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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Mark O'Connell, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

4+ oeuvres 577 utilisateurs 26 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Mark O'Connell is an Irish author and teacher, born in 1979 and based in Dublin. He earned his PhD in English Literature from Trinity College Dublin. His academic work on, John Banville's Narcissistic Fiction, was published in 2013. From 2011 to 2012 he was an Irish Research Council Postdoctoral afficher plus Fellow at Trinity College and taught contemporary literature. His debut book, To Be a Machine: Adventures Among Cyborgs, Utopians, Hackers and the Futurists Solving the Modest Problem of Death, was published in 2017 and won for him the 2018 Wellcome Book Prize. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Mark O'Connell

Oeuvres associées

Tolka 4 (2022) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1979-06-23
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Ireland
Lieu de naissance
Kilkenny, Ireland
Lieux de résidence
Dublin, Ireland
Études
Trinity College Dublin (PhD | English)

Membres

Critiques

This book is another good reminder — as if I needed one — that there are plenty of insane people with bizarre ideas wandering across America.
 
Signalé
MylesKesten | 11 autres critiques | Jan 23, 2024 |
This is not a story of the murders but a story of the quirky man who committed the murders and the author's obsession with him.
 
Signalé
ghefferon | 2 autres critiques | Dec 15, 2023 |
A harrowing, tenderhearted, and funny journey through all the circles of imagined an anticipated doom. Extraordinarily insightful and strangely hopeful while being resoundingly truthful, this is the must read book for our current end-time reality.
 
Signalé
ryantlaferney87 | 7 autres critiques | Dec 8, 2023 |
To Be a Machine, by Mark O’Connell, won the 2018 Wellcome Book Prize. It introduces the reader to transhumanism, a movement that aims, by various means, to allow humans to defeat the problem of aging and thereby death. The transhumanist really believes we can transcend the flesh via technology and solve death. And while, as a Christian, I find this movement to be morally repugnant, I also find it fascinating for some strange reason (maybe it is the sci-fi nerd in me?). Mark O’Connell, makes a journalistic inquiry into the current form of this movement and explores ideas as radical as uploading of minds in computers, post-death cryonic suspension of human bodies to be revived later by some yet-to-be developed advanced technology, cyborgs, technological singularity etc. The book also discusses the ethical questions posed by these technologies in a manner that is accessible to the everyday reader.

This is not a book that champions the transhumanist movement but rather explores it with a journalistic skepticism. And I happen to share O'Connell's bemused skepticism of singularitarians and transhumanists.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ryantlaferney87 | 11 autres critiques | Dec 8, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
4
Aussi par
1
Membres
577
Popularité
#43,429
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
26
ISBN
71
Langues
10

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