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This important collection of essays by Andrew Feenberg presents his
critical theory of technology, an innovative approach to philosophy
and sociology of technology based on a synthesis of ideas drawn
from STS and Frankfurt School Critical Theory. According to
critical theory of technology, technologies are neither neutral nor
deterministic, but are encoded with specific socio-economic values
and interests. Feenberg explores how they can be developed and
adapted to more or less democratic values and institutions, and how
their future is subject to social action, negotiation and
reinterpretation. Technologies bring with them a particular
"rationality," sets of rules and implied ways of behaving and
thinking which, despite their profound influence on institutions,
ideas and actions, can be transformed in a process of democratic
rationalization. Feenberg argues that the emergence of human
communication on the Internet and the environmental movement offer
abundant examples of public interventions that have reshaped
technologies originally designed for different purposes. This
volume includes chapters on citizenship and critical theory of
technology, philosophy of technology and modernity, and Heidegger
and Marcuse, two of the most prominent philosophers of technology.
This important collection of essays by Andrew Feenberg presents his
critical theory of technology, an innovative approach to philosophy
and sociology of technology based on a synthesis of ideas drawn
from STS and Frankfurt School Critical Theory. According to
critical theory of technology, technologies are neither neutral nor
deterministic, but are encoded with specific socio-economic values
and interests. Feenberg explores how they can be developed and
adapted to more or less democratic values and institutions, and how
their future is subject to social action, negotiation and
reinterpretation. Technologies bring with them a particular
"rationality," sets of rules and implied ways of behaving and
thinking which, despite their profound influence on institutions,
ideas and actions, can be transformed in a process of democratic
rationalization. Feenberg argues that the emergence of human
communication on the Internet and the environmental movement offer
abundant examples of public interventions that have reshaped
technologies originally designed for different purposes. This
volume includes chapters on citizenship and critical theory of
technology, philosophy of technology and modernity, and Heidegger
and Marcuse, two of the most prominent philosophers of technology.
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