Addressing the technological opportunities and challenges of the 21st century, Introduction to Philosophy of Technology offers the most up-to-date and comprehensive overview of philosophy of technology available. It covers several of the classic theories and approaches, but also moves beyond them to explore a broader range of theories and a number of new dynamics in the field, including responding to new technological developments. Esteemed scholar Mark Coeckelbergh emphasizes how new technological developments stimulate philosophical thinking-and rethinking-and how philosophers of technology could do more to interact with other subdisciplines in philosophy and fields beyond academia, such as art and policy.
PART 1. INTRODUCTION: PHILOSOPHY OF TECHNOLOGY?
1. Introduction
Case/Technology: Nuclear Technology and the Atomic Bomb:
1.1. Thinking about Technology?
1.2. Approach, Structure of the Book, and Overview of Chapters
2. History and Landscape
Case: Technology, Knowledge, and Memory:
2.1. Beginnings: Two Ancient Myths
In Focus: Bernard Stiegler:
2.2. A Brief History of the Discipline
Technology: The Time Machine:
2.3. Historical Context, Landscape of the Discipline, and Critical Questions
Technology: The Industrial Revolution:
In Focus: Carl Mitcham:
PART 2. THINKING ABOUT TECHNOLOGY BY STARTING FROM THEORY
3. Phenomenology and Hermeneutics: Heidegger, McLuhan, and Contemporary Work
Case/Technology: Robotics and Artificial Intelligence and the Question about Mastery:
3.1. Heidegger's Essay Concerning Technology: Beyond an Instrumental Understanding of Technology
In Focus: Martin Heidegger:
3.2. McLuhan's Understanding of Media
In Focus: Marshall McLuhan:
In Focus: Maurice Merleau-Ponty:
Case/Technology: The Internet:
3.3. Some Contemporary Work in Phenomenology and Hermeneutics of Technology
Case/Technology: Artificial Intelligence:
In Focus: Hubert Dreyfus:
4. Postphenomenology, Material Hermeneutics, and Mediation Theory
Case/Technology: Driving a Car:
4.1. Introduction: The Empirical Turn
4.2. Ihde's Postphenomenology and Material Hermeneutics
In Focus: Don Ihde:
Case/Technology: Robot as Quasi-Other:
4.3. Contemporary Postphenomenology and Mediation Theory
In Focus: Peter-Paul Verbeek:
Technology/Case: Medical Sonography/Ultrasound:
4.4. Critical Discussion
5. Critical Theory and Feminism
Case: Digital Technologies in a Corporate and Capitalist Context:
5.1. Marx: Political Economy and Technology
In Focus: Karl Marx:
5.2. Marx 2.0.: Social media and Exploitation
Case/Technology: Social Media and Web 2.0:
5.3. Critical Theory about Technology Beyond Marx: From Marcuse and Foucault to Feenberg and Winner
In Focus: Michel Foucault:
Case: Surveillance: The Panopticon and Airport Security:
Case: Biased Algorithms and Algorithms Not in the Interest of Consumers: Job Selection, Criminal Justice, and Online Stores:
In Focus: Andrew Feenberg:
In Focus: Langdon Winner:
5.4. Feminist Thinking about Technology
Case: Design of Household Robots:
In Focus: Donna Haraway:
5.5. Critical Discussion
6. Pragmatism, Analytic Approaches, and Transcultural Philosophy
Case/Technology: Neonatal Care and Technology:
6.1. Pragmatism
In Focus: John Dewey:
6.2. Analytic Philosophy of Technology
Technology: Money and Contemporary Financial Technologies (Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain):
In Focus: John Searle's Social Ontology:
6.3. Intercultural and Transcultural Philosophy of Technology?
In Focus: Gilbert Simondon:
Case/Technology: Digital Communication Technologies and The Good Life:
PART 3 . THINKING ABOUT TECHNOLOGY BY STARTING FROM TECHNOLOGY
7. From Information Technologies to Philosophy and Ethics of Information
Technology: Digital and Virtual Worlds, The Matrix, and Beyond:
7.1. Introduction
In Focus: Norbert Wiener:
7.2. All about Information: Floridi's Philosophy and Ethics of Information
Case/Technology: Fake News and the Internet:
7.3. Critical Discussion
7.4. Conclusions for Philosophy of Technology
8. From Robotics and AI to Thinking about Moral Status and Human Relationships
Case: Self-Driving Cars:
8.1. Introduction
8.2. Moral Machines? The Discussion about Moral Agency
Case: Biased Algorithms:
8.3. The Discussion about Moral Patiency
8.4. Changing the Question: Toward More Relational Thinking
In Focus: Emmanuel Levinas:
8.5. The Debate about Sex Robots and Human Relationships: Feminist (or Egalitarian) Questions
Technology: Sex Robots:
8.6. Humans, Non-Humans, and the More-Than-Human
9. From Genetic Engineering and Cyborgs to Transhumanism and Posthumanism
Case/Technology: Gene Editing:
9.1. Introduction
9.2. Transhumanism and Human Enhancement
9.3. Posthumanism and Cyborgs
In Focus: Haraway:
In Focus: Stelarc:
In Focus: Bruno Latour:
10. From Climate Change and Geoengineering to Questioning Nature and Thinking in and about the Anthropocene
Case/Technology: (Solar) Radiation Management as a Method of Geoengineering:
10.1. Introduction: Earth, We Have a Problem
10.2. The Problem With Nature: Modern Versus Non-Modern Approaches
Case/Technology: Central Heating Versus Wood-Burning Stove:
10.3. The Anthropocene: Some Philosophical Responses
PART 4. THINKING ABOUT TECHNOLOGY BY GOING BEYOND PHILOSOPHY OF TECHNOLOGY (PHILOSOPHY OF TECHNOLOGY +)
11. Philosophy of Technology and Other Philosophy: (Re)Connecting with Other Philosophical Subdisciplines
Case/Technology: Social Media (2) and Its Effects on our Lives:
11.1. Introduction
11.2. Ethics and Moral Philosophy: Thinking about Virtue and Thinking about Technology
11.3. Philosophical Anthropology: Thinking about the Human and Thinking about Technology
Technology: Cochlear Implants:
11.4. Philosophy of Language: Thinking about Language and Thinking about Technology
In Focus: John Searle:
Ludwig Wittgenstein:
11.5. Other Subfields: Some Examples
11.6. Conclusions for Philosophers of Technology
12. Philosophy of Technology and Other Academic Disciplines: Interdisciplinarity and Transdisciplinarity
Case/Technology: Robotics and Interdisciplinarity:
12.1. Introduction
12.2. Some Examples of Transdisciplinary Work for Philosophers of Technology
In Focus: Deborah Johnson:
Technology: Humanoid Robots:
In Focus: Wiebe Bijker:
12.3. Challenges for Transdisciplinary Work
13. Philosophy of Technology and Other Practices Beyond Academia
Case/Technology: Killer Drones and Activism:
13.1. Beyond Academia: Innovation, Policy, and Art
In Focus: Jeroen Van Den Hoven:
In Focus: Robert Frodeman:
Technology: Smartphones, Tablets, and Other Smart Devices:
13.2. Some Directions and Recommendations Concerning the Future of Research in Philosophy of Technology and Its Potential Implications for Education
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