Book contents
- Mortal Objects
- Mortal Objects
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Material Objects
- Chapter 2 Conformism
- Chapter 3 Organisms
- Chapter 4 Incregratism
- Chapter 5 Selves
- Chapter 6 The Cogito
- Chapter 7 Living and Dying
- Chapter 8 Welfare and Nonexistence
- Chapter 9 What We Can Become
- Chapter 10 (Re)making Ourselves
- Chapter 11 The Meaning of Life and Death
- References
- Index
Chapter 9 - What We Can Become
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2022
- Mortal Objects
- Mortal Objects
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Material Objects
- Chapter 2 Conformism
- Chapter 3 Organisms
- Chapter 4 Incregratism
- Chapter 5 Selves
- Chapter 6 The Cogito
- Chapter 7 Living and Dying
- Chapter 8 Welfare and Nonexistence
- Chapter 9 What We Can Become
- Chapter 10 (Re)making Ourselves
- Chapter 11 The Meaning of Life and Death
- References
- Index
Summary
Evolution by natural selection is not a process by which objects called “species” change over time under selective pressures. There are no such objects. It is a process by which organisms that are related in salient ways, by which they are specific we might say (as opposed to being members of a species), are replaced by others. There is more than one way in which they can be specific. One is related compatibility, which some organisms, the xs, exhibit just when they have common ancestry, when they are reproductively compatible, and when every organism so related to one of the xs is among the xs. Given this way of understanding specificity, we current humans, the Homo sapiens presently inhabiting the planet, could give way to future humans that resemble us only insofar as they are reproductively compatible with us. What is more, our humanity is not essential to us. Neither is our origin, in that we might have originated in a different time and place. So in theory – given technology that is currently out of sight – we could change ourselves into creatures that are very unlike us.
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- Information
- Mortal ObjectsIdentity and Persistence through Life and Death, pp. 140 - 159Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022