A significant development is the "anti-human turn" in artificial intelligence, which focuses on power, efficiency, and data extraction over human flourishing.
Porcine antihuman lymphocyte globulin (p-ALG) is used in stem cell transplantation, for example in treating severe aplastic anemia.
The Anti-Human: Posthumanity, Technology, and Biological Targeting
Antihuman antibodies are also used in immunological research to distinguish between different cell types in studies. 4. Cultural and Philosophical Implications
A shift from anthropocentric views, where human-driven, "post-chthonic" models are replaced by ecological intelligence that thrives alongside or beyond human activity.
The "anti-human" is no longer merely a science-fiction trope but a developing posture in technology, philosophy, and biology. It encompasses a growing trend where human limitations are viewed as defects to be managed, optimized, or transcended. This paper explores three primary dimensions of the anti-human: the philosophical shift towards posthumanism, the "anti-human" turn in technological artificial intelligence, and the biomedical, targeting of human cells using antihuman antibodies. 1. Introduction: Defining the Anti-Human
The rise of Artificial Intelligence (AI) that serves corporate or efficiency-focused ends rather than human welfare.
