Weaving science and digital media: postphenomenology’s expanding hermeneutics

AI and Society 38 (6):2339-2345 (2023)
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Abstract

Postphenomenology is not a critique of phenomenology, but a practical interpretive epistemology where technological artifacts and practices are studied. These new researchers can be called ‘R&D postphenomenologists’. Over the past 25 years, the expanding hermeneutics of postphenomenology has been undertaken by classical phenomenologists, cultural anthropologists, media/communications writers and performance artists. But these face Scharff’s challenge of ‘insufficient critical consideration’ and an entire world of artifice experienced through embodied mobile devices. In response there is a ‘weaving metaphor’ and performance art with the intentional use of artifice/illusion to allow for multistability and ‘implicit idealism’ in a complex and unpredictable sensory world of ontological experiments and case studies. Allowing for multistable interpretations, variational theory, and the study of illusions, technoscience researchers and users of emerging technologies can develop heuristics for interpreting the world through devices, if programmers of these technologies make the hermeneutics accessible and visually interpretable. Both groups must expand the purview of the ‘readable technologies’ of Patrick Heelan, allowing for an expanding material hermeneutics of postphenomenology that is poised to become a praxis of perception for users of ubiquitous digital technologies and devices.

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References found in this work

Expanding Hermeneutics: Visualism in Science.Don Ihde - 1998 - Northwestern University Press.
Expanding Hermeneutics: Visualism in Science (Drew Christie).D. Ihde - 2000 - Continental Philosophy Review 33 (2):218-224.
Natural science as a hermeneutic of instrumentation.Patrick Heelan - 1983 - Philosophy of Science 50 (2):181-204.
Hermeneutics of technological culture.Arun Kumar Tripathi - 2017 - AI and Society 32 (2):137-148.

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