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Philosophy of Technology

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Toward of Philosophy of Science and Technology

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Toward of Philosophy of Science and Technology Anonymous LIS 296A (Sec 4) Dec. 20, 1993 ? NOTICE Something is wrong. In past fifty years we've witnessed an explosion of technological advances that has precipitated rapid changes in all forms of communication and social structures, the transportation of human life to the moon and the recreation of it in earthly test tubes, and the elevation of the status of science to nearly that of religion. Yet, despite the never slackening pace of scientific efforts to gain command over nature, for the past decade the quality of life for most people in the United States has been in steady decline. Now, in what appears to be the most spectacular effort to date to win the war on death and disease, a multi-billion dollar project has been launched by the U.S. Read More
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20th WCP: Philosophy of Technology

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Philosophy of Technology The papers indexed below were given at the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy, in Boston, Massachusetts from August 10-15, 1998. Additional papers may be added to this section as electronic versions are aquired and formatted for the archive. These papers will be listed for a period of time at the What's New? page. Regarding browser support: The papers published in The Paideia Archive are optimized for browsers that support Cascading Style Sheet technology. This includes Netscape Navigator 4.0 and higher and Microsoft Internet Explorer 3.x and higher. Certain fonts, including SGreek Fixed (for Greek characters), Times New Roman Cyrillic (for Russian characters), Symbol (for logical and mathematical notations), etc., may not appear properly if you do not have the Read More
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20th WCP: The Cautionary Ontological Approach To Technology of Gabriel Marcel

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Philosophy of Technology The Cautionary Ontological Approach To Technology of Gabriel Marcel Bernard A. Gendreau Xavier University BAG522@aol.com ABSTRACT: I present the arguments of Gabriel Marcel which are intended to overcome the potentially negative impact of technology on the human. Marcel is concerned with forgetting or rejecting human nature. His perspective is metaphysical. He is concerned with the attitude of the "mere technician" who is so immersed in technology that the values which promote him as an authentic person with human dignity are discredited, omitted, denied, minimized, overshadowed, or displaced. He reviews the various losses in ontological values which curtail the full realization of the human person in his dignity. The impact of technology leads too often to a loss Read More
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Advances in the Philosophy of Technology

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Digital Library & Archives ETDs ImageBase Ejournals News EReserve Special Collections Society for Philosophy and Technology Current Editor: Davis Baird db@sc.edu Current Editorial Assistant: A Bryant aubreybryant@hotmail.com Number 2 Winter 1997 Volume 3 DLA Ejournal Home | SPT Home | Table of Contents for this issue | Search SPT and other ejournals EXPERIENCING THE WORLD THROUGH INTERACTIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS Agustin A. Araya, San Jose State University INTRODUCTION Education is becoming one of the primary targets of the so- called computer and information revolution because of the many opportunities that it offers to the introduction of computing technologies. Applications of these technologies to education have taken many forms including Intelligent Tutoring Systems (Wenger, 1987) , a Read More
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Albert Borgmann, Holding On to Reality, introduction

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"Borgmann moves from Plato to the Internet as he traces the fascinating development of information retrieval, storage and manipulation. Lucid and demanding, this study is a fascinating discussion of how information systems developed, and how their cultural and physical presence influences their ability to communicate their message."—Dave Howell, Daily Telegraph "[Borgmann] has offered a stunningly clear definition of information in Holding On to Reality . . . . He leaves room for little argument, unless one wants to pose the now vogue objection: I guess it depends on what you mean by nothing ."—Paul Bennett, Wired " Holding On to Reality fulfills the author's description: It is indeed a history, a theory, and an ethics of technological information. It is written with great char Read More
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Andrew Feenberg's Home Page

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Andrew Feenberg's Home Page Andrew Feenberg Canada Research Chair in Philosophy of Technology School of Communication Simon Fraser University Phone: (604) 291-5169 Email: feenberg@sfu.ca Last modified: March 14, 2004 For a more recent version of this homepage, please go to http://www.sfu.ca/~andrewf/ Andrew Feenberg is Canada Research Chair in Philosophy of Technology in the School of Communication , Simon Fraser University . He has also taught at for many years in the Philosophy Department at San Diego State University , and at Duke University , the State University of New York at Buffalo , the Universities of California, San Diego and Irvine , the Sorbonne, the University of Paris-Dauphine, the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, and the University of Tokyo . He is the author o Read More
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Artificial Life: A Technoscience Leaving Modernity?

