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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24658
Title: A Hermeneutics of Technology: Don IHDE's Postmodern Philosophy of Technology
Other Titles: A Hermeneutics of Technology
Authors: Zorn, Diana
Advisor: Madison, G. B.
Department: Philosophy
Keywords: hermeneutics;technology;postmodern philosophy
Publication Date: Mar-1994
Abstract: If traditional, modem philosophy of technology fails to genuinely understand the phenomena of technology, then emancipatory reflection, such as Don Ihde's, is required for philosophy of technology to have a future. Ihde's postmodern perspective and hermeneutic framework re-understands the meaning, knowledge and truth of technology as correlated with consciousness and embedded in cultures, while clarifying the relation between the interpreter and the technology he seeks to understand. The first part of my thesis argues that Ihde's philosophy of technology is generally postmodern for the following two main reasons: (1) Ihde's adaptation of the Husserlian model of intentionality, the basis of his phenomenology of human-technology relations, undermines the subject-object distinction prevalent in modem philosophy of technology, thereby recognizing the correlation between consciousness and technology; (2) by uncovering the cultural embeddedness of technologies, Hide rejects the emphasis of modem inquiry on the issue of whether we "control" technology, or it "controls" us. The second part of my thesis argues that Ihde's postmodern philosophy of technology is a hermeneutics of technology. His definition of technology, as an intentional understanding-relation with things, conceives of technology in terms of understanding itself. An implication of this emphasis on technology in praxis, rather than as substance, conceives of technology in a properly human way under the rubric of human agency, and although he never phrased it in this way, takes the techne out of technology. Finally, Hide's inquiry into technology is a call to learn the art of response-ability when attempting to understand technology.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/24658
Appears in Collections:Digitized Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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