Results for 'techno-dystopianism'

994 found
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  1.  21
    The Dystopian Imagination.Oskar Gruenwald - 2013 - Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 25 (1-2):1-38.
    This essay seeks to exploe the nature and effects of the new Post-Industrial Revolution as epitomized by the digital universe, the fusion of synthetic biology and cybenetics, and the promise of genetics, engendering new hopes of a techno-utopian future of material abundance, new virtual worids, human-like robots, and the ultimate conquest of nature. Central to this prefect is the quest for transcending human limitattons by changing human nature itself, consciously directing evolution toward a posthuman or transhuman stage. Less well (...)
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  2.  41
    The Post-Dystopian Technorealism of Ted Chiang.James Hughes & Nir Eisikovits - 2022 - Journal of Ethics and Emerging Technologies 32 (1):1-14.
    In this article, we argue that Ted Chiang’s short stories offer a realist philosophy of technology, one that charts a third course between the techno-pessimism and techno-optimism that characterize the history of philosophizing about technology and much of the speculative fiction about it. We begin by surveying the history of utopian and skeptical approaches to technology in philosophy and speculative fiction. We then move to discuss two of Chiang’s recent stories and use them to articulate the author’s (...)-realism. Chiang’s view, as it is developed in these stories, has three features: First, technology is not merely an agent of de-skilling, it can also promote self-knowledge and insight. Second, technology is not only an agent of alienation it can also provide succor and psychological relief. Finally, technology does not necessarily remake us into new beings with new capacities and needs. In many cases, it just gives us further avenues to be what we already were - to act on the tendencies and pursue the needs we always had. (shrink)
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  3. Uncomfortably Close to Human.Shelley M. Park - 2022 - Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 8 (3).
    Social robots are marketed as human tools promising us a better life. This marketing strategy commodifies not only the labor of care but the caregiver as well, conjuring a fantasy of technoliberal futurism that echoes a colonial past. Against techno-utopian fantasies of a good life as one involving engineered domestic help, I draw here on the techno-dystopian television show Humans (stylized HUMⱯNS) to suggest that we should find our desires for such help unsettling. At the core of my (...)
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  4.  10
    The Dread of Ai Replacement of Humans Represented in Machines Like Me.Yuan Xu & Yanfang Song - 2022 - Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 61 (2):1-15.
    _The rapid progress of AI technology prompts British novelists to speculate what a technologically advanced Britain will be like: a utopia or a dystopia? Or somewhere in between? Ian McEwan shows his concern over these questions in Machines Like Me (2019). It is suggested that this novel mainly reveals people’s technophobia and presents a techno-dystopian world, for which many people are ill-prepared. Technophobia and techno-dystopia represented in the selected novel echo the debates among the Neo-Luddites, especially the thoughts (...)
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  5. Artificial Minds and the Dilemma of Personal Identity.Christian Coseru - 2024 - Philosophy East and West 74 (2):281-297.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Artificial Minds and the Dilemma of Personal IdentityChristian Coseru (bio)Artificial You: AI and the Future of Your Mind. By Susan Schneider. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019.I. IntroductionAll diurnal organisms are stirred to action by light, but as entomologists have long known, for nocturnal insects the pull of its radiance can also spell doom. The image of a moth drawn to flame is suggestive of the sort of self-destructive behavior (...)
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  6.  7
    David Bowie and philosophy: rebel, rebel.Theodore G. Ammon (ed.) - 2016 - Chicago: Open Court.
    The philosophically rich David Bowie is an artist of wide and continuing influence. The theatrical antics of Bowie ushered in a new rock aesthetic, but there is much more to Bowie than mere spectacle. The visual belies the increasing depths of his concerns, even at his lowest personal moments. We never know what lies in store in a Bowie song, for there is no point in his nearly 30 albums at which one can say, "That's typical Bowie!" Who else has (...)
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  7.  27
    Luddite Interventions: on the Poetics of Catastrophe and the Art of Criticism. [REVIEW]Kurt Vanhoutte - 2013 - Foundations of Science 18 (1):149-153.
    As an art theoretician, and as a father, I focus on the social and political consequences of Vanderbeeken’s postmodernist negative theology. I express doubts about the relevance of a poetics of catastrophe that conflates any possible alternative to the alleged technocracy under the sign of the simulacrum. To my opinion, the discourse about the virtual and the real are in a deadlock. Following the lead of American novelist Thomas Pynchon, I rephrase these critical doubts in Luddite terms: should we imagine (...)
