This article is, for the time being, only available in Spanish: Striking Vipers: el objeto técnico para hacer existir la relación sexual
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Abstract:
The subject of interest for this work is given by the metamorphosis that in the modality of the ties between the subjects is promoting the AI. It is the time where the scope of technical development promotes a generalized virtuality, where the virtual image makes us forget the real of the body, giving rise to new modes of enjoyment that trace marks on the subjectivity of the time. Thus, the one who already warned about the possible effects on the subjects of these fabrications of science was Lacan himself. His Theory of the Gadget, located in the first half of the 70s, anticipates not only the emergence of products that will gradually condition the existence of parlêtres, but also their connection to a real that is increasingly difficult to tolerate due to its exponential multiplication. In a time where the vertigo of new technologies has given rise to profound changes in the most diverse fields of human life. From the most modest Smartphone to the Artificial Intelligence -that is, the cognitive capacity of inorganic entities to relate data, find patterns and communicate with people- lead to the technical object at a zenith point. An episode of Black Mirror, Striking Vipers, allows us to locate how the gadget operates in such a way as to try to make the sexual relationship exist in virtuality, which fails when it comes to bringing into play the reality of the bodies.
Key words: Lacan| Technical Object| Virtuality| Body
This article is, for the time being, only available in Spanish: Striking Vipers: el objeto técnico para hacer existir la relación sexual
NOTAS
Volumen 14 | Nº 3
NOVEMBER 2024
November 2024 - February 2025
Ética & Cine es una Revista Académica Cuatrimestral, editada de manera conjunta por:
Programa de Estudios Psicoanalíticos. Ética, Discurso y Subjetividad. CIECS (CONICET y UNC) y Cátedra de Psicoanálisis. Facultad de Psicología. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba.
Departamento de Ética, Política y Tecnología, Instituto de Investigaciones y Cátedra de Ética y Derechos Humanos, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad de Buenos Aires.
Con la colaboración del Centro de Ética Médica (CME), de la Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Oslo, Noruega.