by Charles Mudede Netflix
One way of reading the fourth episode of Black Mirror, "Crocodile," is that, like a number of the episodes in this and other seasons, it's about how new and invasive technologies are radically changing the human into something that's not so much post-human as it is anti-human. The former implies a positive continuation of the human beyond a vision of the fixed and eternal genes of Richard Dawkins or evolutionary psychology (or DNA as Plato's forms), to a vision of the h
One way of reading the fourth episode of Black Mirror, "Crocodile," is that, like a number of the episodes in this and other seasons, it's about how new and invasive technologies are radically changing the human into something that's not so much post-human as it is anti-human. The former implies a positive continuation of the human beyond a vision of the fixed and eternal genes of Richard Dawkins or evolutionary psychology (or DNA as Plato's forms), to a vision of the h