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  8. Techno-optimism: an Analysis, an Evaluation and a Modest Defence.John Danaher - 2022 - Philosophy and Technology 35 (2):1-29.
    What is techno-optimism and how can it be defended? Although techno-optimist views are widely espoused and critiqued, there have been few attempts to systematically analyse what it means to be a techno-optimist and how one might defend this view. This paper attempts to address this oversight by providing a comprehensive analysis and evaluation of techno-optimism. It is argued that techno-optimism is a pluralistic stance that comes in weak and strong forms. These vary along a number (...)
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  9.  23
    Retooling Techno-Moral Scenarios. A Revisited Technique for Exploring Alternative Regimes of Responsibility for Human Enhancement.Simone Arnaldi - 2018 - NanoEthics 12 (3):283-300.
    The techno-moral scenarios approach has been developed to explore the interplay between technology, society and morality. Focused on new and emerging sciences and technologies, techno-moral scenarios can be used to inform and enhance public deliberation on the desirability of socio-technical trajectories. The article presents an attempt to hybridise this scenario tool, complementing the focus on ethics with an explicit acknowledgement of the multiple meanings of responsibility and of the plurality of its regimes, i.e. the institutional arrangements presiding over (...)
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  10.  19
    Dystopian Social Theory and Education.Paul Warmington - 2015 - Educational Theory 65 (3):265-281.
    In this article Paul Warmington examines the dystopian analyses pervading recent work by David Blacker, John Marsh, and Pauline Lipman. Their unsettling depictions of education under late capitalism bear witness to irreversible economic and environmental malaise, the colonization of education by neoliberalism, and the unsustainability of faith in education as the driver of economic security and social mobility. In reality, our education systems are now barely able to mask the fact that increasing numbers of people are being fitted for dispensability, (...)
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  11.  10
    Utopian/Dystopian Dialectics in Christian Responses to the Ecological Crisis: Between Ethics and Ontology.Tamara Prosic - 2023 - Utopian Studies 33 (3):460-478.
    Abstractabstract:Christianity is a religion with deep utopian undercurrents that find their articulation in narratives about a utopian past, a dystopian present and a utopian future. The natural world is also part of this utopian trend, most prominently in the form of the lost Garden of Eden. While both Western and Eastern Orthodox Christianity recognize nature as part of this past utopia, their views regarding its role in the dystopian present, the future utopian condition as well as the path toward it, (...)
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  12.  13
    Techno-solutionism and the standard human in the making of the COVID-19 pandemic.Stefania Milan - 2020 - Big Data and Society 7 (2).
    Quantification is particularly seductive in times of global uncertainty. Not surprisingly, numbers, indicators, categorizations, and comparisons are central to governmental and popular response to the COVID-19 pandemic. This essay draws insights from critical data studies, sociology of quantification and decolonial thinking, with occasional excursion into the biomedical domain, to investigate the role and social consequences of counting broadly defined as a way of knowing about the virus. It takes a critical look at two domains of human activity that play a (...)
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  13.  45
    Techno-secularism: Comments and reflections.Varadaraja V. Raman - 2005 - Zygon 40 (4):823-834.
    I comment on some of the points made in John Caiazza's thesis on techno‐secularism and offer some of my own further reflections on the subject. Tertullian's rhetorical question about Athens and Jerusalem has universal relevance, not just for Western culture, and, notwithstanding the many positive contributions of science and technology to human culture and civilization, they may not take the place of religion of one kind or another in the foreseeable future. What is needed is to transform religions in (...)
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  14.  24
    Rethinking techno-moral disruption in bioethics, society, and justice.Jon Rueda, Jonathan Pugh & Julian Savulescu - 2023 - Trends in Biotechnology 41 (6):743-744.
    In response to De Proost and Segers, we provide further reflections on how technologies induce moral change. We discuss moral changes at the societal level as distinguished from changes in bioethical principles or ethical concepts, impacts on theories of justice, and whether the transformations are negative or positive.
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  15.  46
    Techno-Anthropology.Galit Wellner, Lars Botin & Kathrin Otrel-Cass - 2015 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 19 (2):117-124.
    guest editors' introduction to a special issue on techno-anthropology.
