Hardly any prophets of the innovative insurgency are more regarded than Ray Kurzweil, and his answer is Yes. One day, soon enough, science will convey us from physical passing, from the horrendous reality of mortality, and from the reprimanding out of our cognizant presence on earth.
Human development currently requests such advances, Kurzweil says. "Our bodies are administered by out of date hereditary projects that advanced in a past time, so we have to conquer our hereditary legacy" (The Singularity, 371). The possibility of transhumanism is that we can avoid our organic bodies — like a man escaping out the best incubate of a harmed submarine, or perhaps more like a thumb drive getting away from the best bring forth of a harmed submarine.
Kurzweil is discussing a type of psyche transferring — the capacity to remove the subjective measurement of the human experience, digitize it, isolate it from natural mass, dispose of the organic body, and wind up with a type of cognizance contained inside a PC who is you, endless you, deathless you.
Remaining in his direction are supernaturalists, similar to us, on the grounds that for Kurzweil, "an essential part of conventional religion is deathist legitimization — that is, excusing the awfulness of death as something worth being thankful for" (372).
Everlasting status Trap
Be that as it may, even practical people are ease back to grasp Kurzweil's guarantee.
While trying to get away from this fallen world, imagine a scenario in which we rather get ourselves everlastingly stuck inside it. Since the season of Prometheus, the Greek demigod, or later stories of individuals stuck in a cognizant extreme lethargies, mindful of everything around them yet unfit to move their mouths or bodies, the failure to bite the dust can turn into a definitive trap, the most frequenting frightfulness.
As of late, when inquired as to whether he would grasp the eternality of a demigod, podcaster and life programmer Tim Ferriss said no, he wouldn't. Simple answer. In any case, on the off chance that he was given a leave alternative, to end that unceasing presence when he needed it to end, "accepting that choice is on the table, definitely, I would take that choice." at the end of the day, eternality on account of specialists raises frequenting instabilities about regardless of whether such an exception from death would be worth "living." Hence the requirement for an "escape" catch choice, to end what is left of us.
The association got significantly all the more intriguing when Ferriss was next inquired as to whether humankind would be in an ideal situation if everlasting status was an alternative. "I'm for broadening my practical life expectancy, yet I am not pining after eternality," he said. Why? "I stress over having all the time on the planet, or the impression of having all the time on the planet."
"On the off chance that I were interminable," he closed, "I would feel no surge and no impulse to do many, numerous things."
Cruelty of Deathlessness
Ferriss' reactions convey us to the more prompt concern. For us the inquiry isn't regardless of whether by 2045 we can mind-transfer and evade our organic stuff. A great deal of those forecasts are too far-removed for anything past science fiction plots.
In any case, the way that this dialog exists uncovers a more proximate inquiry: Do you think in your lifetime, deathless awareness will turn out to be mechanically conceivable? Also, would you take it?
What we think about Kurzweil's predictions — and the predictions of all transhumanists — classify how we see the body today. As Ferriss as of now indicates, in the event that I am to live everlastingly in an immaterial express, all earnestness vanishes. What need would I have for resolve today?
In the transhumanist see, everything we currently underestimate — our science, our sexuality, our generation, our organic sex, our work, our nourishment, and the texture of our family legacy — every last bit of it gets immediately purged of its typified esteem. The perfect turns into the freed reluctance, now allowed to advance in ceaselessness, unburdened from natural things.
Contrary to this vision, scholar Ephraim Radner perhaps said all that needed to be said: "Demise denotes where the complexities of our progressing instruments of life age are appeared in their inexplicable immaculateness and helpless givenness. In the event that we take a gander at the way we experience our lives — sexuality, work, sustenance, relations — we fundamentally encounter our passings. This isn't just on the grounds that demise is the other side of life, but since death is the short lived vantage from which to consider life to be it is" (A Time to Keep, 48).
Ferriss intuits what the scholars have just put to paper. As Radner cautions, "Existence without death, passing secured and demise experienced as the squeezing limit of our subjective creatures, is unfeeling and prompts savagery" (42). An existence without death prompts brutality against the body today: sex progressing, diving birth rates, male body disdain, advanced media nonintervention, and the sky is the limit from there.
The Path to Joy
C.S. Lewis' science fiction work That Hideous Strength originates before Kurzweil's post-hereditary dream by around sixty years. In it, Lewis estimated a mechanical expectation that we could get rid of the body as pointless and leave the cerebrum as our major self. In his view, the main natural capacities are the tubes bolstering the cerebrum. "The individual is to end up all head." Indeed there is a dribbling head. Be that as it may, even the dribbling head Lewis imagined could be mind-transferred into the billow of Kurzweil. Personhood is diminished the distance down to a mind fueled computerized processor — nourishment, sex, love, enterprise, connections, all rendered down into manufactured electrical motivations for our recreated endlessness.
However, Christianity is no "deathist defense." We abhor passing. Passing is additionally our adversary. Demise is the most imposing adversary in the universe. Demise is the last adversary that will stand (1 Corinthians 15:26).
We don't defend demise; we advise passing to "Go to hellfire!" for that is the place it must go (Revelation 20:14).
Looked with death, my body isn't a cover of transformative stuff to be sidestepped. Our bodies make it conceivable to reproduce, and eat, and work, and frame familial bonds — all the wonderful things that make us human and not robots, every one of the endowments that make this life worth living, and every one of the things which develop in their magnificence under the shadow and reality of death.
The new Gnostics need us to trust that we are only personalities caught inside bodies. We are most certainly not. We are spirits enlivened by will and love and adores and longings, mixed with physical bodies — with necessities and tastes and sentiments. We are encapsulated creatures, not impeccable and not advanced, made from the tidy we can't avoid alone or through innovation. In Christ, we have just gone from death to life (1 John 3:14– 15). In this way, it's not by sidestepping the torments and confinements of physical life, yet by grasping them, that we locate our purest celebrating (2 Corinthians 6:2– 10).
Our demise is, regardless, the dull and squeezing reality which makes our living conceivable.