Encountering the Machine
Towards a Posthumanist Ethics And Relational Moral Paradigm in Ian Mcewan’s "Machines Like Me"
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18172/jes.6138Keywords:
ethics, moral novel, posthumanism, philosophy of technology, postphenomenology, Ian McEwanAbstract
This work explores the intricate connection between contemporary philosophical debates in the ethics of technology and speculative fiction through the analysis of the novel Machines Like Me (2019) by British author Ian McEwan. In line with McEwan’s continued literary interest in the intersection of science, morality, and ethics, this novel scrutinises the moral complexities that emerge from the encounter of humans with a technological other. Following the postphenomenological and relational ethical approaches of Peter-Paul Verbeek and Mark Coeckelbergh that overtly align with posthumanist thought, the article reassesses the moral dilemmas that emerge when a conscious nonhuman other challenges traditional ethical codes and the core of humanist moral ascription.
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