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The Obsolescence of the Human Volume 75

Günther Anders author Christopher John Müller translator Christian Dries editor Christopher John Müller editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Minnesota Press

Publishing:23rd Dec '25

£27.99

This title is due to be published on 23rd December, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This paperback is available in another edition too:

The Obsolescence of the Human Volume 75 cover

Now available in English—one of the twentieth century’s most important works on the philosophy of technology


With this first English translation of influential German philosopher GÜnther Anders’s 1956 masterpiece of critical theory, The Obsolescence of the Human, a new generation of readers can now engage with his prescient and haunting vision of a “world without us” dominated by technology.



Looking at technological events such as the detonation of the nuclear bomb and the arrival of televisions in our living rooms, Anders advances a warning of what humanity looks like in a world where it has surrendered all agency. He outlines the new emotional landscapes that shape our relationship to increasingly capable technology, including Promethean shame, the human sense of unease our own superior technological innovations can instill. Confronting the growing gap between what we can collectively create and what we can individually comprehend, Anders speculates on the trajectory of a developing technological world that rapidly exceeds our ability to control or even foresee its negative consequences.

The Obsolescence of the Human prefigures contemporary posthumanist discourse and is eerily predictive of current debates around automation, global warming, and artificial intelligence. Providing new ways to conceptualize the intersection of technology and emotion, it offers groundbreaking frameworks for future-oriented ethics. Radical in both its stylistic experimentation and its theoretical insights, this new translation presents a cautionary tale regarding the human capacity to usher in its own destruction.

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"Even though this translation arrives decades late, it is perhaps even more relevant to today's technological condition - one in which Promethean shame becomes increasingly apparent: artificial intelligence is widely believed to soon surpass human capabilities. Günther Anders's cultural pessimism serves as a counterpoint to contemporary technological optimism, but more important, his reflections on human obsolescence and its relation to the technological world challenge many prevailing myths and offer critical insights for contemplating the posthuman future." - Yuk Hui, author of Machine and Sovereignty: For a Planetary Thinking

ISBN: 9781517912659

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm

Weight: 482g

384 pages