This commentary introduces the notion of technical alterity in order to address the following questions: is it possible that technical objects can become others in analogy to Levinas' ethics and can this relation provide solutions for the subject in the Anthropocene? According to Levinas, the human subject's only break from having to be itself is in the consumption and enjoyment of things. Objects constitute thus an other that can be consumed, i.e., appropriated and be made one's own. But, in times of the Anthropocene, where the entanglement of human and non-human actors becomes increasingly obvious and intricate, and a question of survival for human beings in the face of the climate crisis, it is necessary to develop a relation with non-hu...
In What Things Do, Verbeek (What things do: philosophical reflections on technology, agency and desi...
realist literature. This is surprising not only because of its central importance to a wide range of...
After several technological revolutions in which technologies became ever more present in our daily ...
I reply to two comments to my paper "Subjectivity and transcendental illusions in the Anthropocene,"...
Beginning in the 1500s, the modern period witnessed an emerging transformation in the understanding ...
Because climate change can be seen as the blind spot of contemporary philosophy of technology, while...
The evermore explicit technicization of the world, together with the immeasurable nature of the poli...
In our thinking, speaking and doing we employ two basic conceptualizations of the world. On the one ...
This article outlines an eco-operational theory of technical mediation that centers on Gilbert Simon...
The aim of this article is to argue for an interdisciplinary social theoretical approach to the tech...
The ethical approach to science and technology is based on their use and application in extremely di...
Contemporary culture abounds with stories about how new technologies are radically altering human ex...
Technology has tremendously shaped human society, economy and environment. The quest for better ways...
If nanotechnology lives up to its revolutionary promises, do we then need a ‘new’ type of ethics to ...
Abstract : The Morality of Things. Autonomy versus Influencing Behaviour? Traditional ethics, e.g. ...
In What Things Do, Verbeek (What things do: philosophical reflections on technology, agency and desi...
realist literature. This is surprising not only because of its central importance to a wide range of...
After several technological revolutions in which technologies became ever more present in our daily ...
I reply to two comments to my paper "Subjectivity and transcendental illusions in the Anthropocene,"...
Beginning in the 1500s, the modern period witnessed an emerging transformation in the understanding ...
Because climate change can be seen as the blind spot of contemporary philosophy of technology, while...
The evermore explicit technicization of the world, together with the immeasurable nature of the poli...
In our thinking, speaking and doing we employ two basic conceptualizations of the world. On the one ...
This article outlines an eco-operational theory of technical mediation that centers on Gilbert Simon...
The aim of this article is to argue for an interdisciplinary social theoretical approach to the tech...
The ethical approach to science and technology is based on their use and application in extremely di...
Contemporary culture abounds with stories about how new technologies are radically altering human ex...
Technology has tremendously shaped human society, economy and environment. The quest for better ways...
If nanotechnology lives up to its revolutionary promises, do we then need a ‘new’ type of ethics to ...
Abstract : The Morality of Things. Autonomy versus Influencing Behaviour? Traditional ethics, e.g. ...
In What Things Do, Verbeek (What things do: philosophical reflections on technology, agency and desi...
realist literature. This is surprising not only because of its central importance to a wide range of...
After several technological revolutions in which technologies became ever more present in our daily ...