Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Cyborg Transhuman Compared to Kafka's Metamorphosis


Cyborg Transhuman Compared to Kafka's Bug Metamorphosis

Franz Kafka’s Human to Bug Metamorphosis
The Metamorphosis is one of the most durable works of fiction both because of the simple concept, that of a man turned into a bug, and Franz Kafka’s deftly executed narrative in which the omniscient third-person narrator presents Gregor Samsa’s transformation in a completely straightforward manner. Kafka’s tale of a man who wakes to find he has changed into a giant insect still has the power to shock and delight a century after it was first published. Many regard it as the greatest short story in all literary fiction. Metamorphosis is 100 years old based on 1915 when the story was published. It's a kind of horror story of sorts. Its premise – a man transforms into the body of an insect – exerts a ghastly fascination beyond anything in even the consummate short works of Chekhov or Joyce or Alice Munro. In 1915 the dramatist Carl Sternheim, winner of the prestigious Theodor Fontane prize, bestowed his prize money on Kafka as a mark of writer-to-writer respect.

Humanoido’s Human to AI Machine Cyborg Metamorphosis
Now step into Humanoido's Metamorphosis to become one with the machine, in 2019. Extreme invasive connections of man to machine allow a symbiosis of functions with side effect spinoff technology such as life longevity, faster processing and analysis, and enormous improvements to health. Step by step, Humanoido is making connections with his body to the Big Brain AI, in an effort to become one with the machine. Slowly every two weeks over the course of three years the transformation metamorphosis has taken place, changing human response and appearance into machine AI response and appearance.

https://humanoidolabs.blogspot.com/2019/11/big-brain-human-machine-merge-improves.html

https://humanoidolabs.blogspot.com/2021/11/cyborg-transhuman-interface-52.html

Comparisons
Both meta changes encompass great surprises to the human anatomy, and both garner judgement by fellow colleagues and humans. Both are processes with changes that take time and continue to progress. Both yield shocking results. Perhaps the bug is a kind of horror story but we hope the morphing of man and machine is a more pleasant transformation.