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Transhumanism: "The World's Most Dangerous Idea" | Philosophy Tube

Philosophy Tube - 2022-04-22

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BIBLIOGRAPHY: https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vQivH0mxKoSJyk3JCndDFLCtjgt2iJfvyGVWDdJcD6ZZOtQvprcw_0KvwLN7c7bqFntzUG8tkmclgae/pub

LOOKS:
Styling by Brian Conway

Hair and Makeup by Nicki Buglewicz

Latex Outfit by Dead Lotus Couture: https://www.deadlotuscouture.com/
(Not sponsored)

Heels by Pleaser Shoes: https://pleasershoes.com/
(Not sponsored)

MUSIC:
Original Music By Nina Richards: https://www.ninarichards.co.uk/

Unfoldment, Revealment, Evolution, Exposition, Integration by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Source: http://chriszabriskie.com/reappear/
Artist: http://chriszabriskie.com/

00:00 - Introduction
02:05 - Part 1
08:40 - Part 2
20:14 - Intermezzo
23:11 - Part 3
32:08 - Part 4

#science #technology #transhumanism

@PhilosophyTube - 2022-04-15

That latex bodysuit was actually surprisingly comfortable!

@andy-kg5fb - 2022-04-22

It looks sooo cool

@DodongoManoof - 2022-04-22

@@andy-kg5fb i agree, that so cool! 😎

@chronic.dementia - 2022-04-22

you look absolutely stunning ❤😭❤

@pieppy6058 - 2022-04-22

Even the arm bands.

@diamonddoge8456 - 2022-04-22

Where do I get one?

@adjoint_functor - 2022-12-13

"The saddest aspect of life right now is that science gathers knowledge faster than society gathers wisdom" -Isaac Asimov

@MirceaLazar - 2023-01-08

Amin!

@101iswhatsup - 2023-01-11

Enter the net..

@GertKlimanschewski - 2023-01-11

This is a great saying ❣️❣️❣️ and I agree 👍
Even if we think and had a great evolutionary development becoming "humans" I think we stay like chimpanzees stood... We have a great lack of social competence & societal empathy . We act in many cases like predators and search 9ur benefits in exploitation of others and ressources too...

@ellenpendergast6481 - 2023-01-14

Yes great quote. Thanks
Sad in SF CA🥲😞

@joeyconsensus6199 - 2023-01-14

@@GertKlimanschewski 1000% Agree with

@neurotransmissions - 2022-04-22

When you did the 360 with the hammer, I was expecting you to say after, "but did you see the dancing gorilla?"

@legendswarble2845 - 2022-04-22

Same lol

@technopoptart - 2022-04-22

all i could think was how impossible it would be for a subset of people to manage given she's showing 180 degrees of latex-covered bum on youtube XD

@UnfortunatelyTheHunger - 2022-04-22

Wasn't it a moonwalking bear?

@capsandnumbers - 2022-04-22

Took my eye off the hammer to do a gorilla check

@ukaszkaminski4405 - 2022-04-22

Same

@satrian - 2022-05-06

One of my favorite writers, William Gibson, said "The future is already here – it's just not evenly distributed" and I think it is all kinds of relevant to this discussion.

@Thedeepseanomad - 2022-05-27

Indeed. But it is not about even that. It is about how we distribute resources to highest benefit and that benefit is preference dependant.
It is a dance of interests and how they might align.

@DeathnoteBB - 2022-06-10

@@Thedeepseanomad No it is about that. The highest benefit would include everyone getting food, shelter, and water.

@Thedeepseanomad - 2022-06-10

@@DeathnoteBB But how much? And what about the other stuff?

@Thedeepseanomad - 2022-06-10

@@DeathnoteBB The question is how much, and what about the other stuff?

@DeathnoteBB - 2022-06-10

@@Thedeepseanomad People have already figured that kind of thing out. The biggest issue is money to fund the distribution, due to us living under the current economic system. The US government has the funds but it puts it towards the military.

@Charredalotte - 2023-12-08

I was born deaf. At 4 years old, I was implanted with a cochlear implant to give me the ability to hear. I very much "needed" cochlear implants to participate in a SPEAKING society. Your point about not needing the internet, but the internet being a necessary technology to participate in society today really resonated. It's this weird thing for me where everyone has adopted the technology of verbal speech, but I needed an extra technology to access the speaking technology.

My implantation was an equivalent of buying an internet plan and being stuck with the provider for life.


I don't regret being implanted (not that I had a choice at 4 years old), and everyday I can choose to not wear my cochlear implants. But, I wear them regardless because it's my way of "seeing" the world. What's a gunman without a gun? What am I without my cochlear implants?

And, before anyone else mentions that living a non-hearing Deaf life is very possible. Yes it is, but one still uses technologies to interact with the speaking world, just different ones.

("technology" mention count: 5)

Abigail, thank you for giving me the tools to understand this better.

@CaelTheWaxAngel - 2023-12-09

I’m also Deaf and had the cochlear implant forced onto me as a young kid. This comment puts a lot of my thoughts on it into actual words. :)

@robertortiz-wilson1588 - 2024-01-23

Using technology as a supplement for an otherwise natural body function in line to the human design is perfectly fine.

Attempting to become inhuman is where it slips off the rails. The failings that can come about when being born into/ living in an imperfect world can be attempted to be alleviated by bringing something back towards its original function/ purpose. To purposefully subvert the body as a whole would be an abomination and inevitably self-destructive.

There’s a firm Higher Moral line beyond human subjectives. We are not God. Only the Almighty.

@sladewilson9741 - 2024-02-09

There's a good Outer Limits episode about everyone having a chip directly tied into the "internet". The people that couldn't get the chip were "disabled". Of course the system ended up turning on everyone connected, but... Same starting point.

@marksargent2440 - 2024-02-16

Hi I am also a Colea ear user its one of the best ways of helping one to hear but I do worry if it could get hacked now with how fast technology is going I just pray Ai don't come to the colea ear implants as I don't want to become controlled via it

@robertortiz-wilson1588 - 2024-02-16

My comment... deleted.

Still... not yet defeated.

Anti-human ideas must be deleted.

@lindsey8669 - 2022-04-22

That facial recognition bit kinda creeped me out! I have ADHD and if my professors were actually judging my participation in class by how attentive a computer/random stranger thinks my face looks, I would be constantly accused of not listening, which sounds awful

@sourgreendolly7685 - 2022-04-22

Same here. I’m less likely to be paying attention if I look like it anyways. Let me fidget or doodle and I can almost recall word for word.

@imageez - 2022-04-23

Literally that gym scene from 1984
"You are not trying"

@rancidprince3133 - 2022-04-23

YES that’s exactly what I thought. That whole time I was just going “this would be AWFUL for neurodivergent people”.

@chada4806 - 2022-04-23

Same

@rosiejl2798 - 2022-04-23

Yup, I'm Autistic and have adhd and my first thought was, this would be a disaster for Neurodiverse ppl. We already face enough discrimination in school and work without AI justifying it. PoC ppl are also negetively effected as often their faces are not recognised as they are not included in the refernece data.

@rruhland - 2022-04-26

The “tools” becoming “invisible” should be very understandable to anyone like myself who wears glasses. I literally can’t function in the world without my glasses, but when they’re on I don’t even think about them. They’re a piece of technology that enhance me to get around my limitations, and I’d imagine that it would never get brought up by the folks whining that UBI is going to lead to transhumanism either.

@phosphenevision - 2022-04-26

left the house without my glasses on accident today to go to the pharmacy, boy was that a long shopping trip, i had to closely inspect half of the store to find what i was looking for because i couldn't see shit lol

@LightandShadow533 - 2022-04-28

Was thinking about the fact I was wearing glasses and don't think about it much all through the segments (and remembering wheel chair users saying similarish things about wheelchairs).

@jdprettynails - 2022-04-28

Such a good example!! Exactly the same with contact lenses. One time, I had just put a fresh pair of lenses in then automatically put my glasses back on without thinking....and freaked out when I couldn't see!

@DeepSeaLugia - 2022-05-03

@@phosphenevision if you have a phone with assistive technologies, some make use of the camera app to magnify images (though it's a real pain when my battery life is short)

@Laurell_Silentshade - 2022-05-04

They are the first thing I reach for when I wake up and the last thing to come off before sleep.

@BecomingHumanAI - 2022-04-23

“I used to think the top environmental problems were biodiversity loss, ecosystem collapse, and climate change.I thought with 30 years of good science we could deal with those problems
But I was wrong. The top environmental problems are selfishness, greed, and apathy.
And to deal with those we need a spiritual and cultural transformation. And we scientist don’t know how to do that.” Gus Speth

@krysbrynhildr - 2022-04-23

Tbf, most people who specialize in the Spiritual or Cultural often have no clue how to do that either. Or sometimes the desire to do so, especially in the case of the first group. Well, above Selfishness, Greed, and Apathy....I personally would put stuff like the Cultural Obsessions with Domination, Ambition, and Maintaining Power over Others higher on those lists. Since thats what the people who are in positions where they could actually make any difference have as vices (branded as virtues of Capitalism and Traditionalism and probably "Communism in any of its 'implemented' forms that ignore the steps that involve a dissolution of the State which is a tool of Capitalist Oppressors actually that is only useful until the oppressors are gone or whatever" too).

