Humans have been indirectly and directly biohacking for millennia. This course considers the evidence for human ?self-engineering? throughout human evolution, recent human history, and today, focusing on broad comparative perspectives on cultural influences on human anatomy, physiology, genetics, and the ethics and social context of conscious human self-modification.
Humans have been indirectly and directly biohacking for millennia. This course considers the evidence for human ?self-engineering? throughout human evolution, recent human history, and today, focusing on broad comparative perspectives on cultural influences on human anatomy, physiology, genetics, and the ethics and social context of conscious human self-modification.