Greta wrote: ↑May 4th, 2020, 12:17 amDan D is far from my favourite philosopher. Once again, living things are being described as "machines" and "programmed". It seems that some observers take those metaphors too seriously. Obviously, no matter how machinelike an organism may seem to us humans, it is not a machine, but an entity with its own particular needs.
Any organism has needs with regard to its survival and reproduction, but it doesn't follow that it isn't a living machine.
There's a robotic, subconsciously operating "automatic pilot" or "zombie-within" (Ullin Place) in us, our minds&brains too.
As for the concept of a machine, whether living organisms, including ourselves, can properly be called machines depends on how broadly or narrowly that concept is defined. On the one hand the OED defines it as "a structure of any kind, material or immaterial", and on the other hand it defines it as "a combination of parts moving mechanically, as contrasted with a being having life, consciousness and will."
In 1748 La Mettrie's book
L'Homme Machine was published:
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"The human body is a machine which winds itself up, a living picture of perpetual motion."
(p. 7)
"But since all the soul's faculties depend so much on the specific organisation of the brain and of the whole body that they are clearly nothing but that very organisation, the machine is perfectly explained!"
(p. 26)
"To be a machine and to feel, to think and to be able to distinguish right from wrong, like blue from yellow – in a word to be born with intelligence and a sure instinct for morality and to be only an animal – are thus things which are no more contradictory than to be an ape or a parrot and to be able to give oneself pleasure. … I believe thought to be so little incompatible with organised matter that it seems to be one of its properties, like electricity, motive power, impenetrability, extension, etc."
(p. 35)
(La Mettrie, Julien Offray de. "Machine Man." 1748. In
Machine Man and Other Writings, translated and edited by Ann Thomson, 1-40. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.)
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