Stopping in the 1970s, "Hybridity" as the fifth and final chapter is less of an end point than a certain realization of the artifice, plasticity, and technology that Wells and Loeb envisioned as the future of the human relationship to living matter as well as of the "catastrophic" situation that Georges Canghuilhem (following Kurt Goldstein) saw in life subjected to the milieu of the laboratory. Hannah Landecker
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The best of the five chapters of this book is "Hybridity" which portrays the future of human beings with the help of new technologies. For instance, the chapter shows the possibilities of transplanting organs and tissues or growing other people in laboratories. The future is not only about living in the laboratories but also about marrying, having children, and other things. This chapter makes us think about our own future.

Source: Culturing Life: How Cells Became Technologies

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