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    <title>love</title>    
    <link>https://fp.waik.stronazen.pl:443//index.html?id=1420</link>
    <description>Index de love</description>
    <language>fr</language>    
    <ttl>0</ttl>
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      <title>Artificial Intelligence versus Agape Love</title>  
      <link>https://fp.waik.stronazen.pl:443//3590-2402-12.html</link>
      <description>As Artificial Intelligence researchers attempt to emulate human intelligence and transhumanists work toward superintelligence, philosophers and theologians confront a dilemma: we must either, on the one horn, (1) abandon the view that the defining feature of humanity is rationality and propose an account of spirituality that dissociates it from reason; or, on the other horn, (2) find a way to invalidate the growing faith in a posthuman future shaped by the enhancements of Intelligence Amplification (IA) or the progress of Artificial Intelligence (AI). I grasp both horns of the dilemma and offer three recommendations. First, it is love understood as agape, not rational intelligence, which tells us how to live a godly life. Love tells us how to be truly human. Second, the transhumanist vision of a posthuman superintelligence is not only unrealistic, it portends the kind of tragedy we expect from a false messiah. Third, if as a byproduct of AI and IA research combined with H+ zeal the wellbeing of the human species and our planet is enhanced, we should be grateful. </description>
      <pubDate>Fri, 20 Dec 2019 11:53:18 +0100</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>Fri, 20 Dec 2019 11:56:41 +0100</lastBuildDate>      
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      <title>Memory, Origins, and the Searching Quest in Girard’s Mimetic Cycle</title>  
      <link>https://fp.waik.stronazen.pl:443//3509-2401-03.html</link>
      <description>This paper offers an interpretation of René Girard’s mimetic theory in light of Hannah Arendt’s account of St Augustine’s philosophy of love. Girard’s mimetic theory crosses many disciplines and has been the main inspiration in his oeuvre over decades. However, its later application and how it purports to demystify culture and point to the truth of the Christian revelation, sits uneasily with his early confessional position. This paper is an attempt to make sense of Girard the Christian thinker, who seeks to explain Christianity without a continuous searching quest for God and ethical orientation in the world. I examine his early theory of desire and how it claims to lead to the conversion of the hero and author of the novel, and how Girard compares the hero’s journey in literary space to the Saint’s journey in spiritual space. In explicating Hannah Arendt’s work entitled Love and Saint Augustine I set out some of the key concepts of Augustine’s philosophy of “love as desire” and highlight a number of contexts in Augustine’s thinking that refocus his philosophy in the direction of memory in response to the commandment to love God, neighbour and self. I go on to examine whether Arendt’s analysis of Augustine might also apply to Girard’s journey with mimetic theory. Finally, I attempt to articulate a context for reading Girard in light of Augustine’s own searching quest for God, one that tries to bring his personal and confessional stance back into his account of mimesis and human origins. </description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 03 Dec 2019 16:52:54 +0100</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>Tue, 03 Dec 2019 17:15:16 +0100</lastBuildDate>      
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