Article, 2024

Persons in a posthuman world

Qualitative Research in Psychology, ISSN 1478-0895, 1478-0887, Volume ahead-of-print, ahead-of-print, Pages 1-17, 10.1080/14780887.2024.2348130

Contributors

Brinkmann, Svend (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aalborg University
  2. [NORA names: AAU Aalborg University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Are we becoming ‘posthuman’, and, if so, what does that mean for our understanding of ourselves as persons? In this paper, I argue that we have good reasons to retain a notion of personhood despite posthuman claims, but that the science of psychology, which ought to be well-equipped to study and defend human personhood, has – with some notable exceptions – failed to develop illuminating ideas of what persons are and how they come into the world phylogenetically, ontogenetically, and sociogenetically. First, I articulate a short history of the concept of the person from antiquity and to the Enlightenment. Second, I describe four current challenges to these modern approaches to personhood. Third, I argue that personhood is inescapable in psychology and human life as such, and that a qualitative psychology should try to find a way of preserving the insights of posthuman thinking and its critiques without thereby abandoning personhood.

Keywords

Enlightenment, antiquity, claims, concept, critique, exception, history, human life, human personhood, life, personhood, persons, posthuman, posthuman thinking, posthuman world, psychology, qualitative psychology, science, science of psychology, short history, thinking, well-equipped, world

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