The Thin Line: The Arrogance of Seeking to Improve Ourselves
Resumen
The Thin Line: The Arrogance of Seeking to Improve Ourselves is a philosophical meditation on the dangers of transhumanist ambition and the ethical fragility of an era that treats human limitation as a flaw to be engineered away. The article argues that the contemporary drive for human enhancement—through biotechnology, artificial intelligence, and cognitive augmentation—rests on a profound metaphysical error: the conflation of performance with personhood, and efficiency with essence. Drawing on thinkers such as Heidegger, Jonas, Losev, Florensky, and Vernadsky, the essay contends that modernity’s myth of technological mastery conceals a deeper spiritual crisis—the loss of reverence for vulnerability, finitude, and the embodied mystery that has long defined human dignity. Far from neutral tools, enhancement technologies reflect and reinforce a worldview that reduces the human being to a standing reserve of optimisable data. The piece warns that the true peril lies not in machines becoming human, but in humans becoming machine-like: outsourcing judgement, abandoning contemplation, and mistaking calculation for understanding. Ultimately, the article calls for a return to wisdom over optimisation, proposing that the most radical act of our age may be not to surpass humanity, but to remember it—in its fragility, its beauty, and its irreducible capacity for love and wonder.
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