We need to move on from tier lists and iron clad hierarchies that force people to get what they "deserve" and only that (if that), we need to move on from this belief that "Deserving" is either Objective in the slightest...Or even a ideal measurement system for solving problems. "Need" based solutions and ways of viewing the world would likely make fixing environmental issues or wealth inequality issues or maybe even criminal justice issues where not everyone gets the same shake or a fair one (while others have enough money or fame to avoid any serious consequences because they're not worth the effort to go after). Honestly it might be the first step to a world where we don't have some of the need for as much enforcement of anything if we could swing it....but changing the viewpoints from Zero Sum or Fear Based Authority or Guilt/Shame Conformity to worldviews where people engage with others through a Sincere Desire to lessen the suffering of others is...well when even most religions that constantly claim an origin in such things lean towards Deserving or Hierarchies of Control or Judgement of Others, yeah I don't know who is equipped to shift how humans view the world and society as a baseline.

@Bluesine_R - 2022-04-23

@@krysbrynhildr That is a very interesting viewpoint. Perhaps you could use a bit fewer capital letters to make your post a bit more readable, Mr. / Ms. One Cat.

@krysbrynhildr - 2022-04-23

@@Bluesine_R Ah, I thought that the use of capital letters might make things clearer due to emphasis. Though I am just a cat, so what do I know?

Well, I'm mostly responding to this because I'm impressed that you were able to decipher the name though, so kudos to you for that.

@Bluesine_R - 2022-04-23

@@krysbrynhildr Haha, no problem!

@averbalin - 2022-04-23

For a while I have begin to think the primary environmental problem is human population in general. While some fancy humans as being an "enlightened" species that has always been an overly optimistic viewpoint.

Take selfishness and greed. Both of these traits are evident in most of what we would call "intelligent" species. Selfishness and greediness both have distinct advantages to a species to ensure survival. It is demonstrated from birth (competition for food and space). It is certainly not an "evil" trait exclusive to humans.

Humans have a species have taken great lengths to both A) increase survivability of offspring and B) prolong natural lifespan through medical care. The problem is that we still carry tendencies baked in over millions of years of evolution. We want to take, we want to consume and we want to procreate.

Unwinding of our very nature is a fantastical idea. Even if we were to completely change our behavior the fact remains that for every human on the planet there is a cost. From birth we impact our environment and I find it highly unlikely that even the most eco conscious individual will ever live a what is now a "normal lifespan" and be die leaving a net ecological credit at the door.

@PennyORadical - 2023-07-10

I love how she says "Angry Canadians" like that's the most wild sci-fi idea so far. I'm Canadian and think we need a basic income program. The homelessness over here is one of Canada's best kept secrets. It's rampant and run-away and killing people at an insane rate compared to our population.

@MM-fy8yx - 2023-08-02

Homelessness in Canada is one of our greatest issues, I agree

@kingjay3370 - 2023-08-08

Imma be honest with you as an American didn't know you had homeless people

@MM-fy8yx - 2023-08-08

@@kingjay3370 most americans dont know much about Canada... Most canadians don't know much about Canada hahah

@kingjay3370 - 2023-08-08

@@MM-fy8yx 🤣

@tothumn - 2023-08-10

Basic income will make homelessness worse. Forcing the homeless into shelters with guards & social workers will treat & reduce the issue. Insane people will attack you for fixing problems though so i guess its a nono. Instead western countries just have to keep feeding and funding the increasing suffering and chaos . I dont know if it can simply be made perpetual or something will eventually break but ... oh wait there is assisted suicide for it now. So le me repharse it, I dont know how many more ways it will keep breaking before the western educated mind can stop being "compassionate" for a moment to actually solve social issues instead of making them worse.

@duskmallow - 2022-04-23

22:30 I love how she lists all these things and then very quickly passes over "borders, prisons, law enforcement" so you almost don't notice it. Even the interviewer seems to completely miss it.
She's so brilliant at creating these terrifying characters.

@lyndonwesthaven6623 - 2022-04-24

I love to see Adelaide and Kelly challenging the Arsonist for the title of PT's reigning monster. Break that glass ceiling, girl boss 👊

@xVmbra - 2022-04-25

omfg, I had to go back there to listen again to catch it. I MISSED IT TOO, that is terrifying by itself lol, how many times does this happen????

@PhosphorAlchemist - 2022-04-25

I love that it's in-character for not only for Kelly's girl-boss persona but also the NYT's (and many other US/ business-positive media) perspective/focus.

@Mzzkc - 2022-04-25

@@PhosphorAlchemist right. I think that was the main point. That feeling of unease/discomfort/terror that everyone gets watching that interview is the exact feeling that "traditionalists" get when they see someone talking about feminism, trans rights, etc and everyone else just going along with it as if there's nothing wrong.

That's why throwing facts and figures at people will never work. So then the question becomes, how do you get someone to move past the feeling that technology and progress is being pushed well beyond their comfort zones?

@kyuokuo - 2023-01-14

@@PhosphorAlchemist gaslight, gatekeep, girlboss, am I right?

@connorthornberg - 2022-04-23

just a fun little fact: the software that Kelly Slaughter talks about is actually real, and I used it in college when designing a puzzle game. we had a bunch of people play the game while recording their face, and then used the software to determine emotional states, mapped to game events. so if someone was getting frustrated, we could know exactly when, and we could know when people were excited or satisfied after solving a puzzle, and which puzzles didn't have that kind of payoff. it was a really useful tool that gave us insight we wouldn't have been able to have otherwise. however, as you can probably tell, this is about the most benign thing you can use this kind of software for. there are a lot more insidious applications.

@dgill441 - 2022-04-23

Sounds also like it is a lot less time intensive than having to do numerous user interviews or going through and analyzing lots of numerical data. I’ve done UX testing research but not at that level! Lol

@pfefferfilm - 2022-04-23

yea, I did that as a short-term job myself (not in the way she describes, nor for Facial Recognition, just AI in general), but to train the Program you need a huge amount of input data, and that's very easy to outsource out to contract employees.
It wasn't a gorgeous job, but it was just as good as a grocery store cashier, say, in my case. Basically I was a computer-human interpreter. I see data that I understand, eg a picture, or a sound bite, whatever, and I turn that into binary data the the computer can understand : type from my keyboard. So like on Facebook (not who I worked for, was more general, but same concept), you see the alt text "Image may contain X, Y, Z" ; my job was exactly how the algorithm is made.
It can be used good (my case, proper..ish salary and such, various levels of human data quality checks, to train Accessibility features), or, the way of Karen Slaughter who's algorithm is not only sketchily sourced, but also has obvious data bias problems.
As an autistic who's face would never show anything typical, this thing sounds terrifying even with proper data diversification.

@AtroposScissors - 2022-04-23

@@pfefferfilm the autistic nightmare... literally I would be called dishonest sm

@rkvkydqf - 2022-04-23

I couldn't find anything specific, but it seems to be a stand in for Clearview AI, and other AI face recognition companies.

@nickscurvy8635 - 2022-04-23

Yes. But to also be very fair this technology has a long way to go before it will even be useful to use nefariously. And there are...fundamental limitations on the nature of its use and effectiveness. A major problem since we made semi reliable object detectors was the adversarial cases. Where an ai was trained to read in that stream of data and detect edges, that stream.of data was made by an ai trained to transform images in a way that obscures the patterns the detector uses, but which isn't apparently visible to a human in the image.

That's a single example. There are a plethora of ways to exploit quirks that these programs form as a consequence of their training. And it'd, while not certain, absolutely possible that our last 100 years of technological growth is about over and tech will plateau. Moores law has broken down. The last 2 generations of chips perform at levels that would have been an embarrassment or a disaster a decade ago.

all these algorithms and technologies were only enabled by the huge increases in transistor density.

Unless there's a discovery that enables us to make smaller transistors or whatever, our technology is about to hit a wall as we are forced to.simply make old designs slightly more efficient or slightly cheaper.

@estherowl8075 - 2022-04-23

A thing I found super interesting from this video is the idea of not noticing a tool until it breaks- it becoming part of you. And this is how the body works too, and is the root of a lot of ableist ideas if you think about it. Most of us don't think about our colons or our hearing or whatever until it goes wrong, and are therefore utterly stunted in empathy for those who have disabilities. Which is to skim over neurodivergence as well- I think we all find it really hard to imagine living life through other lenses than our own.

@quilynn - 2022-04-26

My colon is a tool I use that I am able to forget and it simply becomes a part of me. I'm not just a person who has a colon, I am colonman.

But for real, this makes me think about how I know many people with disability and especially people who have long term illness who talk about their body as being pretty distinctly separate from their self. So they talk about their body as something they have, often their body in opposition to their self, rather their body being a fundamental part of their self. I do something similar because of my ADHD and other mental illness/disabilities: I'll talk about my brain as being separate from myself, like "sorry I didn't catch that, my brain was doing something else".