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  16. Dystopian Literature: A Theory and Research Guide.M. Keith Booker, Robert A. Collins, Robert Latham, Hal W. Hall, Paul G. Haschak & George Locke - 1995 - Utopian Studies 6 (2):134-139.
  17.  97
    Dystopian Reality, Utopian Thought and Educational Practice.Marianna Papastephanou - 2008 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 27 (2):89-102.
    The significance of utopian thought for education can be made evident through reconceptualizing utopia and approaching it alongside the notion of dystopia. Awareness of dystopian elements of reality radicalizes the kind of critique that assists utopian thought and makes engagement with it more pressing. Awareness of the lurking danger of future dystopia goes hand in hand with a utopia that is cautious and vigilant of its own possible turn into catastrophe. If education is not just an institution of the unreflective (...)
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  18.  85
    Techno-animism in Japan: Shinto Cosmograms, Actor-network Theory, and the Enabling Powers of Non-human Agencies.Casper Bruun Jensen & Anders Blok - 2013 - Theory, Culture and Society 30 (2):84-115.
    In a wide range of contemporary debates on Japanese cultures of technological practice, brief reference is often made to distinct Shinto legacies, as forming an animist substratum of indigenous spiritual beliefs and cosmological imaginations. Japan has been described as a land of Shinto-infused ‘techno-animism’: exhibiting a ‘polymorphous perversity’ that resolutely ignores boundaries between human, animal, spiritual and mechanical beings. In this article, we deploy instances of Japanese techno-animism as sites of theoretical experimentation on what Bruno Latour calls a (...)
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  19.  19
    Constructing dystopian experience: A Neurath-Cartwrightian approach to the philosophy of social technology.Ivan Ferreira da Cunha - 2018 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 72:41-48.
  20. Dystopian Critiques, Utopian Possibilities, and Human Purposes in Octavia Butler's Parables.Peter G. Stillman - 2003 - Utopian Studies 14 (1):15 - 35.
  21.  29
    Dystopian literature and the sociological imagination.Sean Seeger & Daniel Davison-Vecchione - 2019 - Thesis Eleven 155 (1):45-63.
    This article argues that sociologists have much to gain from a fuller engagement with dystopian literature. This is because the speculation in dystopian literature tends to be more grounded in empirical social reality than in the case of utopian literature, and the literary conventions of the dystopia more readily illustrate the relationship between the inner life of the individual and the greater whole of social-historical reality. These conventional features mean dystopian literature is especially attuned to how historically-conditioned social forces shape (...)
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  22.  35
    Modern Dystopian Fiction and Political Thought: Narratives of World Politics by Adam Stock.Thuy Cam Van Luong - 2021 - Utopian Studies 31 (3):652-658.
    "We live in dystopian times." With this striking statement, Adam Stock opens his latest work, Modern Dystopian Fiction and Political Thought: Narratives of World Politics. To support this temerarious contention, Stock explores the generic conventions and themes of dystopian novels of the early to mid-twentieth century, from which readers recognize dystopia as a specific genre of fiction that has achieved a "symbolic cultural value in representing fears and anxieties about the future". Hence, the study of dystopian narratives will help readers (...)
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  23.  10
    3. Dystopian Oedipus: Freudianism and Totalitarianism in Aldous Huxley, George Orwell, and Malcolm Lowry.Bradley W. Buchanan - 2010 - In Oedipus Against Freud: Myth and the End(s) of Humanism in 20th Century British Lit. University of Toronto Press. pp. 71-92.
  24.  73
    Techno-Fixers: Origins and Implications of Technological Faith.Sean F. Johnston - 2020 - Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press.
    This is the story of a seductive idea and its sobering consequences. The twentieth century brought a new cultural confidence in the social powers of invention – but also saw the advance of consumerism, world wars, globalisation and human-generated climate change. Techno-Fixers traces how passive optimism and active manipulations were linked to our growing trust in technological innovation. It pursues the evolving idea through engineering hubris, radical utopian movements, science fiction fanzines, policy-maker soundbites, corporate marketing, and consumer culture. It (...)
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  25.  33
    The Dystopian Beyond: George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four.Ludmiła Gruszewska-Blaim - 2020 - Utopian Studies 31 (1):142-163.