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Artificial Life: A Technoscience Leaving Modernity? An Anthropology of Subjects and Objects New version can be downloaded from www.anthrobase.com (975 K incl. images). Read More
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ascusc.org

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Ascusc.org What you need, when you need it /* lang_nav --------------------------------------------------*/ ul#lang_nav { position: absolute; overflow: visible; top: 19px; right: 0px; z-index: 9999; width: 120px; height: auto; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border-top: 2px solid #777777; border-left: 2px solid #777777; border-bottom: 1px solid #848484; border-right: 1px solid #848484; text-align: left; background: #ffffdb; opacity: 0.75; filter:alpha(opacity=75); /* IE's opacity */ } ul#lang_nav li { position: relative; z-index: 9990; list-style: none; display: block; overflow: visible; width: 100%; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; color: #0707cd; } ul#lang_nav li a { position: relative; z-index: 9991; display: block; width: auto; margin: 0px; padding: 1px 6px; color: #0000cc; font-weight: normal; t Read More
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Blacker / PHILOSOPHY OF TECHNOLOGY AND EDUCATION: AN INVITATION TOINQUIRY

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Select ----- HOME 1992 Contents 1993 Contents 1994 Contents 1995 Contents 1996 Contents 1997 Contents 1998 Contents 1999 Contents 2000 Contents 2001 Contents 2002 Contents 2003 Contents Author Index PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION 1994 PHILOSOPHY OF TECHNOLOGY AND EDUCATION: AN INVITATION TO INQUIRY David Blacker Illinois State University My aim in this brief discussion is to make explicit the ontologies undergirding the various ways in which technology is discussed in a representative sampling of the contemporary critical literature in education, and by doing so to offer an idiom for discussing a set of issues both pressing yet beset by confusion. When I say “critical” I mean to include those discussions with some reflective component, that is, those at least on some level addressing wh Read More
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Body

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From Essentialism to Constructivism: Philosophy of Technology at the Crossroads by Andrew Feenberg Introduction What Heidegger called "The Question of Technology" has a peculiar status in the academy today. After World War II, the humanities and social sciences were swept by a wave of technological determinism. If technology was not praised for modernizing us, it was blamed for the crisis of our culture. Whether interpreted in optimistic or pessimistic terms, determinism appeared to offer a fundamental account of modernity as a unified phenomenon. This approach has now been largely abandoned for a view that admits the possibility of significant "difference," i.e. cultural variety in the reception and appropriation of modernity. Yet the breakdown of simplistic determinis Read More
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Brain Death and Technological Change

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[Brain Death Resources] Brain Death and Technological Change: Personal Identity, Neural Prostheses and Uploading James J. Hughes Prepared for the Second International Symposium on Brain Death Second International Symposium on Brain Death Havana Cuba * February 27-March 1, 1995 Contents Abstract Introduction Social Death: Operationalizing the Death Concept Technological Change, and Changes in Social Death Diagnostic Advances Neural Tissue Transplants and Chemical Stimulation Neural-Computer Prostheses Cryonics and Nanotechnological Repair and Replacement Material Interests and Death Redefinition Post-Biological Definition of Death: Personhood and Beyond Appendix One: A Quick Review of the Principal Arguments For and Against a Neo-Cortical Standard of Death Appendix Two Bibliography Abstract Read More
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CCHA humanities essay

