Beyond Human by Eve Herold
Sunday, March 12, 2017 at 10:22AM 
Published by St. Martin's Press/Thomas Dunne Books on August 16, 2016
The title  Beyond Human implies a discussion of posthuman existence, which might be  defined as the next stage of human evolution, either naturally or in  combination with technology that drastically enhances knowledge or intelligence while  eliminating (or drastically altering) the frail and troublesome bodies  that humans now inhabit. There’s almost none of that in this book.
The  nature and timing of posthuman existence is purely speculative, but in  between human and posthuman existence is transhuman existence.  Transhumanism generally refers to the nanobiotechnological enhancement  of human beings. That ground is partially covered, in cursory fashion,  in Beyond Human. Eve Herold’s book should not be confused with other  books of the same name (a couple for sale on Amazon seem to have  religious or self-help themes), including science fiction author Gregory  Benford’s, which is subtitled “Living with Robots and Cyborgs.”  Herold’s book is subtitled “How Cutting-Edge Science is Extending Our  Lives,” which has precious little to do with the main title.
Herold  begins a number of her sentences with phrases like “It may seem like  science fiction, but ….” In fact, science fiction fans will be familiar  with the more futuristic life-extension and life-enhancement techniques  that Herold discusses. Using nanobots to cure disease, augmenting vision  with biotechnology, improving memory by wirelessly connecting the brain  to the internet, avoiding accidental death with the help of  self-driving cars and robotic servants -- it’s all a given to science  fiction fans. And while these technologies aren’t all just around the  corner, they’re coming. That makes it imperative to think about the  practical and ethical problems that the technologies might create,  because it’s better to avoid a problem than to contain it after it  begins to spread. Unfortunately, Herold’s book doesn’t demonstrate much  original thought in those areas.
The first few chapters deal with  hearts and other organs. Transplants are nothing new, although Herold  finds promise in rapamycin, a drug made from a fungus found on Easter  Island that has proven useful in deterring tissue rejection and may soon  be used to slow aging and extend lifespans. Herold also talks about  artificial organs (again focusing more on current rather than future  technologies) and on the medical uses of nanotechnology. The latter is  truly a future technology, and one that sf writers have explored in  greater depth than Herold manages.
Later chapters discuss  anti-aging drugs and gene manipulation and stem cell treatments. Herold again mentions the potential of nanomedicine without  providing enough detail to grasp its implications. Herold does recognize  that granting immortality to old people (like me) will crowd the planet  with seniors yelling “get off my lawn” while limiting the ability of  young people to innovate -- a sure recipe for stagnation, followed by  disaster.
More interesting are Herold’s summaries of ethical  issues surrounding artificial life extension. Some of those issues exist  now (when is it ethical to turn off a pacemaker or an implanted  defibrillator in a dying patient?) and others will eventually arise. If a  failing heart is only beating because hundreds of nanobots have been  programmed to emulate heart functions such as oxygenating blood, is it  ethical to turn off the nanobots if they are extending the suffering  life of a critically ill patient?
Herold also explores brain  enhancement, including potential cures for Alzheimer’s and various  devices that might improve cognitive ability through brain stimulation.  We’re told that “very little is known” about memory-enhancing brain  implants so their impact on society can’t be predicted, which seems to  defeat the purpose of a book that is predicting the future of life  extension and enhancement. Herold nevertheless addresses the future of  brain-computer interfaces. She recognizes the Borg problem (talk to a  Trekkie if you don’t know what means) that could result from the  creation of an artificially intelligent hive-mind, and nods to Ray  Kurzweil’s prediction of the Singularity. Readers who really want to  understand the risks and benefits of a future in which artificial  intelligences develop themselves into a superintelligence should  probably read Kurzweil, Vernor Vinge, or other writers who do the  concept justice. Herold’s discussion is too superficial to be a useful  introduction.
When Herold engages in philosophical discussions of  artificial life extension or enhancement, she sometimes draws upon Our  Posthuman Future by Francis Fukuyama, which sounds like a deeper and more useful book  than Beyond Human. Many interesting questions are posed -- Should we  prolong life if we are just prolonging suffering? Shouldn’t aging people  just get out of the way of generations that are more capable of  producing and reproducing? Does technology replace humanity in  transhuman life? -- but Herold’s answers are again superficial. I  suspect Fukuyama addressed those questions more meaningfully. I had the  same reaction to the provocative material she drew from James Hughes’  Citizen Cyborg.
Herold seems rather dismissive of the concerns  addressed by “bioconservatives” but offers little evidence to support  her more Pollyannaish take on the future (although she does acknowledge  that the gray goo problem is worrisome). The final chapter tells us to  embrace transhumanism (at least in the medical field) and to reject the  “blind prejudice” of fuddy-duddies like Fukuyama. Get rid of that  stinkin’ thinkin’, she seems to say, and everything will be fine. (In  that regard, Herold’s tone is similar to that of nonscientists who tell  us not to worry about climate change.) I’m not a conservative, bio or  otherwise, but I didn’t find Herold’s unsupported optimism to be all  that persuasive.
A chapter on social robots is sort of funny, and  her discussion of the potential usefulness of robots (particularly as  doctors, cars, and soldiers) is straightforward but not particularly  illuminating. I did enjoy the discussion of whether robots should have  rights, although I have enjoyed pondering that question in decades of sf  novels, beginning with my first exposure to Isaac Asimov. I also  appreciated the thought that robots should be required to carry  insurance. Tons of insurance, since moviegoers all know that robots will  eventually run amok and kill lots of people.
Readers who want a  very simple overview of how technology can extend and enhance life will  find it here. Science fiction readers will have been exposed to more  stimulating discussions of the transhuman future and the ethical issues  that accompany it. If the book had included more original thinking, it might have been an engrossing read. As it stands, I would recommend  it only as a very basic overview for readers who have had little  exposure to the subject matter. And even those readers might be better served by reading works of science fiction by Charles Stross, Vernor Vinge, Greg Egan, and dozens of other authors who illuminate the issue more brightly than Herold managed.
NOT RECOMMENDED