This ambitious volume exploits Ricouer’s hermeneutics to develop essential guidance to our interpreting multiple dimensions of our lives and concerns vis-à-vis technology broadly and specific technologies such as AI and social media. Going well beyond central schools in contemporary philosophy of technology, such as postphenomenology and the Frankfurt School, it thereby enables us to better respond to these concerns in more ethical and genuinely emancipatory directions. Individual chapters, encapsulated by the editors’ overarching insights, offer a rich tapestry of critique, insight, and foundations for most promising new directions in philosophy of technology.
- Charles M. Ess, professor emeritus, University of Oslo,
Interpreting Technology puts Ricoeur’s work at the center of contemporary philosophical thinking concerning technology. It investigates his project of critical hermeneutics, the growing ethical and political impacts of technologies on the modern lifeworld, and ways of analyzing global sociotechnical systems such as the Internet.
Introduction: Hermeneutic Philosophy of Technology: A Research Program
Alberto Romele, Wessel Reijers, Mark Coeckelbergh
Part I: Ricoeur and Theories of Technology
Chapter 1: Ricoeur’s Polysemy of Technology and its Reception - Ernst Wolff
Chapter 2: Postphenomenology and the Hermeneutic Ambiguity of Technology – Eoin Carney
Chapter 3: Let’s Narrate That Symmetry! Ricoeur and Latour – Jonne Hoek, Bas de Boer
Chapter 4: Ricoeur’s Critical Theory of Technology – David Kaplan
Chapter 5: Free the Text! A Texture Turn in Philosophy of Technology – Bruno Gransche
Part II: Ricoeur’s Ethics of Technology
Chapter 6: Narrative Self-Exposure on Social Media: From Ricoeur to Arendt in the Digital Age – Annemie Halsema
Chapter 7: Digital Hermeneutics: Will the Real Quantified Self Please Stand Up? – Noel Fitzpatrick
Chapter 8: The Pedagogical Relation in a Technological Age – David Lewin
Chapter 9: Prostheses as Narrative Technologies: Bioethical Considerations for Prosthetic Applications in Health C
This book series reflects philosophically on what new and emerging technologies do to our lives and how we can use them more wisely. It provides new insights on how technology continuously changes the basic conditions of human existence: relationships among ourselves, our relations to nature, the knowledge we can obtain, our thought patterns, our ethical difficulties, and our views of the world.
Series Editor: Sven Ove Hansson
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Mark Coeckelbergh is professor of the philosophy of media and technology at the University of Vienna.
Alberto Romele is research associate at the IZEW, International Center for Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities, University of Tübingen.
Wessel Reijers is postdoctoral Max Weber Fellow at the European University Institute.