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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Oxford :Oxford University Press, Incorporated,
    Keywords: Artificial intelligence. ; Humanism. ; Philosophical anthropology. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: With the progress of artificial intelligence, the digitalization of the lifeworld, and the reduction of the mind to neuronal processes, the human being appears more and more as a product of data and algorithms. The book applies cutting-edge concepts of embodiment and enactivism to current scientific, technological and cultural developments.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (273 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780192653185
    DDC: 128.2
    Language: English
    Note: cover -- In Defense of the Human Being -- Copyright -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- Introduction: A Humanism of Embodiment -- Acknowledgments -- References -- A. Artificial Intelligence, Transhumanism, Virtuality -- 1 Human and Artificial Intelligence: A Clarification -- Introduction: The World of Data -- The Digitization of the World -- Subjectivity and Its Simulation -- Persons are Not Programs -- Programs are Not Persons -- Robots, Androids, and Artificial Life (AL) -- Conclusion: Simulation and Original -- References -- 2 Beyond the Human? A Critique of Transhumanism -- Introduction: Between Naturalism and Culturalism -- The Idea of Perfectibility -- Can Human Nature be Improved? -- Cognitive Skills -- Happiness and Morality -- Aging and Death -- The Contradictions of Posthumanism -- Mind Uploading or Transfer of Consciousness -- Critique of Functionalism -- Critique of Neuro-​Reductionism -- Transhumanism as Neo-​Gnosticism -- Conclusion -- References -- 3 The Virtual Other: Empathy in the Age of Virtuality -- Introduction -- Empathy and Virtual Reality -- Primary, Implicit, or Intercorporeal Empathy -- Extended, Explicit or Imaginative Empathy -- Fictional Empathy -- Interim Summary -- Virtualization in the Present -- Phantomization -- Disembodied Communication -- Summary and Conclusion -- References -- B. Brain, Person, and Reality -- 4 Person and Brain: Against Cerebrocentrism -- Introduction -- Critique of the Cerebral Subject -- Subjectivity and Intentionality -- Embodiment -- Interpersonality -- Critique of Localizationism -- Critique of Neuroimaging -- Holism of Consciousness -- Personhood as Embodied Subjectivity -- Brain, Body, and Environment -- Brain Transplantation -- Conclusion -- References -- 5 Embodied Freedom: A Libertarian Position -- Introduction -- Can Brains make Decisions? -- Freedom as a Personal Ability. , Embodied Freedom -- External Objections -- The Compatibilist Counter Position -- Immanent Objections -- Conclusion -- References -- 6 Brain World or Life World? Critique of Neuroconstructivism -- Introduction -- Bodily Being-​in-​the-​World: The Coextension of Lived Body  and Physical Body -- The Locus of Pain -- Conclusion: Life-​World and Neuroscience -- References -- 7 Perception and Reality: Sketch of an Interactive Realism -- Introduction -- Perception as Interaction -- The Objectifying Power of Perception -- The Implicit Intersubjectivity of Perception -- Genesis of Intersubjective Perception -- Subjectivation of Perception in Schizophrenia -- Summary -- References -- C. Psychiatry and Society -- 8 Psychiatry between Psyche and Brain -- Introduction -- Reductionist Assumptions and their Verification -- Psychiatry as Relational Medicine: An Integrative Concept -- Conclusion -- References -- 9 Embodiment and Personal Identity in Dementia -- Introduction -- Personal Identity -- Body Memory -- Dementia and Personal Identity -- Dementia as a Loss of Reflexivity and Meta-​Perspective -- Body Memory in Dementia -- Relational versus Embodied View of the Person in Dementia -- Conclusion -- References -- 10 The Cyclical Time of the Body and the Linear Time of Modernity -- Introduction -- The Processes of Life and their Cyclical Time -- The Cyclical Structure of Body Memory -- Cyclical and Linear Time -- Individual and Collective Formation of the Linear Order of Time -- Conflicts between Cyclical and Linear Orders of Time -- Conclusion -- References -- Text References (English papers) -- Index.
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    Bioelectromagnetics 18 (1997), S. 439-445 
    ISSN: 0197-8462
    Keywords: ELF ; magnetic fields ; calcium ; jurkat ; flow-cytometry ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Occupational Health and Environmental Toxicology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Physics
    Notes: To explore possible biochemical mechanisms whereby electromagnetic fields of around 0.1 mT might affect immune cells or developing cancer cells, we studied intracellular calcium signaling in the model system Jurkat E6-1 human T-leukemia cells during and following exposure to a 60 Hz magnetic field. Cells were labeled with the intracellular calcium-sensitive fluorescent dye Fluo-3, stimulated with a monoclonal antibody against the cell surface structure CD3 (associated with ligand-stimulated T-cell activation), and analyzed on a FACScan flow-cytometer for increases in intensity of emissions in the range of 515-545 nm. Cells were exposed during or before calcium signal-stimulation to 0.15 mTrms 60 Hz magnetic field. The total DC magnetic field of 78.2 μT was aligned 17.5° off the vertical axis. Experiments used both cells cultured at optimal conditions at 37 °C and cells grown under suboptimal conditions of 24 °C, lowered external calcium, or lowered anti-CD3 concentration. These experiments demonstrate that intracellular signaling in Jurkat E6-1 was not affected by a 60 Hz magnetic field when culture and calcium signal-stimulation were optimal or suboptimal. These results do not exclude field-induced calcium-related effects further down the calcium signaling pathway, such as on calmodulin or other calcium-sensitive enzymes. Bioelectromagnetics 18:439-445, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc. This article is a US Government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.
    Additional Material: 8 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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