TY - GEN AU - Scharff, Robert C. AU - Dusek, Val TI - Philosophy of technology: the technological condition- an anthology SN - 9781118547250 U1 - 601 SCH/P PY - 2014/// CY - Chichester PB - John Wiley & Sons KW - Technology -- Philosophy N1 - Table of Contents Part I: Philosophy, Modern Science, and Technology 1. On Dialectic and “Technē” 2. On “Technē” and “Epistēmē” 3. The Greek Concepts of “Nature” and “Technique” 4. On the Idols, the Scientific Study of Nature, and the Reformation of Education 5. Idea for a Universal History from a Cosmopolitan Point of View 6. The Nature and Importance of the Positive Philosophy 7. On the Sciences and Arts 8. Capitalism and the Modern Labor Process Part II: Philosophy, Modern Science, and Technology 9. The Scientific Conception of the World: The Vienna Circle 10. Paradigms and Anomalies in Science 11. Experimentation and Scientific Realism 12. Hermeneutical Philosophy and Pragmatism: A Philosophy of Science 13. What are Cultural Studies of Science? 14. Revaluing Science: Starting from the Practices of Women 15. Is Science Multicultural? 16. On Knowledge and the Diversity of Cultures: Comment on Harding 17. Philosophical Inputs and Outputs of Technology 18. Analytic Philosophy of Technology 19. On the Aims of a Philosophy of Technology 20. Toward a Philosophy of Technology 21. The Technology Question in Feminism: A View from Feminist Technology Studies Part III: Defining Technology 22. Conflicting Visions of Technology 23. The Mangle of Practice 24. The Social Construction of Facts and Artifacts 25. Actor-Network Theory (ANT) 26. Actor-Network Theory: Critical Considerations Part IV: Heidegger on Technology 27. The Question Concerning Technology 28. On Philosophy’s “Ending” in Technoscience: Heidegger vs. Comte 29. Focal Things and Practices 30. Heidegger and Borgmann on How to Affirm Technology 31. Philosophy of Technology at the Crossroads: Critique of Heidegger and Borgmann Part V: Technology and Human Ends 32. Tool Users vs. Homo Sapiens and the Megamachine 33. The “Vita Activa” and the Modern Age 34. Putting Pragmatism (especially Dewey’s) to Work 35. Buddhist Economics 36. The “Autonomy” of the Technological Phenomenon 37. Do Machines Make History? 38. The New Forms of Control 39. Technological Determinism Is Dead; Long Live Technological Determinism 40. Mining the Earth’s Womb 41. The Deep Ecology Movement 42. Deeper than Deep Ecology: The Eco-Feminist Connection 43. In Defense of Posthuman Dignity Part VI: Technology as Social Practice 44. Cultural Climates and Technological Advance in the Middle Ages 45. Three Ways of Being-With Technology 46. A Phenomenology of Technics 47. Postphenomenology of Technology 48. Technoscience Studies after Heidegger? Not Yet 49. Consciousness in Human and Robot Minds 50. Why Heideggerian AI Failed and How Fixing It Would Require Making It More Heideggerian 51. A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century 52. A Moratorium on Cyborgs: Computation, Cognition, and Commerce 53. Anonymity versus Commitment: The Dangers of Education on the Internet 54. Panopticism 55. Do Artifacts Have Politics? 56. The Social Impact of Technological Change 57. Technology: The Opiate of the Intellectuals, with the Author’s 2000 Retrospective 58. Democratic Rationalization: Technology, Power, and Freedom -- N2 - The new edition of this authoritative introduction to the philosophy of technology includes recent developments in the subject, while retaining the range and depth of its selection of seminal contributions and its much-admired editorial commentary UR - https://www.wiley.com/en-in/shop/general-philosophy/philosophy-of-technology-the-technological-condition-an-anthology-2nd-edition-p-9781118547250 ER -