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How should we understand the experience of encountering and
interpreting images? What are their roles in science and medicine?
How do they shape everyday life? Postphenomenology and Imaging: How
to Read Technology brings together scholars from multiple
disciplines to investigate these questions. The contributors make
use of the "postphenomenological" philosophical perspective,
applying its distinctive ideas to the study of how images are
experienced. These essays offer both philosophical analysis of our
conception of images and empirical studies of imaging practice. The
contributors analyze concrete examples from a variety of fields of
science and medicine, including radiology, neuroscience, cytology,
physics, remote sensing, and space science. They also include
examples of imaging in everyday life, from smartphone apps to
animated GIFs. Edited by Samantha J. Fried and Robert Rosenberger,
this collection includes an extensive "primer" chapter introducing
and expanding the postphenomenological account of imaging, as well
as a set of short pieces by "critical respondents": prominent
scholars who may not self-identify as doing postphenomenology but
whose adjacent work is illuminating.
Friis and Crease capture Postphenomenology, a new field that has
attracted attention among scholars engaged in technology studies.
Contributors to this edited collection seek to analyze, clarify,
and develop postphenomenological language and concepts, expand the
work of Don Ihde, the field's founder, and scout into fields that
Ihde never tackled. Many of the contributors to this collection had
especially close ties to Ihde and have benefited from close work
with him. This combined with the distinctive diversity of the
contributors-18 people from 10 different countries-enables this
volume to put on display the diversity of content and styles in
this young movement.
This edited volume is the first publication to tackle the issue of
researching human-technology relations from a methodological
postphenomenological perspective. While the 'traditional'
phenomenology of the 20th century, with figures like Husserl,
Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty, provided valuable insights into the
formal structures of essence, being and embodiment, etc. their mode
of philosophizing mostly involved abstract 'pure' thinking.
Although rooted in this tradition, the postphenomenological
approach to the study of human-technology relations emphasizes the
"empirical turn" and interdisciplinary work in the field of
philosophy - and reaches out to other disciplines like
anthropology, education, media studies, and science and technology
studies (STS). The contributors discuss what it means for the field
of postphenomenology to be empirically based and what kind of
methodology is required in order for researchers to go out and
study human-technology relations in this perspective. In many
disciplines, methodology refers to the analytical approach taken -
e.g. the analytical concepts you employ to make an analysis; in
postphenomenology, these might include concepts such as
multistability, variation, or mediation. In a discipline like
anthropology, it also refers to reflections over the methods
researchers use to approach an empirical field. Methods can include
interviews of different kinds, participant observations, surveys,
and auto-ethnography. Furthermore, methodology can include ethical
issues tied to doing research in an empirical field. These
practical aspects are not separate from, but rather connected to,
theoretical approaches. This book ties together the methods,
ethics, and theories of postphenomenology in a groundbreaking
volume on methodology. With postphenomenological studies of
education, digital media, biohacking, health, robotics, and
skateboarding as points of reference, the authors of this volume,
in twelve chapters, provide new perspectives on what a
comprehensive postphenomenological research methodology must
consist of.
We are facing an environmental crisis that some say is ushering a
new geological epoch, the Anthropocene, one that threatens not only
a great deal of life on the planet but also our understanding of
who we are and our relation to the natural world. In the face of
this crisis it has become clear that we need a more sustainable
culture. In fact the language of sustainability has become
pervasive in our culture and has deeply ingrained itself in our
understanding of what living a good life would entail.
"Sustainability," however, is a contested word, and it carries with
it, often implicitly and unacknowledged, deep philosophical claims
that are entangled with all kinds of assumptions and power
relations, some of them very problematic. This book attempts to set
this urgent goal of sustainability free from its more reductive and
harmful interpretations and to thereby apply a more thoughtful
environmental ethics to current and emerging technologies,
particularly those involving reproduction and the harnessing of
energy that dominate our elemental relations to sun and air, wind
and water, earth and forest. The book is divided into 4 sections:
(1) Sustainability: A Contested Term, (2) Sustainability and
Renewable Technologies: Sun, Air, Wind, Water, (3) Sustainability
and Design, and (4) Sustainability and Ethics. The first section
sets the context for our studies and opens a space for thinking
sustainability in a more thoughtful way than is often the case in
contemporary discussions. The next two sections are the heart of
our contribution to postphenomenology and technoscience, and the
essays, here, turn to concrete examinations of particular
technologies and questions of technological design in the light of
our environmental crisis. The forth section closes the book by
drawing some more general implications for ethics from the
intersection of the foregoing themes.
We are facing an environmental crisis that some say is ushering a
new geological epoch, the Anthropocene, one that threatens not only
a great deal of life on the planet but also our understanding of
who we are and our relation to the natural world. In the face of
this crisis it has become clear that we need a more sustainable
culture. In fact the language of sustainability has become
pervasive in our culture and has deeply ingrained itself in our
understanding of what living a good life would entail.
"Sustainability," however, is a contested word, and it carries with
it, often implicitly and unacknowledged, deep philosophical claims
that are entangled with all kinds of assumptions and power
relations, some of them very problematic. This book attempts to set
this urgent goal of sustainability free from its more reductive and
harmful interpretations and to thereby apply a more thoughtful
environmental ethics to current and emerging technologies,
particularly those involving reproduction and the harnessing of
energy that dominate our elemental relations to sun and air, wind
and water, earth and forest. The book is divided into 4 sections:
(1) Sustainability: A Contested Term, (2) Sustainability and
Renewable Technologies: Sun, Air, Wind, Water, (3) Sustainability
and Design, and (4) Sustainability and Ethics. The first section
sets the context for our studies and opens a space for thinking
sustainability in a more thoughtful way than is often the case in
contemporary discussions. The next two sections are the heart of
our contribution to postphenomenology and technoscience, and the
essays, here, turn to concrete examinations of particular
technologies and questions of technological design in the light of
our environmental crisis. The fourth section closes the book by
drawing some more general implications for ethics from the
intersection of the foregoing themes.
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