Mary Harrington
The ultimate result, as gender acceleration and acceleration as a whole reaches its ultimate intensity, is a return back to the ocean, back to a sexless, genderless slime swarmachine.
—nlx, “Gender Acceleration: A Blackpaper”REF
Introduction
“Human” as a concept is fuzzy by definition: a Gestalt template sensed and inferred rather than sharply defined and the ontology of which has galvanized philosophical debate for millennia. Does this exist as a template in some higher dimension, as Platonism suggests, or in the mind of God as the Thomists proposed? Does it exist at all? Such questions may seem abstract or merely old-fashioned, but dispute over the nature and ontology of “the human” is alive and well and forms the unacknowledged backdrop to one of today’s most intractable political problems for conservatives: what Heidegger called the question concerning technology.
The groundwork for this question was first laid by one of the great scholastic debates of the Middle Ages, a debate on the nature of “Nature” and its relation to the divine. In that argument, the philosopher William of Ockham problematized two classical claims, later Christianized by Thomas Aquinas: the idea that things have a nature and the idea that the world has meaning. Ockham’s challenge set the stage for the scientific revolution, which in turn galvanized the great social movements gathered under the broad heading “the Left.”REF
It would be an oversimplification to claim that the Left is simply Christianity without the transcendental bits. The moral intuitions that drive the Left’s pursuit of egalitarian social goals are profoundly rooted in the West’s Christian history, but leftism is distinct from Christianity in its focus on social and moral change within history in terms that do not presuppose any spiritual content to human existence. The egalitarian values that order such efforts at change have their origins in a long, » Read More
https://www.heritage.org/progressivism/report/imago-dei-human-nature-technology-and-the-progress-dilemma