Richard Doyle: Wetwares: Experiments in Postvital Living (2003)

28 June 2009, dusan

The mind of the machine, the body suspended in time, organs exchanged, thought computed, genes manipulated, DNA samples abducted by aliens: the terrain between science and speculation, fraught with the possibility of technological and perhaps even evolutionary transformations, is the territory Richard Doyle explores in Wetwares. In a manner at once sober and playful, Doyle maps potentials for human transformation by new ecologies of information in the early twenty-first century. Wetwares ranges over recent research in artificial life, cloning, cryonics, computer science, organ transplantation, and alien abduction. Moving between actual technical practices, serious speculative technology, and science fiction, Doyle shows us emerging scientific paradigms where “life” becomes more a matter of information than of inner vitality–in short, becomes “wetwares” for DNA and computer networks. Viewing technologies of immortality–from cryonics to artificial life–as disciplines for welcoming a thoroughly other future, a future of neither capital, god, human, nor organism, the book offers tools for an evolutionary, transhuman mutation in the utterly unpredictable decades to come.

Publisher U of Minnesota Press, 2003
ISBN 0816640092, 9780816640096
235 pages

Keywords and phrases
SimLife, deterritorialization, Thousand Plateaus, Alan Sokal, Gilles Deleuze, ribotype, Dead Zone, autopoiesis, Robert Ettinger, wetware, nanotechnology, technoscience, Philip K, alife, information theoretic death, exotic derivatives, coma, Mike Darwin, ecology, brain death

publisher
google books

PDF (updated on 2012-3-9)


2 Responses to “Richard Doyle: Wetwares: Experiments in Postvital Living (2003)”

  1. Marketa on March 8, 2012 8:50 pm

    Please, please, could you re-establish this too? Thank you, Iam sorry that I still bother you… :-(

  2. dusan on March 9, 2012 2:53 pm

    all done, you can also always check http://free-books.us.to for a backup

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