As much as I am all about the idea that we ARE our bodies, we're not just a mind/brain/soul/self that "pilots" a body or something like that, the way I use language still leans into sometimes talking about my body as being not subject but object. I think it's probably extremely normal and very human to have the capacity to see our bodies as both subject and object.

But it does still bother me the extent to which some people distance their self from their body, and I think this framework might help me understand why they're doing it. If the body is a sort of tool, the ways in which it doesn't function as the person wants can bring that tool into focus, which then puts their subjectivity at a distance from the object, the self at a distance from the body. Just as a broken hammer turns hammerman into man with broken hammer, an ill or disabled body turns a body-person(?) into person with broken body.

And I think that model also can be useful in how I see many people with mental illness in the comments here talk about how medications can align their sense of self. By reducing the degree to which your body feels like a dysfunctional tool, it allows that tool to become more seamlessly integrated into your self. I don't think it matters whether I think my "true self" is either integrated with or at odds with my depression; when I take anti-depressants or do therapy (another kind of technology) I am helping to mend the tool of my mind/brain to be better suited for my needs, so the tool fades into the background and my self integrates easier with it.

I could write so much more but that's enough existential philosophy for me for at least a whole week.

@marcelinenolan6284 - 2023-08-08

16:23 As a disabled person who works with technology every day as part of my life, this concept really hits. Even when I’m in a relatively low neurological state my brain is still able to manage some level of communication through aac tools that I’m used to on my phone. They just flow naturally. It’s also a similar situation with my wheelchair, I do the feather thing where I’m consciously aware of my size and how I can manoeuvre. When something feels off about my control with the ground (ie one of the rear wheels lifting off uneven ground during a push) it’s immediately startling as if I’d just stepped off a ledge where I expected solid ground. The implementation of it into my idea of what my brain perceives goes even further. If someone reaches for or grabs my chair without consent it feels just as shocking as if someone grabbed my physical body and moved me the same. Trans-humanism is already here, technology is already integrated into most people’s lives.

@Empathy4Animals411 - 2023-08-25

Now prove that you're not an AI chatbot.

@marcelinenolan6284 - 2023-08-26

@@Empathy4Animals411 uhhhh ok? I'm literally just autistic if my speech patterns are weird

@robbieboydudeguy - 2023-09-17

⁠@@marcelinenolan6284Oh, I don’t believe that person was being serious or trying to imply you were speaking weirdly—it seems to be a joke (just not a very good one). It’s very interesting that you can compare your wheelchair to feeling like stepping off a ledge at times, I didn’t realize the feeling Abby described could be so acute!

@thejohnreview9650 - 2023-09-25

Usually, when people criticize transhumanism, they mean by it something more than just wheelchairs, medications or hearing aids. Using all this, a human is still a human. Transhumanism, in a strong sense, advocates the creation of a certain "post-human", whose lifestyle will be strikingly different from human, and whose way of thinking will also be radically different from the way of thinking of a person.

@MichaelJohnson-kq7qg - 2023-09-26

Ironically, we were transhumanists before we were us. The first time some pre-human ancestor used a long stick to lift a rock, we'd augmented the limitations of the flesh with technology.

@konstantin8417 - 2022-04-23

21:40 As an autistic person, facial reading software becoming a widespread corporate or governmental tool is a terrifying prospect to me. I do not externalize emotions via facial expressions very much. I'd say that about 80% of the time, my face does not accurately reflect my emotions and feelings to non-autistic people. It's hard enough dealing with that on a private level, but to imagine this being made forced routine? Nope, take me away, aliens.

@vincentmuyo - 2022-04-23

It's not just autistic people, as John Oliver's video on police interviews might show.

It's bunk. It's all bunk.

@katbairwell - 2022-04-23

Oh yes, same, same, same!!

@Thunderyena - 2022-04-23

i am not autistic, but that's the very first thing i thought of, too. "what about autistic people?" there would definitely be problems with relying on facial recognition & especially expressions for so much technology.

@jkr9594 - 2022-04-23

this is without a doubt a problem, but at the moment i am quite optimistic for that technology for myself, because it turns out i look "focused" and "concentrated" literally all the time.

@agburanar5656 - 2022-04-23

@@jkr9594 I apparently look angry or frustrated something like 90% of the time, so I'll probably end up in precrime jail shortly after

@tessy4018 - 2022-04-23

23 minutes in and I just want to say already that as a neurodivergent black person I'm extremely nervous at the idea of companies like XPRS, knowing how badly BIPOC faces are recognised in the first place , especially ppl who are medium and dark-skinned ; without even going into how terrible assumptions based on facial expressions would be for us NDs and the idea of "paying attention" (e.g. for us looking away can often help us focus on what a person is saying).

@magicspell1780 - 2022-04-23

I’m white but also nd and def have the same worries.

@Ithaca-vv5dy - 2022-04-23

I’m white and I think you try too Fucking hard. It’s corny.

@Call-me-Al - 2022-04-23

I'm always grateful for that when I talk with friends and I'm struggling to focus I can just close my eyes while talking and listening and they 100% understand what's going on and take it as intended. Stuff you can't do among normal people who know nothing about neurodivergent people, absolutely especially not law enforcement.

@Ithaca-vv5dy - 2022-04-23

@@Call-me-Al oh god, are you like 12 years old?? Get over yourself. Really.
People like this are fucking bogging down society. There has to be a baseline of function. Stop feeling sorry for yourself

@XenaBe25 - 2022-04-23

Are you American? If so, the thought of that software going mainstream must be terrifying for you. I got a stock tip about 2 years ago, with the big selling point being that the stock was supposed to take off when everybody wants it for use with their security cams. So far, it hasn't done that. So I haven't bought that particular stock. But yeah, I never even considered how tech like this could impact poc.

@pinkopansy - 2022-04-23

facial recognition regarding stuff like "paying attention" was pushed a lot at my university, especially when everything had to be online. it got a lot of pushback from a lot of people and groups on campus, including political groups across the spectrum. also particularly from people who are neurodivergent and/or have anxiety disorders.
if I look nervous during my at home exam is that because I'm worried about being caught cheating or because I'm prone to anxiety inducing intrusive thoughts? if I'm not staring at my exam paper the whole time is that because I'm looking at secret notes or getting help where it's not allowed, or does my brain work in a way that means I can't stare at paper for two hours straight.

Sophie from Mars' video on Cyberpunk 2077 also mentions a lot of good things about transness and disability in relation to transhumanism.

@readyforlol - 2022-04-24

Nobody's brain is wired to be able to stare at paper for two hours straight.

The education system needs to move past that idea.

@trapadvisor - 2022-04-24

Hello future me hello future me also has an amazing video on cyberpunk and transhumanism

@channingdeadnight - 2022-04-24

Including the economic class transhumnism. Now it's cell phones. But once organ cloning and physical and mental tech which will give major advantages to the very very wealthy, will create a two tier society. Just like much of education is today but worse. Why would someone hire someone with chronic health problems from the environment when you can hire someone genetically smarter healthier and better looking. And that is more likely part of the next century. In 200 hundred years we might basically be different species.
The solution for a fair system is replacing capitalism with a more egalitarian system with everyone having access to the same benefits.

@channingdeadnight - 2022-04-24

The first step in true tranhumanism is replacing capitalism

@IndustrialParrot2816 - 2022-04-24

yeah but those don't work on autistic people such as myself because express emotions very diffirently so for example i don't smile when i am happy but i do smile when i am in pain

@aliengeo - 2023-11-09

I think the example of technology changing how I see the world that most resonates with me is glasses. There's the painfully literal interpretation of "seeing," yes, but once you're used to wearing them, it's just part of your face, and some people forget they're there at all, even though you can physiologically see and feel the frame the entire time. Scientifically, it's an assembly of metal and plastic, but I experience it as a component of my body and adjust the "hitbox" of my face accordingly.

@manuelsoares4343 - 2023-12-09

This, I usually joke that I can't "see" myself in the mirror without mine. First cause I can't see myself if I'm more than 40cm away from it. But also I can't see myself without them because whoever that is is not me. dysphoria kicks in whenever I wear contacts. It is not I am the me+glasses.

@gpl992 - 2024-02-21

​@@manuelsoares4343Idk,im also severely myopic but I never feel comfortable with my glasses on and I feel "free" with Contacts in

@rancidprince3133 - 2024-03-07

⁠@@manuelsoares4343 yeah!! My experience of glasses is a bit different from many people’s — I got them as a baby/toddler, so I’ve literally always had them as part of my experience of the world. Getting contacts would be a huge change to how my face has always been, and the idea has always been pretty weird to me when people raise the possibility. It’s like getting rid of one of my facial features

@lightningkiki6090 - 2024-06-25

oh my god I didn't even think about this.

I have glasses. when I scratch round my eyes I have to weave my hands and fingers around my glasses to reach my eyes. The interesting thing is when I don't where my glasses, I still naturally try to dodge my glasses because I essentially see them as part of my body. It's always funny when I do it and then realise they aren't there.

Also when I need my glasses and ask someone to get them for me, I'll often say "Can you get my eyes". Again treating my glasses as if they are a body part. Further to this I'm treating "My eyes" as being my eyeballs and my glasses. without my glasses, my eyes are incomplete

@LeBonkJordan - 2024-06-27

I don't wear glasses, but I've definitely noticed that someone's glasses basically just become a part of their face as far as my brain's facial recognition is concerned.

