prostheticist
English
Etymology
prosthetic + -ist
Noun
prostheticist (plural prostheticists)
- Alternative form of prosthetist
- 2002, Keith A. Chandler, The Android Myth: How Humans Think and Why Computers Can't, →ISBN, page 46:
- While the two fields can exchange ideas about the design of artificial hands, the prostheticist has the entire natural anatomical, neurological and cerebral power of a human being to work with, whereas the roboticist has the additional and formidable task of duplicating all that backup capacity.
- 2005, Chris Hables Gray, Peace, War, And Computers, →ISBN, page 61:
- We live in a society of automatons, of machines tightly coupled with "organic" bodies themselves denatured and reassembled, discursively by the teacher, politician, and boss as well as literally under the knife of the surgeon or the hand of the prostheticist.
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