What Things Do

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780271025407

Philosophical Reflections on Technology, Agency, and Design

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By Peter-Paul Verbeek
Imprint:
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
264

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Description

Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments

Introduction: To the Things Themselves

1. The Death of Things

2. The Thing About the Philosophy of Technology

3. Toward a Philosophy of Artifacts

Part I: Philosophy Beyond Things

1. Technology and the Self

1.1 Introduction

1.2 Technology and Mass-Rule

1.3 Human Beings and Mass Production

1.4 Mass Existence

1.5 The Neutrality of Technology

1.6 Conclusion

2. The Thing about Technology

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Heidegger’s Philosophy of Technology

2.3 To Be or Not to Be—That Is the Question

2.4 Heidegger and Things

2.5 Conclusion

Part II: Philosophy from Things

3. Postphenomenology

3.1 Introduction

3.2 Empirical Research into Technology

3.3 Beyond Classical Phenomenology

3.4 Toward a Postphenomenology of Things

4. A Material Hermeneutic

4.1 Introduction

4.2 Relations Between Human Beings and Artifacts

4.3 Mediation and Meaning

4.4 Artifacts, Culture, and Science

4.5 Conclusion

5. The Acts of Artifacts

5.1 Introduction

5.2 Latour’s Amodern Ontology

5.3 Technical Mediation

5.4 Actor-Network Theory and Postphenomenology

5.5 Mediation of Action

5.6 Conclusion

6. Devices and the Good Life

6.1 Introduction

6.2 The Device Paradigm

6.3 Technology and the Good Life

6.4 Beyond Alienation

6.5 Mediated Engagement

6.6 Conclusion: The Mediation of Action and Experience

Part III: Philosophy for Things

7. Artifacts in Design

7.1 Introduction

7.2 The Materiality of Things

7.3 Toward a Material Aesthetics

7.4 Durable Designs

7.5 Conclusion



“In this insightful examination of the technological mediation in human action, he both poses new philosophical and societal questions, and offers a new way of bringing ethics into the practice of designing technical artifacts.”

—Katinka Waelbers, Science and Engineering Ethics

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