@jubisisters - 2022-04-22

i had to pause the video and bust out laughing and clap my hands when I realized that as the tech CEO character starts talking about using technology to detect dishonesty, she herself is starting to show those exact signs of dishonest facial movements that the hypothetical tech would detect. Good one, Abby. Love ya

@lordrefaiv - 2022-04-22

Kelly Slaughter is terrifying and so many people that will watch this video, let alone people in the wider world, will not understand the couched language being used. She is brilliantly written, and I think a better representation of the danger of many modern "leaders" than The Arsonist. She almost has herself convinced that she's the hero of this story.

Thank you Abigail. A topic I've always been quite interested in.

@WraithMagus - 2022-04-22

This is literally what goes on any time I rail against NFTs in a forum, and then get a cryptobro to come on and challenge me. "NFTs are good for paying artists" - the artists are being paid a single commission of about $300-$1000 while someone conceals that it's for an NFT, and then turns around and sells it for $30,000 and says the artist has no rights to their own work. "Pay to Earn games are great for 3rd world countries, because they can play games and earn money!" - They've literally invented Cryptocolonialism, where the buy-in to these games is so huge that it takes first-world investors to fund the third-world players who get paid sub-minimum wage and don't get to keep any of the value of the products they work for because the wealthy foreigners own all the means of production. When I point this out, they say it's not crypto's fault that they live in a country that has crushing poverty, it's "the bad leaders who ruined their country's economy" and that "crypto is helping change all that"... The more exposure I have to cryptobros, the more convinced I become they're all sociopaths.

@barb8347 - 2022-04-23

I love the arsonist. Because his skits are scaffolded around the metaphor fascism=fire, they're not so much reality as about reality. It makes for great entertainment and a lasting memory.
But Kelly Slaughter? I've seen her on the news. I've met her. I've heard her voice in my own head sometimes. Her skits come so close to reality it's disquieting.

@purplespectre - 2022-04-23

@@WraithMagus God, don't get me started on NFTs. I have a sister who said I should make art and sell it as NFTs.

@taram1222 - 2022-04-23

Watch the Drop Out, its basically a spoof of Elizabeth Holmes

@disasterjones5798 - 2022-04-23

@@barb8347 I had so many words for how I felt about Kelly Slaughter and you just laid it out in a few sentences. This is exactly it.

@tiffanyfrost3271 - 2023-08-11

“You’ve actually been staring at a great example this whole time,” wow you’re right, my phone! What a great point I had entirely forgotten about the little computer in my hand I was only focused on the… “acrylic nails!” Oh right, that too I guess

@LeBonkJordan - 2024-06-27

and here I was thinking she was wearing contact lenses and was gonna use that as the example
I suppose that's maybe a bit too literal an interpretation of "tech affecting how one sees the world"

@70othl3ss4 - 2024-07-13

This is exactly what i thought

@meghandoyle3110 - 2022-04-23

This reminds me of a conversation I had last year. My professor and I were discussing the future of transportation, and she kept emphasizing how electric cars will solve our energy crisis. I asked why we don't invest in public transportation now to solve the same problem immediately, and not just for those who can afford new cars. She replied that she didn't know anyone who would want to ride the bus. I couldn't convince her that her reasoning was the point of investing in public transportation--to make people WANT to ride the bus. Or that it would still be better even if only to benefit those who don't get the choice of riding the bus.

@Call-me-Al - 2022-04-23

A lot of us in countries/cities with great public transportation systems like riding the bus. I wear an n95 face mask when I do, but buses are quite comfortable and in my culture it's rude to pester strangers so no real risk of anyone trying to chat me up on the bus just because they sit next to me either.

@colleennewholy9026 - 2022-04-23

I liked riding the bus!
The only problem being, that the time tables were messed up

@vincentmuyo - 2022-04-23

Of course you wouldn't want to ride the bus in the US. US city planning is trash and made for cars, for some reason. Even if you could easily have walked given a choice.

@LauraGrrrr5370 - 2022-04-23

In addition to everyone else's comments, why can't we make nice buses, that are on time, and put on extra buses when it's busy? Oh we all know why. $$$$$

@dexterabend8945 - 2022-04-24

Just driving with trains go in the direction of great reset

@broadusthompson1666 - 2023-01-31

The hammer point is actually super interesting, I am a professional blacksmith so a hammer is really an extension of my hand, but so are tongs, I never get to actually touch my work with my bodily hands till its all finished, all my interaction is through augmentations. You learn to treat the hammer and tongs like your hands, I can feel and touch and grab and shove and strike. But one of the wildest experiences is to become very proficient with a sledgehammer, which for one is a much greater extension from your hand, and must by its nature swung with more force AND more confidence. but the real surreal experience comes when someone else calls you in to help with the sledge mid heat, and you walk up, grab the sledge, and without thinking about it, without situating your feet just so, without calibrating your reach, a skilled hammerman can bring that sledge up and immediately strike a target the size of a dime without hesitation. I know exactly where the sledgehammer is and where it will go like it was my own fist.

Also fun fact, Hammerman is a real historic term for the job of being the blacksmith helper who swings a sledgehammer!

@rachelgawrysiakschwister2982 - 2023-05-13

I love how you talk with such passion. You're lucky to have found something to make you feel that way. I'm still searching for mine. But I appreciate this comment a lot. I bet your work is very impressive! Keep up the good work🤙🏼

@craigsiedema - 2023-05-16

I was thinking the same thing about operating earth-moving equipment, especially excavators, I don't think about what the controls do, just where that bucket needs to be.

@MoDotS - 2023-05-18

Didnt know there were blacksmiths anymore (however stupid that may sound), that's so cool

@Taisia-p9l - 2023-07-14

I practice jewelry-making and metalworking as a hobby and your comment really resonated haha. Although with jewelry you get to touch it a lot more, most of the important manipulations come through the use of other instruments - for example, I was taught to use a very thin vertical see-saw (no idea how to translate this stuff in english) to cut out various flourishes and designs on a thin piece of silver manually. When you start out, it is absolutely terrifying how easy it is to accidentally go outside the border of the design and ruin your work so far. When you get proficient, though, you intuitively know the exact angle, speed and force you have to apply to cut out a smooth design. The see-saw becomes an extension of your abilities

@lazilexi - 2023-07-14

@@craigsiedema I have the same experience with the saxophone! i don't think which keys to press or what to do with my mouth, i think about what sound i want to make and just... do it.

@Zandorv - 2022-04-24

As someone with severe ADHD the part of this about the "core self" was very interesting to me, because I do consider my ADHD a part of my core self and I don't really consider it a disability, but I still take medications to alter that state in order to function in a world that isn't suited for me. I feel like I sacrifice a part of myself in order to do things like hold a steady job and give semi-consistent effort. I certainly don't feel like I as an individual got to really decide what about myself I wanted "augmented"

@slime7390 - 2022-04-24

i feel this way about my depressive disorder ! i know it isnt healthy for me to be in a depressive state, but only because i NEED to be able to hold a job and stuff. i struggle so much with making art and being inspired when im not lacking serotonin and i feel like im missing a part of myself or that ive given it up so i can make $13 an hour ya know ? there are some symptoms im grateful are taken care of by meds but man. it doesnt feel the same !!

@gloomyeyes1527 - 2022-04-24

Yeah, I've really always felt this way about my disability, and also my body. As someone who is transgender, the idea of transhumanism is appealing to me, but where do I draw the line regarding what is my "core self"? Is my body mine and simply one that I ought to improve upon? Or am I in the "wrong body" and one that needs significant changes in order to keep my mental health at an okay level? I tend to stick with the former idea, as it helps my dysphoria knowing that my body is a work-in-progress that can look more "feminine" according to societies standard, but conversely, the idea of slight body modifications like tattoos, piercings -- and ofc hormones for physical transition -- are really appealing, and I suppose those modifications would be transhumanism.

@currentquiet9591 - 2022-04-25

It changes day by day for me. Sometimes I view my brain and "me" as two very different things, even though that makes no sense it feels right. I'm still trying to better understand my ADHD and other mental stuff so I still tie all that stuff to my brain, maybe as a way of creating a scapegoat or trying to avoid that part of myself. Granted usually I think that much more strongly when I'm stressed or annoyed with my mental illness. Idk I still think some part of a partitioned self really resonates with me

@karkatvantass3730 - 2022-04-25

@@currentquiet9591 I'm very similar in the mental health department. I've basically never been medicated for ADHD, so it's been a part of me and how I function for my whole life. Which means it's very much who I am. I've always viewed life through an ADHD lens. But it's sometimes not "me" in the instances where it comes in the way of how I want to express myself or do something. Big example for me is communication. English is my native language but it feels like it's a second. I often cannot communicate ideas in the way my brain had processed it. In those moments I view ADHD as a disability hindering the "me", and as an entity separate. Ya know like I'm not noticing the hammer till I accidentally hammered my hand. Even so I'm still hammerman. That is "me".

