Results for 'technologies of power'

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  1.  9
    Technology and Power.Daniel Sarewitz - 2012 - In Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis, Stig Andur Pedersen & Vincent F. Hendricks, A Companion to the Philosophy of Technology. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 308–310.
  2.  10
    Copula: Sexual Technologies, Reproductive Powers.Robyn Ferrell - 2006 - State University of New York Press.
    Explores the conceptual schema underlying our understanding of reproductive technologies.
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  3.  10
    M. Bauer , Resistance to New Technology: Nuclear Power, Information Technology and Biotechnology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995. Pp. xii + 422. ISBN 0-521-45518-9. £50.00, $74.95. [REVIEW]Sally Horrocks - 1996 - British Journal for the History of Science 29 (4):490-491.
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  4. Ethics and technology: a program for future research.Deborah G. Johnson & Thomas M. Powers - 2009 - In M. Winston and R. Edelbach, Society, Ethics, and Technology, 4th edition.
    This chapter is reprinted from our lead essay in the Encyclopedia of Science, Technology, and Ethics, ed. C. Mitcham, Gale, 2005.
     
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  5.  18
    Technology and social power.Graeme Kirkpatrick - 2008 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Technology is an increasingly important dimension of social life. This title discusses the impact of technology and science on our lives, exploring how power is demonstrated and reinforced by technological innovation.
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  6.  23
    Book Review: Emerging Pervasive Information and Communication Technologies (PICT). [REVIEW]Thomas M. Powers - 2014 - Journal of Philosophy, Science and Law 14:1-5.
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  7. Computer systems and responsibility: A normative look at technological complexity.Deborah G. Johnson & Thomas M. Powers - 2005 - Ethics and Information Technology 7 (2):99-107.
    In this paper, we focus attention on the role of computer system complexity in ascribing responsibility. We begin by introducing the notion of technological moral action (TMA). TMA is carried out by the combination of a computer system user, a system designer (developers, programmers, and testers), and a computer system (hardware and software). We discuss three sometimes overlapping types of responsibility: causal responsibility, moral responsibility, and role responsibility. Our analysis is informed by the well-known accounts provided by Hart and Hart (...)
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  8.  16
    Power and Technology: A Philosophical and Ethical Analysis.Faridun Sattarov - 2019 - Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield International.
    This book aims to offer an empirically-informed philosophical framework for understanding the technological construction of power, allowing for a differentiated vocabulary for describing various senses of technological power, while bridging together social and political theory, critical studies of technology, philosophy and ethics of technology.
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  9.  31
    Virtual power: gendering the nurse–technology relationship.Julie Fairman & Patricia D’Antonio - 1999 - Nursing Inquiry 6 (3):178-186.
    To date, studies of the relationship between technology and its consumers have used the constructs of traditional paradigms of production and consumption as the foundation for analysis. These studies have served to reinforce traditional concepts of gender and hierarchy in the nursing–technology dichotomy. To propose a new and more relevant framework for analysing the technology–nursing relationship, the analysis of gender within the methodology of the social history of technology will be used. Healthcare will be viewed as a technologic network, and (...)
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  10.  14
    (1 other version)Nuclear Power and Technological Authoritarianism.Steven M. Hoffman & John Byrne - 1987 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 7 (5-6):658-671.
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  11.  22
    Introduction: Power to the image! Science, technology and visual diplomacy.Simone Turchetti & Matthew Adamson - 2023 - British Journal for the History of Science 56 (2):135-146.
    This special issue explores the power that images with a techno-scientific content can have in international relations. As we introduce the articles in the collection, we highlight how the study of this influence extends current research in the separate (but increasingly interacting) domains of history of science and technology, and political science. We then show how images of different types (photographs, cartoons and plots) can inform inter-state transactions through their public appeal alongside the better-studied dialogic practices of the diplomatic (...)
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  12.  8
    Wind Power in Australia: Overcoming Technological and Institutional Barriers.Andrea Bunting & Gerard Healey - 2008 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 28 (2):115-127.
    Until recently, Australia had little installed wind capacity, although there had been many investigations into its potential during the preceding decades. Formerly, state-owned monopoly utilities showed only token interest in wind power and could dictate the terms of energy debates. This situation changed in the late 1990s: Installed wind capacity began growing rapidly following the introduction of supportive renewable energy policies and the restructuring of the electricity industry. However, wind farms still provide only 1% of Australia's electricity, the future (...)
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  13.  14
    A Pragmatic Optimism About Enhancement Technologies.Nicholas Agar - 2004 - In Liberal Eugenics: In Defence of Human Enhancement. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 20–38.
