "other": The "borg" framing helps to clarify the challenge of the individual to engage meaningfully with the

environment. The case of finaborgs, omnipresent in institutions of governance of every kind, raises the question as to whether their

mode of "spreadsheet discourse" inhibits all usefulengagement -- or transforms it into a kind of "modelling language", fundamentally

divorced from the grounded reality with which many problems are associated and experienced (cf. Uncritical Strategic Dependence on

Little-known Metrics, 2009).

The reverse is also of relevance. How is it possible to engage meaningfully with the human being "within" the finaborg or legaborg

enhancements? Is there stilla human being inside the "cognitive exoskeleton"? Transformation into various forms of borg, may then be

essentially a process of dehumanisation in ways which have yet to be understood. Borgs may be fundamentally alien, as anticipated by

the science fiction account.

Understood as "extraterrestrials", the question of how to "contact" borgs -- and how to "communicate" with them -- is then curiously

anticipated and mirrored by ongoing consideration on whether there are intelligent beings elsewhere in the galaxy (Communicating with

Aliens: the psychological dimension of dialogue, 2000; "Human Intercourse": "intercourse with nature" and "intercourse with the

other", 2007)

Borg legal rights: This human transformation raises interesting legal questions regarding the rights of transformed humans -- following

the arguments regarding the rights of robots, as argued by Sohail Inayatullah (The Rights of Your Robots: exclusion and inclusion in

history and future, Metafuture.org). The question may also be framed more generally in relation to development of artificial intelligence,

greater than that of ordinary humans -- as might follow after the technological singularity (Alex Knapp, Should Artificial Intelligences Be

Granted Civil Rights? Forbes, 4 April 2011).

How does "enhancement" relative to the "ordinary" human being modify "human rights"? Do the rights of significantly enhanced cyborgs,

legaborgs, finaborgs, or mediborgs take precedence over those of the relatively unenhanced? However, as noted, is the legal recognition

(and enforcement) of human rights itself an instance of instrumentalisation and dehumanisation -- rather than the reverse, as is so

frequently upheld?

Alternative modes of human transformation: Clearly the modern emphasis on socio-technicalenhancement according to the "borg

principle", together with possible biologicaladaptations (prosthetics, implants, etc), is only too evident. There is however the intriguing

possibility of a complementary (or independent) psycho-spiritual transformation, as speculatively explored separately (Authentic

Grokking: emergence of Homo conjugens, 2003).

Framed in this way, the various forms of "borg"can be understood cognitively as "conceptualexoskeletons" -- as "languages"

empowered by particular metaphors for engagement with the environment. The languages are then understood as cognitive tools -- as

interfaces or programmes. Such framing language has been described in terms of generative metaphor (Frank J. Barrett and David L.

Cooperrider, Generative Metaphor Intervention: a new approach for working with systems divided by conflict and caught in defensive

perception, Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 26, 1990, 2). Curiously, as emerges from the above argument, these frameworks are

to some degree usefully understood as metaphors of each other.

Integrating conceptual languages: The four varieties of "borg" presented here can be usefully considered as a subset of a larger variety

of borgs (and their associated languages). A larger set might be derived from a separate discussion (12 Complementary Languages for

Sustainable Governance, 2003).

A case is then to be made for integration of the cognitive "tool set", as separately discussed (Enabling a 12-fold Pattern of Systemic

Dialogue for Governance, 2011).

Amuch-cited early integrative exploration of the insights offered by the cyborg metaphor is that of Donna J. Haraway (A Cyborg

Manifesto: science, technology, and socialist-feminism in the late Twentieth Century, 1985), and the commentaries by others on that

framing (Donna Haraway: "A Cyborg Manifesto", 1985): an outline; Carolyn Keen. On Haraway, "Cyborg Manifesto"; 25 years later:

Donna Haraway's "A Cyborg Manifesto", Sentient Developments: science, futurism, life, 25 October 2010). Haraway proclaims herself

to be a cyborg, as noted by Hari Kunzru (You Are Cyborg, Wired Magazine, 5, 1997).

The Manifesto has notably been republished as A Cyborg Manifesto: science, technologiy and socialist feminism,

AnarchoTranshumanism: a journal of radical possibility and striving). Consideration is now given to "cyborg anthropology" by Amber

Case (An Illustrated Dictionary of Cyborg Anthropology) as a way of understanding how people live as technosocially connected citizens

in the modern era -- "with bodies extended into hyperspace".

Recognized as developer of cyborg theory, Haraway offers this as "an ironic dream of a common language for women in the integrated

circuit", noting in her extensive and rich discussion of the metaphor that:

By the late twentieth century, our time, a mythic time, we are allchimeras, theorized and fabricated hybrids of machine and

organism; in short, we are cyborgs. The cyborg is our ontology; it gives us our politics. The cyborg is a condensed image of

both imagination and material reality, the two joined centres structuring any possibility of historical transformation. In the

traditions of 'Western' science and politics -- the tradition of racist, male-dominant capitalism; the tradition of progress; the

tradition of the appropriation of nature as resource for the productions of culture; the tradition of reproduction of the self from

the reflections of the other -- the relation between organism and machine has been a border war. Stakes in the border war have

been the territories of production, reproduction, and imagination.

Through her use of the metaphor, Haraway offers an alternative framing of the problematic issues highlighted above by suggesting that

the cyborg calls for a non-essentialized, material-semiotic metaphor capable of uniting diffuse politicalcoalitions along the lines of affinity

rather than identity.

