The Plan? To Resurrect Every Person Who Ever Lived
9 hours ago
- #Transhumanism
- #Resurrection
- #Philosophy
- Nikolai Fedorov envisioned humanity's common task as achieving universal harmony by controlling nature, resurrecting all dead, and colonizing the universe.
- Fedorov criticized human disunity—such as urban vs. rural divides and academic elitism—and proposed unification through education and relocating people to small towns near ancestors' graves.
- He defined the 'blind force of nature' (e.g., disease, death) as the enemy to conquer through collective scientific effort, aiming for literal resurrection by reassembling particles of the deceased.
- Fedorov's 'Supramoralism' posited resurrecting ancestors as the highest moral duty, blending Christian teachings with transhumanist goals like space travel and immortality.
- Critics argue Fedorov's philosophy ignores human plurality and individuality, akin to forcing all into a collective 'Borg,' with unrealistic assumptions about universal agreement on values.
- Dostoyevsky fully endorsed Fedorov's literal resurrection idea, aligning with Russian Orthodox beliefs, while Tolstoy respected Fedorov's Christian lifestyle but did not share his views.
- The review highlights Fedorov's ambitious, transhumanist vision as life-affirming, yet questions its feasibility given human nature's diversity and self-interest.