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On Contemporary Philosophies of Technology by Frank H. W. Edler Copyright ? 2000-2001 by Frank Edler (Paper presented to the Eastern Division meeting of the Community College Humanities Association on November 10 in Rockville, Maryland. Minor revisions have been made to this paper.) We are on the threshhold of crossing human being with technology in a way hitherto unimagined. Whether it is using DNA coding as a biological microchip or the invention of three-dimensional digitalization, we are on the way towards that crossing, that is, translating human being into digital being. We can't yet say, "Beam me up, Scotty!" but three-dimensional digital reconstruction of objects has been tested and patented by Stanford University. If Carl Mitcham is right in his book Thinking throughTech Read More
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Chris Kimble, University of York. Computers In Society (CIS)

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[Go to Teaching page ] [Go to Research page ] [Go to MIS Group ] CIS (Computers In Society) This is main web page for Computers In Society course (CIS) at the University of York. This page provides links to material for the topics in the course. Some of this material is in the form of references to books and/or articles and some of it is in the form of links to web sites and/or on-line documentation. Some additional material in the form of notes and slides materials is available to members of staff and students in the department of Computer Science only from http://www-course.cs.york.ac.uk/cis/ . Overview of the structure of the course The structure of the course is as follows. Click on a topic you are interested in, or go to the list of contents at the bottom of the page. Contents Introdu Read More
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Constructions

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Constructions and Reconstructions of Self in Virtual Reality: Playing in the MUDs SHERRY TURKLE Massachusetts Institute of Technology There are over 300 multi-user games based on at least 13 different kinds of software on the international computer network known as the Internet. Here I use the term "MUD" to refer to all the various kinds. All provide worlds for social interaction in a virtual space, worlds in which you ran present yourself as a "character," in which you can be anonymous, in which you can play a role or roles as close or as far away from your "real self" as you choose. In the MUDs, the projections of self are engaged in a resolutely postmodern context. Authorship is not only displaced from a solitary voice, it is exploded. The self is not only decentered but multiplied with Read More
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CSE 268D: Technological Determinism

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CSE268D: Social Aspects of Technolgy and Science Notes for the First Meeting Remarks: I should have issued a warning in class: because I encourage participation, things may sometimes seem confusing, or even disorganized; however, I will always draw it back together with little remarks along the way; if you miss these in class, you should be able find them in the lecture notes. These notes are intended as an outline of the main points, rather than a careful exposition; moreover, I cannot guarantee that they will always be complete, or available immediately after class. 1. Introduction Our civilization is deeply involved with technology, and recently, especially with information technology; therefore so are all of us. Many people want to know, Where is it all going? Newspapers, magazines, TV Read More
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Dreyfus (background) - Highway Bridges and Feasts: Heidegger and Borgmann on How to Affirm Technology

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Home > Philosophy > 1997 After Postmodernism Conference > Dreyfus (background) Highway Bridges and Feasts: Heidegger and Borgmann on How to Affirm Technology Hubert L. Dreyfus Department of Philosophy Moses Hall - MC2390 University of California at Berkeley Berkeley, California 94720-2390 Charles Spinosa Department of English Bachelor Hall Miami University Oxford, Ohio 45056 Albert Borgmann advances an American frontiersman's version of the question concerning technology that was pursued by Heidegger almost half a century ago among the peasants in the Black Forest. Since the critique of technology pioneered by these thinkers has by now become widely known, we would like to address a subsequent question with which each has also struggled. How can we relate ourselves to technology i Read More
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E-Prime

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TOWARD UNDERSTANDING E -PRIME Robert Anton Wilson E-PRIME, abolishing all forms of the verb "to be," has its roots in the field of general semantics, as presented by Alfred Korzybski in his 1933 book, Science and Sanity. Korzybski pointed out the pitfalls associated with, and produced by, two usages of "to be": identity and predication. His student D. David Bourland, Jr., observed that even linguistically sensitive people do not seem able to avoid identity and predication uses of "to be" if they continue to use the verb at all. Bourland pioneered in demonstrating that one can indeed write and speak without using any form of "to be," calling this subset of the English language "E-Prime." Many have urged the use of E-Prime in writing scientif Read More
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generation5 - Philosophical Arguments For and Against AI

