|
Tuscaloosa, Ala. – The University of Alabama’s Blount
Undergraduate Initiative invites the public to “Becoming
Post-human,” a symposium which blends man and technology,
April 28 at 3 p.m. in Tuomey Hall, located on the corner of Sixth
Avenue and Capstone Drive on campus.
“This semester, the Blount Seminar has been interrogating
the term post-human in an endeavor to define it for ourselves and
to theorize the intellectual, ethical, political and aesthetic
concerns and prospects posed by the synthesis of biological species
and technology,” said Sandra Huss, associate professor of
English and director of the creative writing program. “The
students have read some contemporary theorists on the subject and
examined some novels and films that in one way or another anticipate
these issues.”
During the symposium, students will offer a documentary film,
original music, fiction and multimedia presentations of their research
on designer babies, the Braingate chip - where a team of neuroscientists
have successfully implanted a chip into the brain of a quadriplegic
man allowing him to control a computer – and other body/machine
interfaces, cosmetic surgery, the politics of the post-human, virtual
reality and eternal life.
There will also be an opportunity for guests to interact with
the Sony AIBO dog, a cute form of artificial intelligence. According
to Huss, people with curiosity about the subject will be further
provoked by the students’ findings, and the event is sure
to be enlightening. Refreshments will be served following the event.
The Blount Undergraduate Initiative was established with a $14
million private endowment provided by 27 Alabamians including the
late Winton Blount of Montgomery, his wife Carolyn Blount and the
Blount Foundation. It is a special four-year program designed to
give students the best of a small liberal arts college experience
as well as the advantages of a comprehensive public university.
Interdisciplinary seminars in the program are intended to broaden
students’ perspectives on the world and help them develop
superior critical thinking skills. The program includes a residential
freshmen year, a study abroad option, a public service component,
and a senior Capstone Course in which students are asked to prepare
a thesis on their personal world view.
For more information about the Blount Initiative please visit www.as.ua.edu/blount or
call 205/348-1706.
|