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The cyberworld fast rolling in and impacting every aspect of human
living on the globe today presents an enormous challenge to
humankind. It is taken up by the media following current events
through to all kinds of natural- and social-scientific discourses.
Digitized technoscience develops at a breakneck pace in all areas
accompanied by sociological analysis. What is missing is a
philosophical response genuinely posing the basic ontological
question: What is a digital being's peculiar mode of being? The
present study offers a digital ontology that analyzes the
dissolution of beings into bit-strings, driven by mathematized
science. The mathematization of knowledge reaches back to
Pythagoras, Plato and Aristotle, and continues with Descartes,
Galileo, Newton, Leibniz. Western knowledge from its inception has
always been driven by an unbridled will to efficient-causal power
over all kinds of movement and change. This historical trajectory
culminates in the universal Turing machine that enables efficient,
automated, algorithmic control over the movement of digital beings
through the cyberworld. The book fills in the ontological
foundations underpinning this brave new cyberworld and interrogates
them, especially by questioning the millennia-old conception of
1D-linear time. An alternative ontology of movement arises, based
on a radically alternative conception of 3D-time.
The first aim is to provide well-articulated concepts by thinking
through elementary phenomena of today's world, focusing on privacy
and the digital, to clarify who we are in the cyberworld - hence a
phenomenology of digital whoness. The second aim is to engage
critically, hermeneutically with older and current literature on
privacy, including in today's emerging cyberworld. Phenomenological
results include concepts of i) self-identity through interplay with
the world, ii) personal privacy in contradistinction to the privacy
of private property, iii) the cyberworld as an artificial, digital
dimension in order to discuss iv) what freedom in the cyberworld
can mean, whilst not neglecting v) intercultural aspects and vi)
the EU context.
We live today surrounded by countless digital gadgets and navigate
through cyberspace as if it were the most natural thing in the
world. This digital cast of being, however, comes from a long
history of philosophical and mathematical thinking in which the
Western will to productive power over movement has attained its
consummation. This study traces the digital dissolution of beings
from the Pythagoreans, Plato and Aristotle's ontology via Cartesian
mathematical science through to our digitized economy and
telecommunications. With an appendix reinterpreting quantum
mechanical indeterminacy phenomenologically.
Freedom, value, power, justice, government, legitimacy are major
themes of the present inquiry. It explores the ontological
structure of human beings associating with one another, the basic
phenomenon of society. We human beings strive to become who we are
in an ongoing power interplay with each other. Thinkers called as
witnesses include Plato, Aristotle, Anaximander, Protagoras,
Hobbes, Locke, Adam Smith, Hegel, Marx, Schopenhauer, Heidegger,
Schumpeter, Hayek, Schmitt, Ernst Junger, et al.
How are core social phenomena to be understood as modes of being?
This book offers an alternative approach to social ontology. Recent
interest in social ontology on the part of mainstream philosophy
and the social sciences presupposes from the outset that the human
being can be cast as a conscious subject whose intentionality can
be collective. By contrast, the present study insistently poses the
crucial question of who the human being is and how they sociate as
whos. Such whoness is a clean-cut departure from the venerable
tradition of questioning whatness (quidditas, essence) in
philosophical thinking. Casting human being hermeneutically as
whoness opens up new insights into how human beings sociate in
interplays of mutual estimation that are simultaneously social
power plays. Hitherto, the ontology of social power in all its
various guises, has only ever been implicit. This book makes it
explicit. The kind of social power prevalent in capitalist
societies is that of the reified value embodied in commodities,
money, capital, & co. Reified value itself is constituted
through an interplay of mutual estimation among things that
reflects back on the power interplay among whos. In this way a new
critique of capitalism becomes possible.
How are core social phenomena to be understood as modes of being?
This book offers an alternative approach to social ontology. Recent
interest in social ontology on the part of mainstream philosophy
and the social sciences presupposes from the outset that the human
being can be cast as a conscious subject whose intentionality can
be collective. By contrast, the present study insistently poses the
crucial question of who the human being is and how they sociate as
whos. Such whoness is a clean-cut departure from the venerable
tradition of questioning whatness (quidditas, essence) in
philosophical thinking. Casting human being hermeneutically as
whoness opens up new insights into how human beings sociate in
interplays of mutual estimation that are simultaneously social
power plays. Hitherto, the ontology of social power in all its
various guises, has only ever been implicit. This book makes it
explicit. The kind of social power prevalent in capitalist
societies is that of the reified value embodied in commodities,
money, capital, &c. Reified value itself is constituted through
an interplay of mutual estimation among things that reflects back
on the power interplay among whos. In this way a new critique of
capitalism becomes possible.
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