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Explorations of the ‘Transhuman’ Dimension of Artificial Intelligence   335

                       a being, constantly ‘replenished’ by accumulating, multiplicitous layers of information or
                       ‘memory’,  while  every  successive  generation  of  organisms,  according  to  Sheldrake,
                       inherits the collective memory from the generation before it, or contemporaneous to it, in
                       other parts of the world.
                          But is this ostensible resemblance between a certain kind of artificial intelligence (the
                       fictional,  but  informationally  possible,  idoru)  and  humans  adequate  to  establish  an
                       identity?  Probably  not  –  even  if  the  analogy  between  the  growing  informational
                       ‘foundation’ of which the idoru is the epiphenomenon, and generations of humans (as
                       beings that rely on ‘morphic resonance’ for ‘information’ regarding appropriate modes of
                       behaviour) is tenable, the difference would be precisely the uniqueness of every finite,
                       embodied human subject, compared to the transhuman, infinitely escalating aggregate of
                       information – vast as it already is – which might manifest itself in different forms, such
                       as the fictional, and transhuman, idoru.


                                                      CONCLUSIONS

                          What have the preceding reflections on manifestations of the transhuman in artificial
                       intelligence research brought to light? The brief examination of Jonze’s Her served the
                       important objective, to provide a kind of paradigmatic instance of what a transhuman AI
                       would be like, that is, what would make such a being recognisably ‘transhuman’ in its
                       virtually  incomprehensible  otherness.  This  fictional  excursion  prepared  the  way  for  a
                       brief  consideration  of  David  Gelernter’s  contention,  that  when  the  human  mind  is
                       conceived  of  in  terms  of  a  ‘spectrum’  of  mental  functions  covering  rational  thinking,
                       daydreaming,  fantasy,  free  association  as  well  as  dreaming,  the  concentration  of
                       mainstream  AI-research  on  exclusively  the  first  of  these  levels  (as  a  model  for  AI),
                       appears  to  be  seriously  flawed.  The  image  of  AI  that  emerges  from  such
                       ‘computationalist’  research  would  be  truly  ‘transhuman’.  It  was  argued  further  that
                       Sherry  Turkle’s  work  complements  Gelernter’s  through  her  foregrounding  of  the
                       irreducible  differences  between  performatively  impressive,  intelligent  and  quasi-
                       affectionate  androids  (robots)  and  human  beings:  unlike  humans,  the  former  lack  a
                       personal  history.  Christopher  Johnson’s  work,  in  turn,  was  shown  as  focusing  on  the
                       conditions of engineering AI in the guise of robots that would be convincing simulations
                       of human beings. Johnson finds in replication through ‘reverse-engineering’ the promise
                       of successfully constructing such robots. However, his reminder, that human beings are
                       distinguished  by  their  uniqueness,  implies  that  the  difference  between  a  transhuman,
                       ‘neuromorphically’  engineered  android  and  a  human  being  would  remain  irreducible.
                       Returning  to  fiction,  William  Gibson’s  perspicacious  exploration  of  the  potential  for
                       artificial  intelligence,  harboured  within  the  ever-expanding  virtual  realm  of  (digital)
                       information, was used to demonstrate its similarity with successive generations of human
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