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Home Articles Reviews Interviews JDK Glossary Features Discussion Search Contribute What's New Submit News Home » Articles » Philosophy » Beginner Philosophical Arguments For and Against AI By James Matthews There is a fundamental question in the field of Artificial Intelligence ? what is Artificial Intelligence? What constitutes intelligence? When will a program be called intelligent ? At the moment in artificial intelligence, the fields are not unified. We have hundreds of scientists pursuing different areas of AI - parallelism, evolutionary computing, image recognition, voice recognition and synthesis. Yet, none (with perhaps the exception of long-term robotic projects like Cog) attempt to model intelligence to a level of human capacitance. In order to deal with the question artificial Read More
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http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/ejournals/SPT/v5n2/pdf/garnar.pdf

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PDF Document Read More
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LBNL ELSI Home Page

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Welcome to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's ELSI Project Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's ELSI in Science program is a pilot project designed to stimulate discussions on the implications of selected areas of scientific research. These modules probably will be most useful to educators and students at the middle school through high school level. However, we hope that other visitors will find the information interesting and useful as well. A second goal of the program is to highlight some of the research activities taking place at the lab. "The need to KNOW vs. the need to GROW" BASIC and APPLIED RESEARCH "Information is the difference that makes a difference. Are you better off knowing ?" BREAST CANCER SCREENING "The Citizen-Scientist's Obligation to Stand Up for Standards" SCI Read More
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McLuhan Meets the Net

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McLuhan Meets the Net By Larry Press Communications of the ACM, Vol 38, No 7, July, 1995, pp 15-20 In 1964, Marshall McLuhan published Understanding Media , a classic discussion of media and their effects on society and the individual. Understanding Media helped transform the 52-year old McLuhan from a somewhat obscure English professor at the University of Toronto, to an academic and media star, and industrial consultant. In recognition of the book's importance, it has been reissued by MIT Press with an introduction by Lewis Lapham of Harper's Magazine [10]. McLuhan understood that computers were a communication medium, but did not discuss them in Understanding Media or subsequently, although he lived until 1980 (footnote 1) . Regardless, I found this book fascinating and highly relevant Read More
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Media Determinism

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Preface Introduction Definitions A Brief History of Technology Early Philosophers of Technology Man the Prosthetic god The Neutrality of Technology The Technological Dilemma Philosophical Assumptions in Cyberspace Conclusions References Regent University’s School of Communication and the Arts is dedicated to combining quality education with biblical teachings. We continue to produce Christian leaders who will make a difference, who will change the world. We offer Master and PhD degrees in Communication Studies, Theater, Cinema Television and Journalism. Learn more about our Communication and the Arts graduate programs » Contact us for questions or more information » Start your application now » © 1995-2007 Samuel Ebersole Read More
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OPT Design Philosophy: Philosophy of Technology

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OPT HOME Back to Philosophy This is on the Philosophy of Technology and was written in 1994/95. Breif overview of this essay How much does Technology really influence our lives? Today, many people use computers to store and retrieve pertinent information. What does this widespread use of computers and information technology do to our social development? In order to understand the way technology may be changing our views of ourselves and the world that surrounds us, we must first understand the way in which modern technology itself processes information. Most computers use a binary digit system to store and manipulate data. The majority of home computers and personal computers in use today are called microcomputers. Microcomputers are made up of different internal parts that perform functio Read More
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Page moved -- Redirecting

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This page has been moved; you will find it at http://www.princeton.edu/~hos/mike/texts/readmach/otoole.htm Read More
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phil/tech essays