@mouse9831 - 2022-04-25

Just wanted to say, OP, you're not alone. It feels like giving up a part of myself, not all of which is negative, to function. When I'm on my meds I'm slower, but stable. Though the ability to organize, prioritize, and have overall clearer thoughts is lovely. :)

@WhyseWytch - 2023-10-25

As one born with a connective tissue disorder, clicking this video both terrified me and filled me with curiosity. I have often examined the pros and cons of chasing perfection. I can see how advances in technology have allowed me to live longer. Without my heart surgery in my 20s, I'd be dead long before now.

On the other hand, my mother had her feet operated on in the 70s. I don't think I need to say how badly that served her in the long term; rather, I should say, that isn't my story to tell.

It's a huge subject that I still haven't completely made my mind up about.

@dovydasvaiksnys3807 - 2023-12-10

I think what's important for you to understand is that you shouldn't waste your time wondering which side you on. As you said - you wouldn't be alive without it. So that says everything here then - if you truly believe technology saved your life. That version of you who thinks technology is bad wouldn't have taken that operation and would have chose death. So you made your decision long ago, and as they say in matrix movie - now you got to figure out why. Or just don't bother even asking and enjoy the longer life you were gifted or cursed with - all depends what you make out of it now....

@WhyseWytch - 2023-12-10

@@dovydasvaiksnys3807 Well said!

@dovydasvaiksnys3807 - 2023-12-10

@WhyseWytch  thank you. Although I must say - wouldn't have this perspective if I myself wouldn't be going through and battling same emotions. The need to fit in and be good feels more like a job I didn't subscribe to myself, but rather a challenge I was given to overcome. If that makes any sense... or maybe I did but just can't remember when and why

@WhyseWytch - 2023-12-10

@@dovydasvaiksnys3807 Depending on your metaphysical preference, that second part is entirely probable. And, I do agree that humaning is difficult. Suffering is one of the few ways to gain true empathy-- I know that's a spicy take, but it has been very true in my own life. I hope everyone here finds the solace and respite so badly needed in existence.

@katbairwell - 2022-04-23

As a disabled person who uses crutches, wheelchairs, hearing aids, and yes eye glasses, transhumanism and the debates around it are utterly fascinating. This is by far the best understanding of the subject I have been offered - thank you Abi! Oh and lady, that latex suit was.... phew I needed to open a window, the temperature rose in this house by quite.a few degrees!!

@JoshuaGoudreau - 2022-04-24

As a fellow disabled person who can't go any places without a cane or the opportunity to sit down fairly frequently as well as having some pretty severe bipolar and being transgender, transhumanism has become a favorite topic of mine over the last few years. I'm excited about the possibilities of things like straightening my spine and more efficiently regulating brain chemicals.

Also yeah, that latex suit... especially the 'keep your eyes on the hammer' part...

@katbairwell - 2022-04-24

@@JoshuaGoudreau Yes, I...errr...lost sight of the hammer more than once! <3

@steph5630 - 2022-04-25

Hey fellow disabled person here! Yeah I use a motorised wheelchair when out and about and a stick around the house and honesty both just become invisible to me while using them so transhumanism is such an interesting thing to learn!

@Giganfan2k1 - 2022-04-25

Hello felloed disabled people. I have lost a portion of my sigin (eyesight) and words for garbage. Strokes man...

@Talentedtadpole - 2022-04-25

Disappointing but unsurprising there was only one mention of disability and that Abigail has an outdated and ableist conception of disability. So much the left are behind on and missing out on, not comprehending that disability justice work is key to all, notwithstanding the lack of solidarity while increasing hostilities kill disabled people en masse

@Jamandabop - 2022-04-23

The part where she speedily drops all of the criminal justice and surveillance use cases for facial recognition in 2 seconds before moving on was perfection. 22:17

@Danuxsy - 2022-04-24

surveillance is at the bottom of the scale of destruction that tech will bring lmao, do you know what the top is?

@sirius1696 - 2022-04-24

Oh wow, forced advertising?

@Danuxsy - 2022-04-24

@@sirius1696 Modified and regulated psyches.

@lazerbeam134 - 2022-04-24

But dystopia is like so profitable doncha know?

@ScorpionViper1001 - 2022-04-24

I did not want Minority Report to become a serious thing we had to worry about.

@laldowaldo - 2022-04-22

My wife and I have often been discussing recently how conservatives (including liberal conservatives) use "progress" to excuse leaving things the way they are; "if only we had the technology to do x" rather than "how can we improve the state of x now?". We've started calling people who lean on this a lot "techno-conservatives". By making what are really social/distributive problems (meaning: things we can solve by changing the structure of our society or by moving around resources, like trans segregated healthcare & poverty) into "technological" problems, it shuts down any political conversation. You don't need to even defend the status quo if you and those around you largely believe (or say) that the status quo is immutable until Gadot shows up with the right hammer. It's incredibly frustrating and really hard to combat, because what you need to do to fight against techno-conservative rhetoric is to convince them to fundamentally shift the way they view the world. That is to say: that the world is mutable by YOU and not just by "people who invent things" and that you are capable of coming up with solutions/actions they can't replace.

Also I loved the outfits in this. Lots of love <3

@Roxanneredpanda - 2022-04-22

so true bestie

@harmonicpsyche8313 - 2022-04-22

Good point. Framing something as a purely technological problem can be limiting to social progress. I prefer democratic socialist James Hughes' approach where we must advance technological progress and social progress interdependently in tandem.

In his book Citizen Cyborg, Hughes lays out his idea of "Democratic Transhumanism" or "Techno-Progressivism," which recognizes that we cannot just expect technological progress to lead to the right places if left alone, but also recognizes the enormous benefits that technology can give us. Hughes promotes the idea of building democratic social institutions to guide technological progress in ways that contribute to everyone's wellbeing. For example, Hughes (and I) support single-payer healthcare largely because it will extend the benefits of cutting-edge medical technology from just the rich to potentially everyone.

Edit: I can't believe I forgot to mention Iain M. Banks' series The Culture as a leftist perspective on transhumanism. The Culture is basically what I consider the best possible outcome for humanity: post-scarcity fully-automated luxury gay space anarcho-communism with full (transhumanist and/or transgender) bodily autonomy for anyone.

@TheStarBlack - 2022-04-22

Yes, see Elon Musk.

@jeanf6295 - 2022-04-22

Well I guess that the institutional change that goes with new ways to redistribute stuff around is in a sense a technological change.

@iruns1246 - 2022-04-22

A counter point to this is that philosophy, governmental reforms, economic system, social movements, better social medias, etc. are also all technologies. So in that sense the excuse of "if only we had the technology to do x" is correct. But the x is not "how to feed people", but "how to get people to use the existing physical technology to feed people".

And this is not just being pedantic about definitions. It's important to view the status quo as something logical. As logical as how when a hammer hits a nail, the nail gets stuck in a piece of wood. All of the extreme inequality, inequity, hatred, tribalism, ignorance, misinformation, greed; the existence and prevalence of all of them are as logical as that hammer and nail.

Yes, we DO need "people who invent things" to fix them. It's just the invention is not limited to physical technologies. The progressive ideas that we like don't get adopted by the larger population because we lack the technologies to make those people agree with them. More equitable economic systems don't get widespread adoption because we lack the technologies to make them competitive with the current systems. The many failures of progressive movements are logical consequences of our lack of technology to implement them. We can't just will it to succeed. We actually need inventions to do it.

@aidenbouc3314 - 2024-01-07

A quote that i think about a lot is “you have your intentions, but the knife has its own intentions, too” which was said by a fictional character in His Dark Materials talking about a knife that can cut windows into other dimensions. But it applies to all technology, even down to something as simple as a fork. The forks intention is to stab. Its not a weapon, its meant to be used on food, but the fork doesnt care. All the fork knows is to stab, whether that be a piece of broccoli, or a steak, or a person. Its a strangely profound idea, and something i never would have thought of had Phillip Pullman not written that line. The hammer, too, has its intention: to strike. It is up to the user to choose how to use the hammer, they may choose to use it as a paper weight or a meat tenderizer. But the hammer is happy so long as it has struck an object, gently or not.

@a2aaron - 2023-01-12

I like the little fakeout at 17:50. "You've been staring at a really good example this whole video [of technology becoming transparent]". The expected answer is "your computer/phone you use to watch the video" but the actual answer she gives is her acrylic nails.

@monicamiranda3161 - 2023-06-12

I understood that once I want to convey my ideas using the keyboard, I can be no long aware I am using the keyboard, I can be no longer aware which language I am using so the keyboard becomes invisible/transparent. The same with artificial nails that you glue to your nails, you get used to it and no longer feel you are using artificial nails.

That's what I understood. The hammer becomes transparent as you focus your attention on the nail.

