The Ghost in the Machine: Humanity and the Problem of Self-Aware Information (original) (raw)

Lunceford, Brett. “The Ghost in the Machine: Humanity and the Problem of Self-Aware Information.” In Palgrave Handbook of Posthumanism in Film and Television, edited by Michael Hauskeller, Thomas D. Philbeck, and Curtis Carbonell, 371-379. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. Theories of posthumanism place considerable faith in the power of information processing. Some foresee a potential point of self-awareness in computers as processing ability continues to increase exponentially, while others hope for a future in which their minds can be uploaded to a computer thereby gaining a form of non-corporeal immortality. Such notions raise questions of whether humans can be reduced to their own information-processing: Are we thinking machines? Are we the sum of our memories? Many science fiction films have grappled with similar questions; this chapter considers two specific ideas through the lens of these films. First, l will consider the roles that memory and emotion play in our conception of humanity. Second, I will explore the question of what it means to think by examining the trope of sentient networks in film.