Thinking through Technology
The Path between Engineering and Philosophy
405 pages, 8 halftones, 4 line drawings, 9 tables 6 x 9
©
1994
Paper $22.50
ISBN: 9780226531984
Published October 1994
Prefatory Notes and Acknowledgments Introduction: Thinking about Technology Background and Standpoint Collections and Conferences Themes and Variations 1: Engineering Philosophy of Technology Mechanical Philosophy and the Philosophy of Manufactures Ernst Kapp and Technology as Organ Projection Technology and Politics according to Peter Engelmeier and Others Friedrich Dessauer and Technology as Encounter with the Kantian Thing-in-Itself The Intellectual Attraction and Power of the Technical 2: Humanities Philosophy of Technology Lewis Mumford: The Myth of the Machine Jose Ortega y Gasset: Meditation on Technics Martin Heidegger: The Question concerning Technology Excursus on Ortega and Heidegger Jacques Ellul: Technology as the Wager of the Century 3: From Engineering to Humanities Philosophy of Technology The Two Philosophies in Tension: A Dialogue Two Attempts at Reconciliation The Question of Marxist Philosophy of Technology A Brief for the Primacy of Humanities Philosophy of Technology 4: The Philosophical Questioning of Technology Science and Ideas Technology and Ideas Conceptual Issues Logic and Epistemological Issues Ethical Issues Issues of Political Philosophy Religious Issues Metaphysical Issues Questioning the Questions 5: Philosophical Questions about Techne Observations on the History of Technology Techne and Technology Philosophy of Technology versus Philosophia Technes 6: From Philosophy to Technology Engineering Objections to Humanities Philosophy of Technology Philosophical Objections to Humanities Philosophy of Technology Two Usages of the Term "Technology" The Extension of "Technology" A Framework for Philosophical Analysis 7: Types of Technology as Object The Spectrum of Artifacts Types of Machines The Machine (and Object) as Process The Engineering Analysis of Machines Physical, Chemical, and Biological Artifacts Animal Artifacts, Social Artifacts, the Planet as Artifact On the Human Experience of Tools and Machines The Social Dimension of Artifacts Toward a Phenomenology of Artifacts 8: Types of Technology as Knowledge Cognitive Development and Myth in Technology The Phenomenology of Technical Skill Maxims, Laws, Rules, and Theories Against Technology as Applied Science Cybernetics Ancient and Modern Technology 9: Types of Technology as Activity Technology as Activity The Action of Making The Process of Using Work: From Alienated Labor to "Action into Nature" Again, Ancient versus Modern Technology 10: Types of Technology as Volition Philosophies of Technology as Volition Volition as a Conceptual Problem in Relation to Technology Philosophies of Volition in Relation to Technology Toward Ethics Technology and Weakness of the Will Conclusion: Continuing to Think about Technology The Argument Revisited Science, Technology, and Society Studies Epilogue: Three Ways of Being-with Technology Being-with: From Persons to Technics Ancient Skepticism Enlightenment Optimism Romantic Uneasiness Notes References Index
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