The most important part is in the end when they associate "progress" with "transhumanism" and on the other side Russia through philosopher Alexander Dugin embraces tradition, church, right to property, family and they don't want the progress in technology as nobody agrees with it, they don't want western medical care as nobody agrees with it, the medicine is not plebise.
Then there comes the caveats from Heidegger: the car is not working and which part of the car is Jewish. I have seen this on a movie, the car was not working so it was the antichrist.
The idea of progress as transhumanism is something very few people accepts. Progress for most people mean well being for everybody and not watching children in trans-gay parades sponsored by Lockheed-Martin or other. This is not progress. This is ignorance.
We are going backwards towards paleolithic. We are becoming Stone Age man again. And we are moving fast , if we don't decide what progress is.
We must take off all the lies from media, schools, universities, corporations, banks, etc... we must tell people what satellites are for real and how the spatial industry helps the pharmaceutical industry.
Progress will only come with transparency from the upper class.
They will not tell you as they think you kill them all.
Progress will not come if the upper class don't tell people what ethnicity and race is.
Transparency from the upper class is what people need and no more code expressions like "climate change".
Those expressions the upper classes use to advance their agenda, but nobody understands and nobody asks. Nobody asks what "Jewish" means. It's dangerous.
So the upper class is not transparent to people , but think their ideas are so useful that they became transparent and nobody understands them and they do not notice.
They do not notice anything at all.

@ash-null-0 - 2025-08-04

@@monicamiranda3161 this is half "yeah! that's right!" and then "what the fuck? where'd the jews come in? what do you mean 'climate change is a rich person thing'? where does 'transhumanism is not that good' become 'children shouldn't have to see the gays being happy'?"

@esemaire - 2022-04-21

I love that the dictionary definition joke has become its own motif, because it absolutely kills me every time

@DialecticRed - 2022-04-22

I love how you've written this comment before the video has even premiered

@wanderingursa8184 - 2022-04-22

@@DialecticRed Wow, it's almost as if Patreons get early access or something. :P

@alexbartle3084 - 2022-04-22

@@wanderingursa8184 it’s funnier to think that they anticipated it.

@melaniewut - 2022-04-22

It’s garbage

@edwinrollins142 - 2022-04-22

@@melaniewut yeah...well...that's just, like, your opinion, man

@brockenglish7602 - 2022-04-23

As a teenager, I loved the idea of transhumanism. When asked, "How do you want to die." I'd always respond with "My goal is to live long enough for them to download my brain into a computer so I can live forever." but as I get older I become more and more afraid of who will be in control of that kind of technology. More and more I feel we shouldn't be focused on pushing technology but instead pushing for a better society where the power lies in the hands of the people, and only then should we start pushing the limits of technology.

@rubeniscool - 2022-04-23

Why not push for both? I'm a transplant patient that's been through 2 different kidneys in the last 31 years. I'm 32 lol With tech at its current level, the best I can hope for is an indeterminate amount of time (on average 15-20 years) using a donor organ before I need another one, with excruciating and debilitating dialysis in between organs. After the age of 65ish, they don't like doing transplants and at 85, you're stuck on dialysis for your remaining years. All things considered, best case scenario at the end of my life is that I die on the operating table. Otherwise it's potentially a case of drawn out and long term suffering before my body can't take it anymore.
What I wouldn't give for a library of genetically engineered kidneys coded to my DNA. Proof of concept has already happened with a lab grown speck of liver. It's realistically within reach if we wanted it to be.
At the same time I understand the apprehension behind technological progress. Which is why my answer is push for both. At the same time. Public ownership of technology and technological progress.

@doughboi2145 - 2022-04-23

Same here I used to be an Elon musk bro until I became a homeless broke person

@Noname72105 - 2022-04-23

Here's the thing about that goal, you don't get to live forever. The copy of you that gets put into the computer does.

@LyzLocked - 2022-04-23

@@Noname72105 yes, thank you, we know this already. Those semantics aren't contributing to this conversation

@Meraxes6 - 2022-04-23

Right, we need the mental and emotional maturity to handle new technology first. We’re already way behind in that regard

@MatthewSmith-sz1yq - 2024-03-09

Genetic engineering is what has me really scared, because its something that doesn't just alter your own body, but any decendants. In fact, it might not even alter your body, JUST your decendants. Unless this technology is made widely available at low or no cost, genetic engineering could turn social class divisions (rich vs poor) into physical, biological, inheritable divisions. Rich people would be physically stronger, smarter, healthier, and prettier.

Even aside from class mobility issues, this would almost certainly result in extreme dehumanization of the poor, if genetic engineering became the perceived "standard" for what a human should be. Those who weren't able to afford it would by definition be below that standard, or to put it in a more chilling way, "sub-human" compared to everybody else. Currently, most of the rich like to pretend that they are the "cream of the crop," that they are somehow superior to the rest of the population, rather than just winning the inheritance lottery, largely because it allows them to justify doing terrible things to millions of people, such as laying off 20% of their workforce, because those people are somehow different, and more expendable, than the people making those decisions. Genetic engineering could make this "cream of the crop" sentiment objectively correct, with there being clear, obvious differences.

@aislingbones1854 - 2022-04-24

"Mental hitbox" is actually such a good term for what you're describing.
I'm sure everyone who's played enough fighting games knows how janky and counter-intuitive hitboxes can be, often not even lining up at all with the weapons/limbs that you're supposedly attacking with. But once you've put enough hours into the game you do develop that sense of virtual-proprioception, you know how far your f.S reaches as intuitively as you know the length of your own arm!

@FayeFaye- - 2022-04-28

I like the saying that went in the Aribender (The Animation) - that the sword is the extension of your body and it made sense to me. And like, you can implement that with any kind of tool, car or whatever have you like the video says.

@yourbellboy - 2022-04-28

good to see fellow Guilty Gear players here :)

@dominickfletcher8502 - 2022-04-29

@@FayeFaye- I WAS THINKING THIS WHOLE TIME!!!

@jaynestrange - 2022-04-30

It's also apt when you consider that kids/teens who grow really fast will have phases of being super clumsy. Their "mental hitbox" is smaller than their actual body, so they smack their elbows into doors or trip over their own feet.

@lukejackson3901 - 2022-12-02

The CEO freaked me the fuck out, really brilliant writing there - such a seemingly positive interview with unbelievably dark implications.

@TheLoneWanderersBunker - 2022-12-05

Not to mention the fact that they were driving home the point about how transhumanism could be exploited by the rich. For those of you who are not aware, mechanical Turk pays it's "contractors" pennies on the dollar to perform tasks. I know because I was desperate and poor and debased myself for change.

@doorhanger9317 - 2022-12-07

I'm pretty sure there was a real startup with exactly the same business model that was talked about on trashfuture once. It's not even really made up

@MasaokaKun - 2022-12-24

That woman was terrifying.

@skinnypiggames3036 - 2022-12-28

Such good writing, I loudly guffaw'd at her rushing past "borders, prisons, law enforcement" in the list of use cases

@StuartCuthbertson - 2023-02-04

Unimportant but the pink jacket gave me a really vivid negative afterimage when we cut back to the white background!

@MrKurome - 2022-04-23

It took me such a long time to realize "mark all the traffic lights" "anti robot" tests on websites are actually to improve recognition softwares.

@LieutenantSteel - 2022-04-26

And I realised that by reading your comment. Dang :/

@TheKarret - 2022-04-26

oh shit, is it really? oh man, that's troubling.

@kyleflournoy7730 - 2022-04-26

TIL

@inkbunnybunny - 2024-04-11

@@TheKarret es and i agree it's worrying but that was the point all along.

@elainexe - 2023-12-05

Dang. Good job. There's so much more to this topic than I thought! I was super interested in transhumanism as a teen/young adult in STEM with a focus on prosthetics, later to become disillusioned in the way spoken of in the video. The fact that tech often doesn't solve problems because the real problems are often distribution of money/power/resources. But it's super interesting to hear about how the concept of transhumanism is quite broad when taking into account the narratives told about what is or isn't human, what is modifying people too much, feeding into fears about society and how it "should" be.

@roberthebert2826 - 2022-04-23

Kelly Slaughter is terrifying. When we got the part about "Facial Recognition being done by people" bit my stomach just dropped.

@LW-ng1fl - 2022-04-23

can you explain kelly's segments and why it was so terrifying. I didn't quite understand it.

@majaherold1325 - 2022-04-23

@@LW-ng1fl the way I understand it is that she represents a very real kind of person who believes in technology and capitalism and maybe even genuinely believes that she is doing a good thing. Meanwhile her technology is most likely extremely fallible (for example when you consider how piss poor facial recognition tech is at recognizing black people's or asian people's faces because of what kind of (very much NOT representative of the world's population) databases these softwares are fed to learn, or how neurodivergent people would most likely suffer a lot from softwares trying to ascribe emotions to their facial expressions).
On top of that she uses cheap, underpaid, outsourced labour by people in difficult living situations (e.g. Ukrainian refugees on Amazon mechanical turk) while claiming that said labour is empowering to people because they get to work on the future.
But the only people benefitting financially from that future are her and her shareholders. How convenient.

@unlimitid6 - 2022-04-23

@@LW-ng1fl As an additional bit of context, Kelly's company is (most likely) based on a real tech startup discussed on a relatively recent (within the past few months) episode of the podcast Trashfuture (Abi has guested a few times). Mechanical Turk, ironic name and all, is a real platform operated by Amazon, that basically consists of tech companies hiring vulnerable people at miniscule wages to essentially do the work of Machine Learning (ML) systems manually. Supposedly the work their doing is supposed to be generating sample data sets to train ML algorithms, but in reality they're just skipping the really difficult programming part part and using the cheap labor to do the work.

