Disambiguation evidence for essay "The World, the Flesh and the Devil" via surface form

"The World, the Flesh and the Devil"


As subject (42)

Triples where this entity appears as subject under the label "The World, the Flesh and the Devil".

Predicate Object
author John Desmond Bernal
surface form: J. D. Bernal
authorName John Desmond Bernal NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
discusses artificial environments in space
discusses biological transformation of humans
discusses ethical responsibilities of scientists
discusses long-term human survival
discusses social implications of science
genre futurist essay
genre science essay
hasPart discussion of the devil
hasPart discussion of the flesh
hasPart discussion of the world
hasReception considered a classic of speculative scientific writing
influenced early transhumanist thought
influenced speculative futures studies
instanceOf essay
instanceOf non-fiction work
intendedAudience philosophers of science
intendedAudience scientifically literate general readers
intendedAudience scientists and technologists interested in ethics
mainTopic ethics of science
mainTopic future of humanity
mainTopic human enhancement
mainTopic philosophy of technology
mainTopic scientific progress
mainTopic space colonization
mainTopic technological progress
notableFor early articulation of human-machine integration
notableFor early vision of space habitats
notableFor linking ethics with long-term technological futures
originalLanguage English
philosophicalPerspective materialism
philosophicalPerspective scientific humanism
publicationYear 1929
relatedField futurology
relatedField history of science
relatedField space studies
relatedField transhumanism
titlePhraseRefersTo devil
titlePhraseRefersTo flesh
titlePhraseRefersTo world