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== History ==
== History ==
The fundamental historical roots of [[File:Antr.png]] Anarcho-Transhumanism are deeply grounded in the [[File:Cball-Russia.png]] Russian artistic avant-garde movements, which flourished in the context of the broad spectrum of [[File:Awaj.png]] anarchist, [[File:Soc.png]] socialist, and [[File:Ormarxf.png]] communist movements that immediately preceded the Russian Revolution, and very briefly followed it until the oppressive [[File:Stalin.png]] [[Stalinism|Stalinist]] dictatorship gained political control and suppressed them. This very broad radical cultural milieu saw the birth of the artistic and literary Futurism, alongside a wide range of related movements such as Rayonism, Cubo-Futurism, Suprematism, Orphism. The visual arts and poetry of these Russian avant-garde movements were dominated by a broad mythology of [[File:Technocracy.png]] technoscientific progress, a visionary modernity deeply rooted in anarchist and socialist philosophy. Images of trains were widespread, as symbols of a revolutionary modernity that collectively drives humanity towards the future, through a new level of connectedness that transcended state and class boundaries. Other dominant iconological themes included the human body as mechanism and the blending of body and machine (from Oskar Schlemmer's mechanical ballet figures to Capek's robots), the myth of electrification as modernization and as metaphor for revolutionary political power, the image of the city as dynamical hub of radical societal transformations and [[File:Technocracy.png]] technoscientific innovations, and the early developments of a mythology of outer space and of the connection between human progressive destiny and the exploration of the cosmos.
The fundamental historical roots of [[File:Antr.png]] Anarcho-Transhumanism are deeply grounded in the [[File:Cball-Russia.png]] Russian artistic avant-garde movements, which flourished in the context of the broad spectrum of [[File:Awaj.png]] anarchist, [[File:Soc.png]] socialist, and [[File:Ormarxf.png]] communist movements that immediately preceded the Russian Revolution, and very briefly followed it until the oppressive [[File:Stalin.png]] [[Stalinism|Stalinist]] dictatorship gained political control and suppressed them. This very broad radical cultural milieu saw the birth of the artistic and literary Futurism, alongside a wide range of related movements such as Rayonism, Cubo-Futurism, Suprematism, Orphism. The visual arts and poetry of these Russian avant-garde movements were dominated by a broad mythology of [[File:Technocracy.png]] technoscientific progress, a visionary modernity deeply rooted in anarchist and socialist philosophy. Images of trains were widespread, as symbols of a revolutionary modernity that collectively drives humanity towards the future, through a new level of connectedness that transcended state and class boundaries. Other dominant iconological themes included the human body as mechanism and the blending of body and machine (from Oskar Schlemmer's mechanical ballet figures to [[File:Honk.png]] Capek's robots), the myth of electrification as modernization and as metaphor for revolutionary political power, the image of the city as dynamical hub of radical societal transformations and [[File:Technocracy.png]] technoscientific innovations, and the early developments of a mythology of outer space and of the connection between human progressive destiny and the exploration of the cosmos.


It is within this general cultural and political background that the philosophical movement of Cosmism (sometimes referred to as Biocosmism) flourished. This was the direct origin of modern [[File:Transh.png]] Transhumanism, and it exhibited several of the most important themes one encounters in its contemporary forms. Like its modern transhumanist counterpart, Russian Cosmism was a very composite movement, where some representative figures stirred closer to [[File:Esotrans.png]] mysticism and religion, while others embraced [[File:Awaj.png]] anarchist, [[File:Soc.png]] socialist, and [[File:Ormarxf.png]] communist ideals. Cosmist thinkers advocated the radical extension of human life, the conquest of immortality through scientific means, the merging of human and machine, and the quest for space exploration and the creation of human settlements outside the Earth. The Cosmist philosophical movement in turn deeply influenced the scientists who in later decades realized the Soviet space program, starting with Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, the father of Soviet Cosmonautics.  
It is within this general cultural and political background that the philosophical movement of Cosmism (sometimes referred to as [[File:Ectrans.png]] Biocosmism) flourished. This was the direct origin of modern [[File:Transh.png]] Transhumanism, and it exhibited several of the most important themes one encounters in its contemporary forms. Like its modern transhumanist counterpart, Russian Cosmism was a very composite movement, where some representative figures stirred closer to [[File:Esotrans.png]] mysticism and religion, while others embraced [[File:Awaj.png]] anarchist, [[File:Soc.png]] socialist, and [[File:Ormarxf.png]] communist ideals. Cosmist thinkers advocated the radical extension of human life, the conquest of immortality through scientific means, the merging of human and machine, and the quest for space exploration and the creation of human settlements outside the Earth. The Cosmist philosophical movement in turn deeply influenced the scientists who in later decades realized the Soviet space program, starting with Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, the father of Soviet Cosmonautics.  