    Regardless of its ontological status and seemingly subsidiary role, the beyond—real, oneiric, imaginary, or otherworldly—constitutes, I intend to argue, an indispensable and complementary component of any dystopian reality. Paradoxically, it may be claimed that what lies outside a given dystopia—beyond its impassable boundaries—determines, ultimately, whether we deal with the Orwellian or the Hollywood type of "bad world."1 Contrary to the latter, the former systematically compromises and eliminates one kind of the beyond after another, leaving its inhabitants with neither space nor (...)
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  26.  8
    « Techno-Esthétique » de L’Économie Smithienne Valeur et Fonctionnalité des Objets dans L’Angleterre des LumièresThe « techno-aesthetics » of smithian economy the value and function of objects in 18th Century England„Techno-Ästhetik“ der Smith’schen Ökonomie Wert und Funktionalität der Objekte im England der Aufklärung« Tecno-Estética » de la Economía Smithiana Valor y Funcionalidad de los Objetos en la Inglaterra de las Luces.Liliane Hilaire-Pérez - 2012 - Revue de Synthèse 133 (4):495-524.
    De La Théorie des sentiments moraux à l'Essai sur la nature de l'imitation dans les arts, Adam Smith a déployé une conception de l'esthétique comme art des liaisons. Il a fondé sa définition de la beauté des objets comme aptitude à être utiles (aptness), non sans écho avec la valeur d'échange comme « faculté d'acheter d'autres marchandises », « pouvoir » d'agencer et de réaliser des desseins. Composition, adaptation, réduction et mise en scène des moyens: une « techno-esthétique » (...)
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  27. The Dystopian Impulse in Modern Literature: Fiction as Social Criticism.M. Keith Booker - 1995 - Utopian Studies 6 (2):147-149.
  28.  13
    Problems with dystopian representations in genetic futurism.Jon Rueda - 2023 - Nature Genetics.
    This correspondence offers a counterpoint to the recent article of Dov Greenbaum and Mark Gerstein defending the pertinence of GATTACA 25 years after its release. I develop three arguments for not being enthusiastic about dystopian representations in the ethical, legal, and social discussion of genetic technologies and genomic sciences.
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  29.  9
    Dystopian/Utopian Theatre in Britain after 2000 and Its Political Spaces, Zentrum für interdisziplinäre Forschung.Dennis Henneböhl & Luciana Tamas - 2022 - Utopian Studies 33 (1):191-200.
    Although utopian and dystopian elements are a prominent characteristic of twenty-first-century British plays, there is still a significant research gap on these works, as the conference's organizers, Merle Tönnies and Eckart Voigts, pointed out in their introductory remarks. Bringing together drama and theatre studies, cultural studies, and political sciences/sociology, Tönnies and Voigts agreed to convene a conference to address this topic in an interdisciplinary and comprehensive manner. It was originally intended to take place at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research at (...)
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  30.  47
    Techno-Optimism and Rational Superstition.Alexander Wilson - 2017 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 21 (2/3):342-362.
    This article examines some of the implications of technological optimism. I first contextualize, historically and culturally, some contemporary variants of techno-optimism in relation to the equally significant contemporary exemplars of techno-pessimism, skepticism and fatalism. I show that this techno-optimism is often instrumentalized in the sense that the optimistic outlook as such is believed to have some influence on the evolving state of affairs. The cogency of this assumption is scrutinized. I argue that in the absence of explicit (...)
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  31.  7
    Of Techno-Ethics and Techno-Affects.Sareeta Amrute - 2019 - Feminist Review 123 (1):56-73.
    As digital labour becomes more widespread across the uneven geographies of race, gender, class and ability, and as histories of colonialism and inequality get drawn into these forms of labour, our imagination of what these worlds contain similarly needs to expand. Beyond the sensationalist images of the ‘brogrammer’ and the call-centre worker lie intersecting labour practices that bring together histories of bodies and materiality in new ways. In the recent past, these entanglements have yielded oppressive results. As scandals over predictive (...)
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  32.  19
    Techno-Satyagraha.Michael Allen - 2019 - The Acorn 19 (2):149-169.
    Gandhi scholars agree that he was a critic of capitalism, if not capital or capitalists. Nevertheless, they disagree about his relationship to socialism. Some emphasize Gandhi’s claim that the modern Western canon of socialism is incompatible with the philosophy of nonviolence. Others emphasize his occasional affirmation that he is a socialist, regarding socialism as a beautiful ideal of equality. Gandhi moves back and forth between conditional endorsements of capitalists and socialism’s beautiful ideal. In this article, I ask why Gandhi never (...)
