Philosophies of Technologies Theory As Practice
Autor principal: | |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Newark :
John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated
2024.
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Edición: | 1st ed |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009828036106719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Author Presentation
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part 1. Continuities and Disruptions in the Practices of Philosophies of Technologies
- Introduction to Part 1
- Chapter 1. The Question of Technology and Ecological Constraints
- 1.1. What is the appropriate metaphysics for ecology?
- 1.2. Technology and limits
- 1.3. For transcendental poetics: technology at the service of our relationship with space and time
- 1.4. References
- Chapter 2. From Power to Care: For an Object-Oriented Philosophy of Technology
- 2.1. Empirical and "thingly" turn in the philosophy of technology
- 2.2. From technology as power to technology as care
- 2.3. Places and connections
- 2.4. References
- Chapter 3. Thinking in the Anthropocene Era with Henri Bergson
- 3.1. Homo faber
- 3.2. Intelligence as an instinct
- 3.3. Life as an organization
- 3.4. Conclusion: the power and limits of general organology
- 3.5. References
- Part 2. Epistemological Challenges of Modern Technologies
- Introduction to Part 2
- Chapter 4. The Code Paradigm: Trace Amnesia and Arbitrary Interpretation
- 4.1. Introduction
- 4.2. The ages of knowledge
- 4.2.1. The age of resemblance
- 4.2.2. The age of causality
- 4.2.3. The age of coding
- 4.3. Digital technology and coding
- 4.4. Interpreting coded content
- 4.5. Conclusion
- 4.6. References
- Chapter 5. "Motion" Machines and "Token" Machines: Milestones in the History of the Alphabet
- 5.1. Introduction
- 5.2. Two comments on technology from François Sigaut
- 5.3. Renewal of the technology-language relationship based on François Sigaut
- 5.4. Writing as a tool
- 5.4.1. "Motion" machine hardware
- 5.4.2. The semiotic mechanism of "token" machines
- 5.5. Conclusion
- 5.6. References.
- Chapter 6. "Digital Technology", Revealing Intersections between Epistemology, Political Philosophy and Philosophy of Technology
- 6.1. Introduction
- 6.2. Our thought is essentially technical
- 6.3. Writing is a technology
- 6.4. Internet as writing
- 6.5. The robbing of writing and our free will
- 6.6. Should political philosophy be renewed?
- 6.7. Conclusion
- 6.8. References
- Part 3. The Subject in the Era of Digital Metamorphosis
- Introduction to Part 3
- Chapter 7. Taking Care of Digital Technologies with Bernard Stiegler
- 7.1. Memories and writings, retention and protention: constructing the organology of the spirit
- 7.2. Reflexivity for transindividuation
- 7.3. Taking care of intermittence
- 7.4. Toward a benevolent disposition
- 7.5. The practice of knowledge and the contribution economy
- 7.6. References
- Chapter 8. Predictive Machines and Overcoming Metaphysics
- 8.1. Cybernetic machines and intelligent machines
- 8.2. The overcoming of metaphysics and the automation of knowledge production
- 8.3. References
- Chapter 9. Artificial Intelligence's New Clothes
- 9.1. The automation of the other
- 9.2. (Un)controlled intelligence
- 9.3. An endgame
- 9.4. References
- Part 4. Politics and Technology
- Introduction to Part 4
- Chapter 10. Controlling Digital Technologies: Between Democratic Issues and Social Demand
- 10.1. Introduction
- 10.2. Dematerialization leads to an inability to act
- 10.3. Technologies and their social practices
- 10.4. Deconstructing techno-discourses for a better life with technology
- 10.5. Digital micropolitics
- 10.6. Promoting pluralism
- 10.7. Conclusion
- 10.8. References
- Chapter 11. Responsibilities System: Ethics of Civic Technology
- 11.1. Introduction
- 11.2. Improvisations on Jonasian responsibility
- 11.3. Civic technologies.
- 11.4. The limited promise of remote participation
- 11.5. Contributions of the philosophy of technology
- 11.6. Conclusion
- 11.7. References
- Chapter 12. From the Infinite Universe to the Reflexive System: Uses of Technology, States of Emergency and Decidability
- 12.1. Introduction
- 12.2. Deployment of technology and exceptional events
- 12.3. From the infinite universe to the reflexive system or the end of naturality
- 12.4. The unsuitability of the Enlightenment framework
- 12.5. A place for politics and the decidable
- 12.5.1. The question of frames of thought
- 12.5.2. Decidable support and the role of rules
- 12.6. Conclusion
- 12.7. References
- Conclusion. Marcuse's Critique of Technology Today
- List of Authors
- Index
- EULA.