transhuman

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English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Etymology[edit]

trans- +‎ human, also attested as trans-human in the 1950s. Attributed to Teilhard de Chardin, as French trans-humain (noun, sometimes capitalised as (le) Trans-humain), who used it alongside ultra-humain ("the ultra-human"). As a countable English noun (plural transhumans) introduced by F. M. Esfandiary in the 1960s (here trans- is short for transitional).

Adjective[edit]

transhuman (comparative more transhuman, superlative most transhuman)

  1. More than human; superhuman.
    • 2009, Vinoth Ramachandra, Subverting Global Myths, →ISBN:
      Turning fallible human foot soldiers into transhuman machines who need neither sleep nor food, and are incapable of resistance and independent thought, is a Napoleonic dream .
    • 2015, Laurence Moroney, TRANSHUMAN: Volume 1 : The Deconstruction of Hu Ying Chao:
      A template for those who will become transhuman.
  2. Related to transhumanism.
    • 2011, Ronald Cole-Turner, Transhumanism and Transcendence, →ISBN:
      I believe that this is important, because taken in isolation the kind of enhancements portrayed by transhuman philosophers might seem relatively innocuous.
    • 2012, J. B. Stump, Alan G. Padgett, The Blackwell Companion to Science and Christianity, →ISBN:
      The transhuman ideal is based upon a reconception of evolution, a perfecting and transcending of the human race through the next step in progress: not through biological mutation but through science and technology.
    • 2014, Robert M. Geraci, Virtually Sacred: Myth and Meaning in World of Warcraft and Second Life, →ISBN:
      In a study of transhumanists and video games, fully twothirds of the participants claimed that video games incline players toward a transhuman sense of self.
  3. Involving something beyond the merely human; transcending human limitations or boundaries.
    • 2000, Victor Segesvary, Dialogue of Civilizations: An Introduction to Civilizational Analysis, →ISBN:
      This "other world" is transcendent because the experience of the sacred—an encounter with a reality transcending immanent life—gives birth to the idea that there are absolute, that is, transhuman, realities.
    • 2001, Anna Wierzbicka, What did Jesus Mean?, →ISBN:
      Thus, regardless of whether one prefers to replace the father symbol with other human symbols like mother and maternal—or with transhuman and transsexual symbols like first/last reality—none of these images or symbols are really integral to the message of the Gospels.
    • 2011, Richard M. Doyle, Darwin's Pharmacy: Sex, Plants, and the Evolution of the Noosphere, →ISBN:
      Subjectivity, as a paradoxically transhuman phenomenon of awareness renderred only in ecologies, is rendered into inscriptions and images even as no self is adequate to the report.

Noun[edit]

transhuman (countable and uncountable, plural transhumans)

  1. (countable) An enhanced human; An individual having characteristics transitional between a human and a posthuman species.
    • 2007, Kevin J. Vanhoozer, Charles A. Anderson, Michael J. Sleasman, Everyday Theology (Cultural Exegesis), →ISBN:
      In the same way that a transhuman is a transitional human, Christians are also humans in transition, living in a kingdom that has come and yet is coming, “strangers in the world.”
    • 2008, Christopher Ejsmond, Reflections on Life, →ISBN, page 100:
      On the coffee table rested a sculpture of the fundamental, recombinant DNA of the present transhumans.
    • 2011, Andrea Nightingale, Once Out of Nature: Augustine on Time and the Body, →ISBN, page 4:
      In practice, this technological transhumation would wreak havoc on the earth. While modern transhumans are meant to come into being through technology, Augustine offers two models of transhumans made by a divine rather than a human creator -- Adam and Eve in Eden and the resurrected saints in heaven.
    • 2014, Calvin Mercer, Tracy J. Trothen, Religion and Transhumanism: The Unknown Future of Human Enhancement, →ISBN, page 207:
      Will it happaen again if we transition from human to transhuman?
  2. A being that transcends humanity; a superhuman being.
    • 2002, Vernor Vinge, The Collected Stories of Vernor Vinge, →ISBN:
      I bet every critter that thinks it thinks—even the transhumans—worry about how to do right for themselves and the ones they love.
    • 2004, Lou Anders, Projections: Science Fiction in Literature and Film, →ISBN, page 123:
      Imagine a living computer running a simulation where math functions within the simulation think. Then consider an implication of anthrocosmology: if human consciousness created reality and transhumans can simulate any reality they can imagine, that suggest the physical universe has no special status above any other virtual reality.
    • 2015, David Lane, The Thinking Text, →ISBN, page 46:
      Now ask yourself a question, don't these transhumans have as much a right in killing us for food as we do in killing cows?