Publications
Technology as Skill and Activity
- Author(s)
- Mark Coeckelbergh
- Abstract
Can we conceive of a philosophy of technology that is not technophobic, yet takes seriously the problem of alienation and human meaning-giving? This paperretrieves the concern with alienation, but brings it into dialogue with more recent philosophy of technology. It defines and responds to the problem of alienation in a way that avoids both old-style human-centered approaches and contemporary thingcentered or hybridity approaches. In contrast to the latter, it proposes to reconcile subject and object not at the ontic level but at the ontological, transcendental level and at the level of skilled activity. Taking inspiration from Dreyfus’s reading of Heidegger and engaging critically with the work of Borgmann and Arendt, it explores a phenomenology and ethics of skill. It is concluded that new and emerging technologies must be evaluated not only as artifacts and their consequences, but also in terms of the skills and activities they involve and require. Do they promote engagement with the world and with others, thus making us into better persons?
- Organisation(s)
- Department of Philosophy
- External organisation(s)
- University of Twente
- Journal
- Techné : research in philosophy and technology
- Volume
- 16
- Pages
- 208-230
- No. of pages
- 23
- ISSN
- 1091-8264
- Publication date
- 2012
- Peer reviewed
- Yes
- Austrian Fields of Science 2012
- 603113 Philosophy
- Portal url
- https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/96e1f704-1601-40fe-bb94-49287caf13b7