To paraphrase Abi's friend and cohost Alice Caldwell Kelley, companies are using nonsense technical buzzwords to hide the fact that the thing that makes their product work is "just a Guy"

@Frommerman - 2022-04-24

@@LW-ng1fl To say it in a more metaphorical manner, Abigail is playing the archetype of a woman whose soul has been devoured by Mammon.

@GuiSmith - 2022-04-24

@@Frommerman We always knew mother, the god of gold, would ruin us all

@nondescriptname - 2022-04-23

As someone who is disabled, I was very pleased to see this dissection of disability discussed within the space of economics and transhumanism. So many people seem unaware of disability specifically as a relationship to material circumstances and, in my experience, are totally unwilling to engage with it as such.

@DialecticRed - 2022-04-23

oml your pfp is great, I love that

@vodkaboy - 2022-04-24

@@DialecticRed cringe

@josephSlueby - 2025-09-06

You sound like a dork bro just get some racks in your jeans. All this thought and "intellectual ability" just to not get any fuggin guap

@indigopines - 2022-04-29

Last year, after being thiiiis close to legally blind my entire life, I got laser eye surgery. There was a lot of checkups to make sure nothing would go wrong, but when I sat down in the chair (awake) the procedure took less than 10 minutes. I then went home, suffered a lot of pain for maybe 3 hours... and from that moment on, I have lived with 20/15 vision--better than 20/20 vision. (Technically, from the moment the surgery ended, I had perfect vision, I just didn't notice as much).
The technology we have today is astounding, and it blew my mind what is actually available to the public, much less what our top scientists are capable of... but open discoverying this miracle, this treasure, my first thought was "I wish I could give this to *everyone*.
... I think that sums up the problems with transhumanism pretty well. Not the transhumanism itself, but all the systems around it that don't let us simply give this tech to the people who want it.

@pauladriaanse - 2022-06-24

Honestly the same story with every justice system everywhere . . . People that need justice can't pay for it, that's exactly why they need it
Our governmental structures are truly awful but who knows how to fix it? Same story for democracy in general, people don't realize how undemocratic the west really is.

@viewer8734 - 2022-10-03

I wan it. That's why I'm going to study so hard Ill become a cyborg and live forever and just do science forever as well

@violetmushroom6 - 2022-10-19

Lasik was banned in many countries due to safety issues, and some people have gone blind from it..For me personally, my vision is progressively getting back where it was, the effect barely lasted 2 years...this also translates to all of the technologies we cheated the nature with. Not one transcends death or even disease. Very rarely

@thestruggler776 - 2024-02-16

From the moment I understood the weakness of my flesh, it disgusted me. I craved the strength and certainty of steel.

@saulventura4445 - 2024-02-24

how certain is the steel in the face of time, even iron turns to dust

@HK-pq7pe - 2024-05-02

praise the omnissiah!

@VlNCEY - 2024-08-25

I mean.. Period I guess

@projecteaspl6373 - 2025-09-09

Weak ass complaining

@mininabs - 2022-04-22

Abi, thank you SO much for the little bit at the end about Amazon's Mechanical Turk, it's such a frustrating aspect of research in my field now. The idea that you can get participants to take part in your study easily is how it is sold. I've heard stories of people posting their surveys and in about 2 days they have 500+ participants, with each paid whatever the IRB of the institution has agreed is acceptable. However, a lot of research is now showing high levels of bots responding, people not engaging with the survey, etc, which all leads to poor quality data. If this isn't checked then this data can get published and effectively spread misinformation.MTurk was sold as a solution to a common problem in research: getting lots of participants. The other main issue is that it was sold as being an accessible side hustle/income for people with disabilities cause all they need is an internet connection. However, once you do some basic math you realize that most surveys and jobs aren't paying enough to people for them to earn even close to minimum wage.

@pnutz_2 - 2022-04-23

much like fruit picking, the business tends towards the cheapest, most disadvantaged people they can get to the crops, or in this case, a computer terminal

@astabaker9421 - 2022-04-23

There was a fascinating piece by The Builders Association a few weeks ago about MTurks! Took us through the history of the early internet, simulated the experience of mechanical turks, and then talked about Crypto and the metaverse in act 3. During the middle section, we answered surveys just like MTurks do and accumulated pennies of fake money, while being supervised by real MTurks. Fascinating show!

@N0tsaved - 2022-12-07

I really appreciate that you put enough trust in the audience to draw the desired conclusion from the facial recognition skit without spelling it out.
Upon giving us the tools to understand what was being said, we realize that this is a person capitalizing upon the incredibly disenfranchised by using feminism as a brand to have a cheap labor force of suffering women. And with them all over the world, they are less likely to be able to pull together for a better condition.

@DJarry394 - 2022-12-20

Like the Lula Roe scandal

@user-gz2dh7uo7s - 2023-01-09

I agree totally the ceo is using feminism as a guise

@sarahoshea9603 - 2023-01-21

It was why I think feminism wasn't crushed. They saw they could add women to the downtrodden wageslave pool and we've been toothless ever since.

@cassandrareedy7369 - 2023-01-30

@@user-gz2dh7uo7s plus women are evolutionarily better at body language recognition

@delhyde2 - 2023-02-01

The unfortunate reality that this tech actually exists and its pseudo science laden non-peer reviewed work by Dr Paul Ekman was sold to the FBI, CIA among other agencies for 'national security' purposes. Code for justifying racism. Despite the many doctors who have gone on to debunk Ekman's work and the demonstrated poor efficacy and harm caused by the programs based on the work by Ekman (which have both policy makers saying the programs should be scrapped as they waste money and scientists jointly pleading for this garbage science to be dropped) it continues to be used today. It's not imaginary, it's terribly real and it's even more broken than one would imagine.

@tihonannenkov4114 - 2023-02-22

About guns: I can attest to the fact that once a person holds a gun in their hands, it is a different person who perceives the world in a very different way. There is a reason why people become "gun nuts" - the guns make them feel good and powerful. When i was in basic training, I could watch how differently people reacted to getting a gun in their hands. And I could see how the people who were the most excited to get one were the least trustworthy. The ones who were wiser, saw it as a great responsibility and a potential danger "in itself".

@getschwifty5537 - 2023-03-02

I wonder then if the truth is that BOTH guns and people kill people. Both should be held accountable for tragedies. Because it takes a certain kind of person to be so inclined to power trip and feel like they are above the law whenever presented an opportunity to kill, so it is very much their fault for a murder. But a gun enables them in more than just the act of physically firing it to very easily seize the opportunity to kill. The status of owning and holding one does something to said person's brain. It perhaps feeds into prior delusions.

@tihonannenkov4114 - 2023-03-02

@@getschwifty5537 the utopian solution would be to improve the general mental health of the population while making guns unnecessary in and of themselves. They should become a relict of the barbarous and primitive past, just as we would see a sword or a waraxe. A waraxe is terrifying as a weapon, but most people would not wish to walk around with one, because it is extremely brutal way to kill someone. You will end up being covered in blood and guts, most people would not have a stomach for it.

@eternal7912 - 2023-03-03

Except, gun nuts are often the most responsible with guns, because they know the dangers of mishandling them. Sure there are irresponsible gun nuts out there, but in my experience, they are the minority, and generally, its safer to be around a gun nut with a gun, than someone who doesn't really know anything about guns but has one anyway.

@tihonannenkov4114 - 2023-03-09

@Doom Guy aint nobody dying from criminals with guns where I live. It makes national news when there is a shootout, in a country of 80+mln people. In all this time here the worst thing I have witnessed was one person shoving another. Violence is not a normal human behavior. Criminals are created, not born.

@vulk_nubium - 2023-03-10

Same with cars. Some people lose 20 IQ points when behind the wheel.

@violetfactorial6806 - 2023-07-11

The realization came to me gradually that my self has more than one extent. Obviously there's the skin/air boundary between "me" and "not me", but I also clearly percieve a brain/body boundary, and things in-between. And in my brain there are the parts of "me" that I often find excluded from my sense of self, like my addictions, intrusive thoughts, unwanted impulses, negative feelings, etc. There are also many socially defined boundaries (groups that I identify with), and physical boundaries that extend beyond my body, like the room I'm in or the vehicle I'm driving, etc.

Realizing that the extent of my self is so flexible quickly made me realize that I'm actually constantly redefining my "self" in various changing contexts, and that I can actually have a great deal of control over this process if I pay attention to it (it's hard sometimes).

If we're not careful about how we define our self, we'll obviously run into problems when two or more people with an overlapping sense of self have different ideas about what they want. We need to be very aware of how we're defining our self. I see transhumanism in this light, and I think it's somewhat of a distraction, in the sense that it's full of very interesting examples. They are so interesting that we just think about how cool they are and they lead into fantasizing about science fiction, rather than asking and sincerely trying to answer the fundamental question of how we define ourselves, and how we should define ourselves if we want to be happy or to be good or to achieve some other goal.

@doantidoto - 2022-04-22

This is the kind of video that gets even better when watched for the second time.