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  33.  22
    Dystopian Times? The Impact of the Death of Progress on Utopian Thinking.Ruth Levitas - 1982 - Theory, Culture and Society 1 (1):53-64.
  34.  2
    The Dystopian Theodicy of Parson Malthus.Gorman Beauchamp - 2000 - Humanitas: Interdisciplinary journal (National Humanities Institute) 13 (2):54-71.
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  35.  27
    Techno-aesthetic Thinking. Technicity and Symbolism in the Body.Anna Caterina Dalmasso - 2019 - Aisthesis. Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 12 (1):69-84.
    This paper investigates the reciprocal implications between aesthetics and technics, to show how technicity, as a cultural and symbolic attitude, is constitutively rooted in the aesthetic dimension of human experience. The analysis conducted aims to bring into focus the originarity of technicity in the development of the living body, understood in its inseparable connection with the mind, as junction between the sensible and the symbolic, the organic and the cultural, the perceptive and the expressive. I address this question through a (...)
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  36.  10
    On Techno-Tantrik Embodiment.Clémentine Bedos - 2023 - Paragraph 46 (1):65-73.
    Inspired by Paul B. Preciado’s work of autotheory, Testo Junkie, and the various processes of self-shaping that circulate through his corpus, this visual piece and its accompanying personal essay draw upon the artist’s familial and ancestral knowledge of their grandmother’s confinement in an asylum. Developing a visual methodology based on the holographic philosophy of Nondual Śaiva Tantra, Techno-Tantrik Embodiment seeks to offer analogous holistic technologies that harness the power of the repressed and the taboo, to transform mind, body and (...)
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  37.  19
    Techno-mediated otherworlds.Gordon Calleja - 2006 - Technoetic Arts 4 (2):129-139.
    In the last few years a strand of virtual worlds known as Massively Multiplayer Online Games (MMOGs) has catapulted the development and demand for online worlds to an unprecedented scale. This paper interrogates the commonly held assumption that places these online worlds in the same category as other digital games by seeing them as places which reconfigure the interaction between the real and imaginary through virtual technologies and proposes that the demand for these worlds is the contemporary techno-mediated manifestation (...)
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  38.  21
    The Fourth Industrial Revolution, Techno-Colonialism, and the Sub-Saharan Africa Response.Edmund Terem Ugar - 2023 - Filosofia Theoretica: Journal of African Philosophy, Culture and Religions 12 (1):33-48.
    Techno-colonialism, which I argue here to specifically mean the transfer of technology and its values and norms from one locale to another, has become a serious concern with the advancement of socially disruptive technologies1 of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), like artificial intelligence and robots. While the transfer of technology from one locale, especially economically advanced countries, to developing countries comes with economic benefits for both regions, it is important to understand that technologies are not value- neutral; they come (...)
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  39.  32
    Techno-nomadisme et pensée rhizomatique.Franco Berardi - 2001 - Multitudes 2 (2):200-208.
    Answering to Richard Barbrook’s statements concerning the « the numeric nobility » and « Californian » ideology; Bifo who has lived directly events bound by free radios adventure restores facts and institutionalizing meaning of Felix Guattari’s activist activity. Through the figure of the « technos-nomads », he shows how rhizomatic thought is alone in capacity to realize current changes in the networks universes. He puts bombast it, «aesthetics paradigm » only to realize and to fight against the depth of the (...)
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  40. Mechanisms of Techno-Moral Change: A Taxonomy and Overview.John Danaher & Henrik Skaug Sætra - 2023 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 26 (5):763-784.
    The idea that technologies can change moral beliefs and practices is an old one. But how, exactly, does this happen? This paper builds on an emerging field of inquiry by developing a synoptic taxonomy of the mechanisms of techno-moral change. It argues that technology affects moral beliefs and practices in three main domains: decisional (how we make morally loaded decisions), relational (how we relate to others) and perceptual (how we perceive situations). It argues that across these three domains there (...)
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  41. Techno-Telepathy & Silent Subvocal Speech-Recognition Robotics.Virgil W. Brower - 2021 - HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 10 (1):232-257.
    The primary focus of this project is the silent and subvocal speech-recognition interface unveiled in 2018 as an ambulatory device wearable on the neck that detects a myoelectrical signature by electrodes worn on the surface of the face, throat, and neck. These emerge from an alleged “intending to speak” by the wearer silently-saying-something-to-oneself. This inner voice is believed to occur while one reads in silence or mentally talks to oneself. The artifice does not require spoken sounds, opening the mouth, or (...)
