Giulio Argenio’s research while affiliated with Ca' Foscari University of Venice and other places

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Publications (2)


Utopia, determinismo tecnologico, ingegneria sociale: la dianetica tra scienza e fantascienza
  • Article
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November 2019

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22 Reads

Annali di Ca’ Foscari Serie occidentale

Giulio Argenio

In May 1950 L. R. Hubbard published in a science fiction magazine “Dianetics: The Evolution of a Science”, which would later form the basis of Scientology. Emerging from the technocratic mindset typically associated with the periodical, the article considered the human brain as a computer in need of rewiring, giving birth to a peculiar kind of utopian thinking whose aim was not the creation of a ‘new man’, but the return to an original perfection of the mind. Through an examination of this text and its context, I propose to investigate the relationship between engineering culture and literary fictions, trying to understand how the mind-computer analogy shaped the vision of a regenerated society.

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Utopia, determinismo tecnologico, ingegneria sociale: la dianetica tra scienza e fantascienza

November 2019

·

2 Reads

Annali di Ca’ Foscari Serie occidentale

In May 1950 L. R. Hubbard published in a science fiction magazine “Dianetics: The Evolution of a Science”, which would later form the basis of Scientology. Emerging from the technocratic mindset typically associated with the periodical, the article considered the human brain as a computer in need of rewiring, giving birth to a peculiar kind of utopian thinking whose aim was not the creation of a ‘new man’, but the return to an original perfection of the mind. Through an examination of this text and its context, I propose to investigate the relationship between engineering culture and literary fictions, trying to understand how the mind-computer analogy shaped the vision of a regenerated society.