Controlling Destiny : Julian Huxley's Post-Darwinian Evolutionism and the History of Transhumanism
Author
Summary, in English
This study explores the history of transhumanism by analyzing how Huxley’s transhumanism develops and why it does at this particular point in time, by placing it firmly within the context of his specific scientific and sociopolitical milieu, starting roughly in the interwar years and stretching over the Second World War to the 1970s. Continuing, the study then focuses on the new transhumanists of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s and investigates continuity in mode of thinking, contributing to a more coherent understanding of transhumanism, its history and of modern projects of human enhancement. By surveying the literature available to the new generation of transhumanists, the study finds and discusses connections between Huxley’s transhumanism and newer versions of it. Huxley—along with likeminded future-oriented thinkers of his generation helped naturalize a way of thinking about a possible future and disseminate ideas about conscious human evolution and human enhancement into a wider sociotechnical imaginary. The dissertation explains Huxley’s transhumanism, as well as his influence on a new generation of futurists and suggests that his narrative about evolution and the future was perpetuated.
The study captures how scientific and technological development in relation to society and social order shapes images and expectations of the future and of what future is desirable. The ambition is to historicize transhumanism, by placing it in a precise historical context. Transhumanism uses evolution and biology to imagine the future, which is why it is here put in relation to evolutionary thought developed after Darwin, including ideas that would not be termed Darwinian in the strict scientific sense of the word, as well as evolutionary ideas that tended toward opposition to some of the perceived implications of Darwinism. The study also focuses on developments within the field of experimental biology—as well as Huxley’s own involvement in it—and ideas of controlling life, alongside political events and developments throughout the twentieth century. Additionally, it emphasizes the importance of recognizing that visions of the future no matter how optimistic—often express worries and fears about the social, technological and scientific development. At its core, transhumanism can be viewed as a result of the attempt to solve profoundly existential issues.
Department/s
Publishing year
2024
Language
English
Publication/Series
Lund Studies in Arts and Cultural Sciences
Volume
33
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
The Department of Arts and Cultural Sciences, Lund University
Topic
- History of Science and Ideas
Keywords
- Julian Huxley
- post-Darwinian evolutionism
- transhumanism
- evolutionary biology
- posthuman
- sociotechnical imaginaries
- control
- history of science
- intellectual history
- history of the future
- Julian Huxley
- post-Darwinian evolutionism
- transhumanism
- evolutionary biology
- posthuman
- sociotechnical imaginaries
- control
- history of science
- intellectual history
- history of the future
Status
Published
Project
- Controlling Destiny: Julian Huxley's Post-Darwinian Evolutionism and the History of Transhumanism
Supervisor
- Jonas Hansson
- Torbjörn Gustavsson Chorell
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 2001-7529
- ISSN: 1650-7339
- ISSN: 2001-7510
- ISBN: 978-91-987325-6-6
- ISBN: 978-91-987325-7-3
Defence date
16 February 2024
Defence time
10:00
Defence place
C121, LUX
Opponent
- Steve Fuller (Professor)