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Ethical issues of human enhancement technologies: Cyborg technology as the extension of human biology

Ivana Greguric (Visoka poslovna škola Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia)

Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society

ISSN: 1477-996X

Article publication date: 6 May 2014

3377

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to focus on the modern development of bionics and linking new technologies with the human nervous system or other biological systems that cause changes of the human biological structure.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper is a discursive evaluation of technological progress and new systems where computers and machines integrate, making a single matrix entity – the cyborg. Here fundamental questions arise, such as what it means to be human and what is (descriptive aspect) and what should be (normative aspect) a human being?

Findings

The paper argues for the value of twenty-first century human enhancement techniques and other emerging technologies that promised to “help” humans become “more than human”, trying to create human beings with greatly enhanced abilities, to improve human mental and physical characteristics and capacities. Modern man is gradually disappearing as a natural being and increasingly turning into an artificial creature “cyborg” that leads into the question, what will ultimately remain human in a human body?

Originality/value

The paper contributes to the existing debates about further development of cyborgisation and examines boundaries that will strictly divide man from a cyborg in the near future. In order to protect man from the omnipotence of technology and its unethical application is necessary to establish cyborgoethics that would determine the implementation of an artificial boundary in the natural body.

Keywords

Citation

Greguric, I. (2014), "Ethical issues of human enhancement technologies: Cyborg technology as the extension of human biology", Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society, Vol. 12 No. 2, pp. 133-148. https://doi.org/10.1108/JICES-10-2013-0040

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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