Homo Deus (Q1648)

From Wikibase Personal data
Revision as of 08:36, 2 December 2019 by Genferei (talk | contribs) (‎Created claim: Property:P216: 9781784703936)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No description defined
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Homo Deus
No description defined

    Statements

    0 references
    Humankind's immense ability to give meaning to its actions and thoughts is what has enabled its many achievements.
    0 references
    Homo sapiens gives meaning to the world
    0 references
    Humanity is separated from animals by humans' ability to believe in these intersubjective constructs that exist only in the human mind and are given force through collective belief.
    0 references
    Since the language revolution some 70,000 years ago, humans have lived within an "intersubjective reality", such as countries, borders, religion, money and companies, all created to enable large-scale, flexible cooperation between different individual human beings.
    0 references
    Harari argues that humanism is a form of religion that worships humankind instead of a god. It puts humankind and its desires as a top priority in the world, in which humans themselves are framed as the dominant beings.
    0 references
    Technological developments have threatened the continued ability of humans to give meaning to their lives; Harari suggests the possilibity of the replacement of humankind with the super-man, or "homo deus" (human god) endowed with abilities such as eternal life.
    0 references
    Humankind's immense ability to give meaning to its actions and thoughts is what has enabled its many achievements but this ability is now under threat due to technological developments.
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references