Hyperconnectvity of borg mentality: This optimistic framing is consistent with the widely welcomed "hyperconnectivity"enabled by

modern communications (Hyperaction through Hypercomprehension and Hyperdrive: necessary complement to proliferation of

hypermedia in hypersociety, 2006). It is however useful to explore the extent to which this "connectivity" (through hyperspace)

across conventional boundaries is acquired at the price of commensurate "deconnectivity" from the grounded reality of the

planetary environment from which a variety of "hyperconnected problems" are currently emerging.

Somewhat ironically, in the light of understanding of the lateralization of brain function, this could be understood in terms of a

breakdown of "globalawareness", as implied by "deconnection" between the hemispheres of the brain (cf. R. W. Sperry, Hemisphere

Deconnection and Unity in Conscious Awareness, American Psychologist, 1968). Thus what is appreciated as "hyperconnected

awareness" may well be dangerously ignoring forms of connectivity with nature and "otherness" -- now relegated by industrial

development and instrumentalisation to the collective unconscious, as might be consistent with the arguments of John Ralston Saul (The

Unconscious Civilization, 1995). As with many issues of environmental degradation, the point is well made by considering the

disconnection between smartphone users and the network of suppliers sourcing the materials required (George Monbiot, My search for a

smartphone that is not soaked in blood, The Guardian, 12 March 2013).

References

Christopher Baber. Cognition and Tool Use: forms of engagement in human and animal use of tools. CRC Press, 2003

Christopher Bailey. Oil Addiction: diagnosis, not metaphor? Ecopsychology, 1, 2009, 3, pp. 154-157

Frank J. Barrett and David L. Cooperrider. Generative Metaphor Intervention:a new approach for working with systems divided by

conflict and caught in defensive perception. Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 26, 1990, 2, pp. 219-239

Tom Boellstorff. Coming of Age in Second Life:an anthropologist explores the virtually human. Princeton University Press, 2010

Elizabeth Burow-Flak. Background Information on Cyborg Manifesto. 17 September 2000 [text]

Nicholas Carr. The Shallows: what the Internet is doing to our brains. W. W. Norton, 2011

Erika Cudworth and Stephen Hobden. Posthuman International Relations:complexity, ecologism and global politics. Zed Books, 2011

Kieran Egan. The Educated Mind: how cognitive tools shape our understanding. University of Chicago Press, 1998

European School of Social Imagination. Mathematical Ferocity. SCEPSIS, 2012 [text]

Kathleen R. Gibson and Tim Ingold. Tools, Language and Cognition in Human Evolution. Cambridge University Press, 1995

K. P. Gravemeijer, R. Lehrer, H. J. van Oers and Lieven Verschaffel. Symbolizing, Modeling and Tool Use in Mathematics Education.

Springer, 2010

Chris Hables Gray (Ed.). The Cyborg Handbook. Routledge, 1995.

Chris Hables Gray. Cyborg Citizen: politics in the posthuman age. Routledge, 2002

Donna J. Haraway:

A Cyborg Manifesto: science, technology, and socialist-feminism in the late Twentieth Century. In: Simians, Cyborgs and Women:

the reinvention of nature. Routledge, 1991, pp.149-181 [text]

Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: the reinvention of nature. Routledge, 1991

N. Katherine Hayles. How We Became Posthuman: virtual bodies in cybernetics, literature, and informatics. University of Chicago Press,

1999

Charles M. Keller and Janet Dixon Keller. Cognition and Tool Use: the blacksmith at work. Cambridge University Press, 2008

Hari Kunzru. You Are Cyborg, Wired Magazine, 5, 1997, 2, pp. 1-7 [text]

Sam Lilley. Men, Machines and History: the story of tools and machines in relation to social progress. Cobbett Press, 1948

Teresa McCormack, Christoph Hoerland Stephen Butterfill. Tool Use and Causal Cognition. Oxford University Press, 2011

Constance Penley and Andrew Ross. Cyborgs at Large: Interview with Donna Haraway. In: Technoculture, Minnesota University Press,

1991

Howard Rheingold. Mind Amplifier:can our digital tools make us smarter? Kindle, 2012

Chela Sandoval. New Sciences:cyborg feminism and the methodology of the oppressed. In: Chris Hables Gray (Ed.), The Cyborg

Handbook, Routledge, 1995.

John Ralston Saul. The Unconscious Civilization. Anansi, 1995

Theresa M. Senft. Reading notes for Donna Haraway's "A Cyborg Manifesto" [text]

R. W. Sperry. Hemisphere deconnection and unity in consciousness. American Psychologist, 23, 1968, pp. 723-33 [text].

J. R. Suler. Identity Management in Cyberspace. Journal of Applied Psychoanalytic Studies, 4, 2002, pp. 455-460

Jeanine Thweatt-bates. Cyborg Selves:a theologicalanthropology of the posthuman. Ashgate, 2012

Sherry Turkle:

Cyberspace and Identity. Contemporary Sociology, 28, 1999, 6, pp. 643-648

Life on the Screen: identity in the age of the Internet. Simon and Schuster, 1997

The Second Self:computers and the human spirit. MIT Press, 2005

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Mystery of Rh-Negative Blood Genetic Origin Unknown

Awareness of EBE Contact

American Airlines Flight 77 Evidence