@onzeonzeonzeonze - 2022-04-22

Olha quem está aí

@rubensr28 - 2022-04-22

My respect for you increased!

@britneyhochman5204 - 2022-04-22

That was fast.

@marianalglopes - 2022-04-22

oi Antídoto

@Jane-oz7pp - 2022-04-22

You just described all of Abi's content lol

@Windona - 2022-04-23

This talk about technology and disability is always interesting. I've worn glasses since I was a child, and have such strong astingmatism that people who try on my glasses feel like they're drunk. But I consider the corrected vision my glasses gave me my 'real' sight, and I'm not considered disabled despite requiring a piece of technology to be able to functionally drive, and having a great deal of vision-reliant hobbies or aspects to my job.

The genetic aspect is super interesting, especially where the line of eugenics is. Most people would consider using genetic engineering to make sure nobody suffers Tay Sachs good... but then where does the line of genetic disease and something that's only an inconvenience because of society end up?

@CockatooDude - 2022-04-24

That seems like a pretty easy thing to solve with a couple of laws. But at the same time if a family of one "race" want to have their kid look like they are from another one, then I don't really see the harm in that. The goal is for everyone to be treated equally under society and the law, so it shouldn't matter either way.

@Danuxsy - 2022-04-24

Your last part is what will forcibly change humans because everything including Transhumanism is really only about one thing, Psychology. How we interpret the world, what we find meaningful and so forth are nothing more but processes in the brain governed by our genetics, derived from evolution. Transhumanism will change our psyches so that our desire for "being rich" or "living in a virtual world" no longer exist, in fact we might be completely indifferent to external stimuli such as these, why would I ever want to experience anything if I am already content with nothing? Why bother with music or relationships or any of the sort? I find it quite ignorant to believe that our human thought processes will persist throughout time, they are already under attack and influenced by external actors, social media, advertising, medicines and so forth, where did your thoughts come from? Why are you thinking the way you do and not some other way? Why do you find some things important and others not? this is the real "threat" of these technologies and also the goal we've been striving for since forever, education is an attempt at doing the same thing. We might continue to exist but our natural human psyche will be long gone.

@Windona - 2022-04-24

@@Danuxsy Yes, bioethics are necessary. But is it right to condemn people to fear their kid will be born crippled or forced to endure drowning in their own mucus because we fear change?

@Danuxsy - 2022-04-24

@@Windona Exactly people will allow this technology to change them, it doesn't even have to be forced by anyone it is how the human psyche functions but ironically this is the greatest threat to mankind.

@epimisti - 2022-04-24

I do think the line is to be drawn at: Does this benefit me personally or does this benefit the system? If it purely benefits the system, then it is unethical. If it benefits you, it is ethical. What does and doesn‘t benefit you however, should be up to yourself. That being said, if we change the system we necessarily change what it does and does not need. If we were to, for example, create an anarcho-communist society (this is a hypothetical, please stay with me), things like working a job, being „competitive“ etc would not be push factors anymore, allowing for more genuine appliance of technologies to yourself. For example, I don‘t know if I have an argument (beyond a fallacious appeal to nature) against genetically enhancing the mental capabilities of your child in such circumstances. After all, it is not necessary to do so, as there isn‘t any competition between disabled folk and other folk. And I don‘t really see any downsides there. After all, one brilliant mind more, is one brilliant mind more. Who gives a fuck? I do realize that that might have negative consequences. Like for example it being fashionable to do so, effectively recreating eugenics. But then again, I don‘t really see that happening, as fashion trends are part of the capitalist machine of domination and I don‘t really know if it would turn out the same way. I dunno. It is hard to argue this hypothetical to such extremes as I am basically just writing fiction at this point. My point being: It is complicated and I don‘t know where to draw the line and if there even is one.

@anacecilia1387 - 2022-04-24

33:48 this part really gets to me, because new widespread medical technology could really help a lot of diseases, but the diseases that are most common, and that affect the most children in my country, really don't need fancy new tech. We already got the tech: it's basic sanitation. If poorer neighborhoods got basic sanitation, millions of people would be healthier in the short and long term, but since it would require the city to spend money or thr improvement of the lives or poor people, nobody ever wants to do it, and it becomes a decades long public health issue. I swear to god the most maddening problems in the world are the ones that already have the solution, but it's never solved because it would require giving a shit about the people that would be helped.

@emilyjanet455 - 2022-04-25

100%
I think it was John Green who said something along the lines of
"If an alien appeared to me tomorrow, and asked me to explain humanity, I'd tell them a story. I'd tell them about how we had this disease called smallpox and how it killed hundreds of millions of people over the course of history. I'd tell the alien about how we worked together and made scientific and social advancements that allowed us to develop a cure for the disease that WORKED. And I'd also tell the alien that thousands more people died even a hundred years after the cure was invented, because of inequity and greed"

That really stuck with me. All the major problems we have, the technology already exists! It's just the ideas that stop us from using that technology have become so transparent that we don't see them holding us back.

@genri.a9128 - 2022-04-26

People should die more

@daviedarling - 2022-04-27

that's a really good point. so fucking maddening.

@globalist1990 - 2022-04-28

More technology also raises the threat on our health. Lead in petrol, microplastics, agriculture chemicals.

@Skiddoo42 - 2022-04-28

You left out the fact that most diseases are metabolic in nature, the biggest culprits are diseases that have only been known to exist as widespread since the industrialization of agriculture and food processing and which can now be identified and prevented through genomic testing and applied nutritional management... and yet, good luck finding doctors who know anything about this new paradigm. In another decade it will be the gold standard, hopefully.

@angel_ovo55 - 2025-02-21

I find a Russian philosopher ranting about transgressing the natural law funny when Russia is the most infamous country when it comes to figure skating. Russia is literally a factory in the ladies single discipline due to how they pump out young skaters and teach them triples at a WILDLY young age. Alexandra Trusova/Ignatova literally landed 5 QUADS at the 2020 Olympics.

For reference, these were thought to be psychically impossible once.
(With the first quad axel performed successfully in competition being landed by ilia malinin in 2022. It was also fully rotated and was amazing, just to add some praise to my boy.)

@agniagniagni13 - 2022-04-23

i love how the kelly slaughter interview is just sugar-coated words but when you look at them from an objective, factual perspective, you realise how problematic it is. hiring women for low-paying jobs and exploiting certain impoverished sections of women in the name of femininity — the part of facial recognition becoming a human process instead of a machine learning process. also the reference to people as "individual faces" and then rambling on and on about user experience: it rlly shows how much companies and large corporations really care about each individual user, but of us as a general target demographic client base. also it actually shows that if we had the proper neutral science technology to perform facerec without commissioning underpaid tech workers, how helpful of a tool it would be. even if true technology might rob us of the true-to-humanity and god-faithful human experience, even people (jobs which aren't automated yet, thankfully phew) can also dehumanise us

@solgato5186 - 2022-04-24

I definitely came away from this video with the sense that capitalism turns anything good into mass control.

@MrHodoAstartes - 2022-04-24

Yes. The joke is that she actually enslaves the most powerless to enrich herself.

@5ubbak - 2022-04-24

Also, notice how the same software that is used to police prisons and deny entry at the border relies on the underpaid work of women in prisons and refugee camps.

@channingdeadnight - 2022-04-24

Including the economic class transhumnism. Now it's cell phones. But once organ cloning and physical and mental tech which will give major advantages to the very very wealthy, will create a two tier society. Just like much of education is today but worse. Why would someone hire someone with chronic health problems from the environment when you can hire someone genetically smarter healthier and better looking. And that is more likely part of the next century. In 200 hundred years we might basically be different species.
The solution for a fair system is replacing capitalism with a more egalitarian system with everyone having access to the same benefits.

@jackwilson9195 - 2022-12-04

The problem with transhumanism is we haven't even mastered humanism yet.

@dragonfell5078 - 2022-12-13

Couldn't have said it better myself. It's like trying to mine diamonds when you haven't even gotten iron yet

@emiliabarriga6364 - 2022-12-15

a) we have always been posthuman/transhuman, we just don't accept it. Technology has always existed, and we have always experienced the world through technology, starting with one of the first inventions of them all: language.
b) humanism is a flawed ideology that puts the Vitruvian man on the center (white, European, etc) and ignores difference. No surprise humanist beliefs were used in order to colonize the rest of the world. Humanism is also responsible for our ecological crisis. Putting men first and ignoring that we ARE nature instead of separate is one of the reasons we have such a problem.
Transhumanism and posthumanism for me and for most contemporary posthumanist philosophers is not about accelerating technology, but instead about understanding the relationality we have with technology and nature, in order to trascend human constructs, like the gender binary, for example.

@jackwilson9195 - 2022-12-15

@@emiliabarriga6364 That's cool, I'll tell them at the zoo to change the signage to Postgorillas and Transchimpanzees.

@thiccphone1166 - 2022-12-15

That's cute but it's wrong.

@emiliabarriga6364 - 2022-12-15

​@@jackwilson9195 lmaoooo tell me you have never read philosophy and aren't capable of debating without telling me. Why are you watching this video then? bye..