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Essays on the Philosophy of Technology I Copyright ? 2000-2001 by Frank Edler Authors: A through J (listed below) Click here for: Authors K through Z New !! The debate over Technorealism versus Techno-Luddism and Techno-utopianism. Click here for an overview of Technorealism. . New !! Kirkpatrick Sale, Howard Rheingold, Mark Stahlman, Steve Silberman, and Brooke Shelby Biggs discuss the question: What is it that you fear most about digital technology's effects ? Evandro Agazzi's and Hans Lenk's Introduction: Proceedings of a Meeting of the International Academy of the Philosophy of Science, Karlsruhe, Germany, May, 1997. Theodor Adorno's Culture Industry Reconsidered ( from Adorno's book "The Culture Industry: Selected Essays on Mass Culture.") Adelaida Ambrogi Alvarez's Sociolog Read More
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Postmodern Virtualities

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Postmodern Virtualities Mark Poster (This essay appears as Chapter 2 in my book The Second Media Age (Blackwell 1995) On the eve of the twenty first century there have been two innovative discussions about the general conditions of life: one concerns a possible "postmodern" culture and even society; the other concerns broad, massive changes in communications systems. Postmodern culture is often presented as an alternative to existing society which is pictured as structurally limited or funda mentally flawed. New communications systems are often presented as a hopeful key to a better life and a more equitable society. The discussion of postmodern culture focuses to a great extent on an emerging new individual identity or subject position, one that abandons what may in retrospect be the narr Read More
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Praxagora

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Praxagora.com Articles , fiction , and other materials maintained by Andy Oram Editor at O'Reilly Media The site for The Future Does Not Compute: Transcending the Machines in Our Midst by Steve Talbott has moved to: http://netfuture.org/fdnc/index.html Apologies for the inconvenience Read More
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routledge_reader.html

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What Are We Thinking About When We Are Thinking About Computers? SHERRY TURKLE Computers offer themselves as models of mind and as "objects to think with." They do this in several ways. There is, first of all, the world of computational theories. Some artificial intelligence researchers explicitly endeavor to build machines that model the human mind. Proponents of artificial life use computational processes capable of replication and evolution to redraw the boundaries of what counts as "alive." And second, there is the world of computational objects themselves: everything from toys and games to simulation software and Internet connections. Such mundane objects of the computer culture influence thinking about self, life, and mind no less than the models of the computational philosophers. Co Read More
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Society for Philosophy and Technology - volume 1, number 1

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Digital Library & Archives ETDs ImageBase Ejournals News EReserve Special Collections Society for Philosophy and Technology Current Editor: Davis Baird db@sc.edu Current Editorial Assistant: A Bryant aubreybryant@hotmail.com Numbers 1-2 Fall 1995 Volume 1 DLA Ejournal Home | TechnÉ Home | Table of Contents for this issue | Search TechnÉ and other ejournals ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF TECHNOLOGY, PAST AND FUTURE Joseph C. Pitt,Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University It is true that work in the philosophy of technology predates the founding of the Society for Philosophy and Technology (SPT), and probably would have managed to struggle on even if SPT never came into existence. Philosophers and social thinkers did think and write about technology prior to 1975. Plato directed attention to Read More
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Sven Birkerts: The Gutenberg Elegies

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Sven Birkerts: The Gutenberg Elegies The Gutenberg Elegies The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age Sven Birkerts Faber and Faber BOSTON ? LONDON All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. First published in 1994 in the United States by Faber and Faber, Inc., 50 Cross Street, Winchester, MA 01890. Copyright ? 1994 by Sven Birkerts part ii The Electronic Millennium (Selected Fragments) 8 Into the Electronic Millenium 9 Perseus Unbound 10 Close Listening 11 Hypertext: Of Mouse and Man 8 Into the Electronic Millenium [.....] Think of it. Fifty to a hundred million people (maybe a conservative estimate) form their ideas about what is going on in America and in the world from the same basic Read More
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Technological Determinism

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Technological Questions and Issues: What is Technology? What is Design? Social Determinism The Socio- technical Interface Technology is Related to Science? Technology and Gender Technological Determinism Introduction While technology is often described as the most important influence upon society, it remains a subject which has undergone little study. This situation is gradually changing, however, with politicians, sociologists, industrialists and educationalists alike recognising that technology lies at the very heart of society. Indeed, technological determinism, effectively the opposite of social determinism , is a theory which points to technology as being the force which shapes society. Technological Determinism Technological determinists hold that: Like the weather, technology is aut Read More
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Technological Determinism Of Marshall Mcluhan: AllSands

