Simulated Selves by Andrew Spira (.PDF)
File Size: 9 MB
Simulated Selves: The Undoing of Personal Identity in the Modern World by Andrew Spira
Requirements: .PDF reader, 9 MB
Overview: The notion of a personal self took centuries to evolve, reaching the pinnacle of autonomy with Descartes’ ‘I think, therefore I am’ in the seventeenth century. This ‘personalisation’ of identity thrived for another hundred years before it began to be questioned, subject to the emergence of broader, more inclusive forms of agency. Simulated Selves: Undoing Personal Identity in the Modern World addresses the ‘constructed’ notion of personal identity in the West and how it has been eclipsed by the development of new technological, social, art historical and psychological infrastructures over the last two centuries.
While the provisional nature of the self-sense has been increasingly accepted in recent years, Simulated Selves addresses it in a new way – not by challenging it directly, but by observing changes to the environments and cultural conventions that have traditionally supported it. By narrating both its dismantling and its incapacitation in this way, it records its undoing.
Genre: Non-Fiction > Faith, Beliefs & Philosophy
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