Teaching without Teachers? Automation, Education, and the Edge of the Human

dc.contributor.authorNarodowski, Mariano
dc.date.accessioned2025-07-28T23:04:30Z
dc.date.issued2025-07-17
dc.description.abstractThis article explores the possibility and plausibility of fully automating teaching within the structural dynamics of accelerated capitalism. Departing from normative or ethical debates about whether automation in education is desirable, it advances a theoretical hypothesis termed strong techno-automatism, grounded in two main claims. First, drawing on the Church–Turing thesis, it posits that the cognitive and metacognitive functions involved in teaching can, in principle, be formalized and executed by computational systems, without replicating human consciousness or subjective experience. Second, it argues that such automation does not require pedagogical policy as a driving force, but rather emerges as an endogenous trajectory of capitalist acceleration, which systematically replaces human labor with more efficient machinic couplings. The paper reframes teaching not as a transcendent human act but as an evolutionarily adaptive, socially mediated, and historically technologized function, whose progressive exteriorization enables its technical abstraction and potential computability. While acknowledging current technological, symbolic, and biopolitical obstacles to full automation -such as emotional labor, institutional inertia, and the custodial role of schooling- the article contends that none of these constitutes a definitive ontological barrier. In dialogue with postdigital and posthumanist thought, the analysis suggests that teaching is undergoing a material reconfiguration: from a subject-centered, embodied activity to a distributed architecture of learning operations involving both human and non-human agents. The question is no longer whether machines can teach better than humans, but how education will be reorganized once it no longer depends entirely on human agency
dc.description.bibliographicCitationNarodowski, M. (2025, July 17). Teaching without Teachers? Automation, Education, and the Edge of the Human. https://doi.org/10.35542/osf.io/ezd97_v1
dc.format.extent17 p.
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.utdt.edu/handle/20.500.13098/13517
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherEdArXiv Preprints
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.rights.licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/deed.es
dc.subjectEducación
dc.subjectEducation
dc.subjectEnseñanza
dc.subjectTeaching
dc.subjectAutomatización
dc.subjectAutomation
dc.subjectInnovación pedagógica
dc.subjectTeaching method innovations
dc.subject.keywordTeaching automation
dc.subject.keywordAccelerated capitalism
dc.subject.keywordPostdigital education
dc.subject.keywordPosthumanism
dc.subject.keywordEducational technology
dc.subject.keywordCultural evolution
dc.titleTeaching without Teachers? Automation, Education, and the Edge of the Human
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/preprint
dc.type.versioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/submittedVersion
organization.identifier.rorhttps://ror.org/04sxme922

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Preprint_Narodowski_2025.pdf
Size:
351.81 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format