The convergence of [[File:Awaj.png]] Anarchism and [[File:Soc.png]] Socialism with Cosmism and Futurism that took place in the years leading up to the Russian Revolution remains a profound source of inspiration for the modern movements combining [[File:Awaj.png]] Anarchism and [[File:Transh.png]] Transhumanism.
The convergence of [[File:Awaj.png]] Anarchism and [[File:Soc.png]] Socialism with Cosmism and Futurism that took place in the years leading up to the Russian Revolution remains a profound source of inspiration for the modern movements combining [[File:Awaj.png]] Anarchism and [[File:Transh.png]] Transhumanism.

Revision as of 18:11, 2 December 2021

Anarcho-Transhumanism, shortened to AnH+, is a culturally progressive and economically ambiguously left-wing Anarchist ideology which is stemmed from Anarcho-Individualism.

They believe that advancement of technology to a transhumanist point and reduction of state authority are complimentary notions and therefore to achieve singularity the state must be abolished.

History

The fundamental historical roots of Anarcho-Transhumanism are deeply grounded in the Russian artistic avant-garde movements, which flourished in the context of the broad spectrum of anarchist, socialist, and communist movements that immediately preceded the Russian Revolution, and very briefly followed it until the oppressive Stalinist dictatorship gained political control and suppressed them. This very broad radical cultural milieu saw the birth of the artistic and literary Futurism, alongside a wide range of related movements such as Rayonism, Cubo-Futurism, Suprematism, Orphism. The visual arts and poetry of these Russian avant-garde movements were dominated by a broad mythology of technoscientific progress, a visionary modernity deeply rooted in anarchist and socialist philosophy. Images of trains were widespread, as symbols of a revolutionary modernity that collectively drives humanity towards the future, through a new level of connectedness that transcended state and class boundaries. Other dominant iconological themes included the human body as mechanism and the blending of body and machine (from Oskar Schlemmer's mechanical ballet figures to Capek's robots), the myth of electrification as modernization and as metaphor for revolutionary political power, the image of the city as dynamical hub of radical societal transformations and technoscientific innovations, and the early developments of a mythology of outer space and of the connection between human progressive destiny and the exploration of the cosmos.

It is within this general cultural and political background that the philosophical movement of Cosmism (sometimes referred to as Biocosmism) flourished. This was the direct origin of modern Transhumanism, and it exhibited several of the most important themes one encounters in its contemporary forms. Like its modern transhumanist counterpart, Russian Cosmism was a very composite movement, where some representative figures stirred closer to mysticism and religion, while others embraced anarchist, socialist, and communist ideals. Cosmist thinkers advocated the radical extension of human life, the conquest of immortality through scientific means, the merging of human and machine, and the quest for space exploration and the creation of human settlements outside the Earth. The Cosmist philosophical movement in turn deeply influenced the scientists who in later decades realized the Soviet space program, starting with Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, the father of Soviet Cosmonautics.

The convergence of Anarchism and Socialism with Cosmism and Futurism that took place in the years leading up to the Russian Revolution remains a profound source of inspiration for the modern movements combining Anarchism and Transhumanism.

Personality and Behaviour

AnH+ will basically act in a similar manner to Transhumanism but with Anarchist personality traits.

How to Draw

Flag of Anarcho-Transhumanism
  1. Draw a ball,
  2. Fill the bottom-right half of the ball in black,
  3. Fill the top-left half in blue,
  4. Add the eyes (one normal eye and one red, transhumanist eye), and you're done!
  5. (Optional) Draw a grey pipe that goes from the red eye to the back of the ball.
Color Name HEX RGB
Black #202020 32, 32, 32
Blue #0000FE 0, 0, 254
Red #FF0019 255, 0, 25
Grey #8E8E8E 142, 142, 142


Saved Relationships

Postitive

Neutral

Negative

Further Information

Literature

H+Pedia

Videos

Wikipedia

Gallery

Template:Libleft Template:Anarchist Template:Transhuman Template:Fem

Template:Prefixes ru:Анархо-трансгуманизм <comments />

Recent changes

  • JAcket • 1 hour ago
  • JAcket • 1 hour ago
  • JAcket • 01:15
  • JAcket • 00:47