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Contact About Home You Are At: AllSands Home > Potluck2 > Technological determinism of marshall mcluhan Technological Determinism Of Marshall Mcluhan Technological Determinism was molded by Marshall McLuhan. The idea behind the theory is that changes in the way humans communicate is what shapes our existence. The communications theory of Technological Determinism was molded by Marshall McLuhan. The basic idea behind the theory is that changes in the way humans communicate is what shapes our existence. McLuhan feels that our culture is molded by how we are able to communicate. To understand this, there are a few main points you must comprehend. First, inventions in communication technology cause cultural change. Secondly, changes in modes of communication shape human life. Thirdly, as Read More
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TECHNOREALISM

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overview faq signup journal readings Technorealism OVERVIEW In this heady age of rapid technological change, we all struggle to maintain our bearings. The developments that unfold each day in communications and computing can be thrilling and disorienting. One understandable reaction is to wonder: Are these changes good or bad? Should we welcome or fear them? Technorealism.Org is an important historical site. On its original launch, it raised issues, regarding values and technology, which were rarely debated elsewhere. These values and issues, however, are as important today as they ever were. This site is therefore being preserved, and protected, for your current and future enjoyment. Additional Content: Wiki Open Guides ITIL The open collaborative guide to ITIL, the IT infrastructure libr Read More
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Tekhnema: Journal of Philosophy and Technology

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Please select one of the following 4">Browsers 4+ / Browsers before 4 / Text only Read More
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The Nerd in the Noosphere

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Computer-Mediated Communication Magazine / Volume 2, Number 1 / January 1, 1995 / Page 3 The Nerd in the Noosphere by Michael Heim (mheim@earthlink.net) "Virtual community" seems a cure-all for isolated people who won't give up their isolation. Locked in metal boxes on urban freeways, a population enjoys socializing with fellow humans through computer networks. Shopping, learning, and business are not far away once we enhance our telepresence abilities. The prospect seems so exciting that you see the phrase "virtual communities" mentioned next to McLuhan's "global village" or Teilhard's "Omega Point." Teilhard de Chardin, the French Jesuit paleontologist, envisioned the convergence of humans in a single massive "noosphere" or "mind sphere" (Ionian Greek "noos" = mind). This giant mental ne Read More
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Welcome to Principia Cybernetica Web

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Welcome to Principia Cybernetica Web Principia Cybernetica tries to tackle age-old philosophical questions with the help of the most recent cybernetic theories and technologies. This is the website of the Principia Cybernetica Project (PCP), an international organization . The Project aims to develop a complete philosophy or " world-view ", based on the principles of evolutionary cybernetics , and supported by collaborative computer technologies. To get started, there is an introduction with background and motivation, and an overview , summarizing the project as a whole. Main subjects Theory our theoretical results, including epistemology , metaphysics , ethics , concepts , principles , memetics , and the history and future of evolution . Organization details the people , conferences , pub Read More
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Wired 4.01: Who Am We?

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Subscribe Renew Give a Gift Change Address International Questions Cars 2.0 Culture Entertainment Gadgets Gaming How To Med-Tech Politics Science Software TechBiz Commentary Multimedia Wired Insider All Autopia Beyond the Beyond Compiler Danger Room Danger Room Epicenter Gadget Lab Game | Life GeekDad Listening Post Table of Malcontents The Underwire Threat Level WIRED Science Top Stories Magazine Wired Blogs All Wired Issue 4.01 | Jan 1996 Page 1 of 10 previous | start | next Printing? Use this version Who Am We? We are moving from modernist calculation toward postmodernist simulation, where the self is a multiple, distributed system. By Sherry Turkle There are many Sherry Turkles. There is the "French Sherry," who studied poststructuralism in Paris in the 1960s. There is Turkle the socia Read More
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