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  42. The techno-aesthetics of shock : Mario Sironi and the exhibition of the fascist revolution (1932).Libero Andreotti - 2010 - In Walter Benjamin & Gevork Hartoonian (eds.), Walter Benjamin and Architecture. Routledge.
     
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  43.  26
    Techno-Scientific Practices: An Informational Approach.Federica Russo - 2000 - Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Techno-Scientific Practices analyzes and helps readers to understand the role of instruments and technologies in the practice of science, and their partnership with human agents in producing knowledge about the world.
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  44.  6
    Techno-technologized world in the light of paradigmatic philosophical and methodological principles.Dmitry Solomko - 2023 - Sotsium I Vlast 2 (96):16-26.
    Introduction. The human world is presented as an integrity — an organic unity of many inter- connected and interdependent centers (parts, sides, elements): natural and cultural, natural and artificial, animate and inanimate. When any center dominates over others (for example, technical and technological) and / or attempts to realize its claim to the status of a whole, the agreed and optimal ra- tio in the coexistence and synergistic development of all centers, and, consequently, of the whole, is violated. There arises (...)
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  45.  30
    Situated Techno-Ethics in Businesses.Katia Dupret - 2015 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 34 (1):71-94.
    The continuous inclusion of new technologies in organizations challenges business ethics and creates new problematics in work life. Managers in particular are challenged insofar as they must learn how to adapt general technological hardware to local organizational needs and work habits. Based on new empirical research conducted in Danish health care organizations, it investigates how managers experience technologies and how these experiences affect their professional ethics; it asks: a) What kinds of ethics do managers consider when using new technologies? b) (...)
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  46. Mannigfaltige techno-naturen: Von epistemischen modellsystemen und situierten maschinen.Jutta Weber - 2006 - Philosophia Naturalis 43 (1):111-141.
    A multitude of techno-natures emerge through discourses and practices of the new technosciences. While some philosophers and science studies scholars argue that model organisms and artefacts are getting more and more disembodied and decontextualised in the laboratory, I want to show how ontic dimensions of model organisms and artefacts are made invisible as well as visible in different practices of technosciences like Artificial Life and robotics.This analysis opens up possibilities for an understanding of how ontic dimensions of non-human actors (...)
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  47. The Techno-Sublime: Towards a Post-aesthetic.Barbara Bolt - 2007 - In Sensorium: aesthetics, art, life. Newcastle, U.K.: Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 43--51.
     
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  48.  8
    The Dystopian Imagination in Contemporary Spanish Literature and Film by Diana Q. Palardy.Clint Jones - 2021 - Utopian Studies 31 (3):637-639.
    Diana Palardy's book is a remarkable work bringing contemporary Spanish interpretations of dystopia to a wider audience. Her work is incisive, thoughtful, and challenging in its analysis while remaining approachable. The text is broken into seven sections, each focusing on a particular narrative that provides a key element to Palardy's conclusion. Each section is delivered in manageable subsections that allow new readers to ease into the material while still providing for the rigor more familiar scholars will appreciate.The key themes of (...)
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  49.  47
    Techno-secularism, religion, and the created co-creator.Ted Peters - 2005 - Zygon 40 (4):845-862.
    I take up the challenge posed by John Caiazza (2005) to face down the religiously vacuous ethics of techno‐secularism. Techno‐secularism is not enough for human fulfillment let alone human flowering. Yet, communities of faith based on the Bible have a positive responsibility to employ science and technology toward divinely appointed ends. We should study God's world through science and press technology into the service of transforming our world and our selves in light of our vision of God's promised (...)
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  50.  20
    Techno-Nationalism and the Construction of University Technology Transfer.Creso Sá, Andrew Kretz & Kristjan Sigurdson - 2013 - Minerva 51 (4):443-464.
    Our historical study of Canada’s main research university illuminates the overlooked influence of national identities and interests as forces shaping the institutionalization of technology transfer. Through the use of archival sources we trace the rise and influence of Canadian technological nationalism—a response to Canada’s perceived dependency on the United States’ science and technology. Technological nationalism provided a symbol for producing a shared understanding of the desirability and appropriateness of technology transfer that legitimated the commercial activities of university scientists.
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