    This chapter contains section titled: Will We be Able to Clone Geniuses? Human Genomics and the Search for Smart Genes Doogie's Downside Nuclear Powered Vacuum Cleaners or Nuclear Bombs A Pragmatic Optimism about Enhancement Technologies.
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  14.  39
    Technology and Economic Power.Pierre Hessler - 2014 - Philosophy and Technology 27 (2):279-283.
    IntroductionLarge corporations—from Apple to Volkswagen—are powerful; whereas their customers are much less powerful. But many observers believe that information and communication technologies are giving consumers weapons to level the playing field. Is this really true?From Theory to the Reality of Economic PowerTechnology and economic power share one characteristic: economic theory has long ignored them.Starting with the industrial revolution, technology has been the first driver of economic growth. But it is only a couple of centuries later that economic theory (...)
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  15.  52
    Globalisation, Technology and Reason.César González Cantón - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 22:51-59.
    This paper intends to explore an aspect of Blumenberg’s metaphorology as memory of mankind and the ethical commitment derived from it. It is seen as the culmination of the fight that the human being maintains against the senselessness of reality. It manifests itself and it is perceived by a human being as theimmensurability of world time and life time (i.e. that the human being is born and dies), that impedes the human being from having all of the world i.e. the (...)
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  16. Technological Mediation and Power: Postphenomenology, Critical Theory, and Autonomist Marxism.Mithun Bantwal Rao, Joost Jongerden, Pieter Lemmens & Guido Ruivenkamp - 2015 - Philosophy and Technology 28 (3):449-474.
    This article focuses on the power of technological mediation from the point of view of autonomist Marxism. The first part of the article discusses the theories developed on technological mediation in postphenomenology and critical theory of technology with regard to their respective power perspectives and ways of coping with relations of power embedded in technical artifacts and systems. Rather than focusing on the clashes between the hermeneutic postphenomenological approach and the dialectics of critical theory, it is argued (...)
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  17.  26
    Power influences upon technology design for age-related cognitive decline using the VSD framework.Oliver K. Burmeister & David Kreps - 2018 - Ethics and Information Technology (1):95-98.
    Implicit in the value sensitive design (VSD) approach is a concern for understanding, and where possible, disrupting problematic power relationships. Yet an awareness of the issues and ethics of power relations is a pre-requisite for such a concern to bear fruit. This article provides some insight into the issues, and through a case study of technology design to support care arrangements for age-related cognitive decline, illustrates how finding a satisfactory resolution can be particularly troublesome.
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  18.  10
    Technology, Power, and Social Change.Charles A. Thrall & Jerold M. Starr (eds.) - 1974 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    This book presents the current thinking of some of the most famous people in the intellectual world. Two opening essays by Lewis Mumford and Robert Theobald dis­cuss the role of technology in history, man and technology, and technological possi­bilities for the future. Other contributors include such well-known figures as Max Lerner, Edgar Z. Friedenberg, Seymour Melman, Seymour Martin Lipset, and Ash­ley Montagu. Essays center around key is­sues in the study of technology, its rela­tionship to authority or leadership elites, its potential (...)
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  19.  10
    Pursuing Power and Light: Technology and Physics from James Watt to Albert Einstein. [REVIEW]David Miller - 2011 - British Journal for the History of Science 44 (4):609-610.
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  20.  25
    Distributed Power Trading System Based on Blockchain Technology.Shuguo Chen, Weibin Ding, Zhongzheng Xiang & Yuanyuan Liu - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-12.
    The power trading system has the characteristics of nonlinearity, dynamics, and complexity. Part of the business data in the trading system needs to be exposed to numerous external business systems. The traditional centralized power trading model has some problems, such as low data security and trust crisis of regulators. Blockchain technology provides prominent ideas for solving these problems. Firstly, the improved AdaBoost algorithm is used to predict the supply and demand gap of power trading nodes. Secondly, based (...)
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  21.  77
    Religion/Technology, Not Theology/Science, as the Defining Dichotomy.Rustum Roy - 2002 - Zygon 37 (3):667-676.
    Science and religion are incommensurable: one cannot use centimeters to measure volume. Science's proper cognate is theology. Science and theology are human activities that are basically conceptual (partly fallible) frameworks for explaining experience. Religion and technology, by contrast, involve and control or limit human practice and experience: they involve “sensate” reality—people and things. The study of the interaction of these four terms (or any two) must use the terms more precisely.Science as practiced today has become scientism, another theology. Technology is, (...)
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  22.  14
    Technological Grounding: Enrolling Technology as a Discursive Resource to Justify Cultural Change in Organizations.Michele H. Jackson & Paul M. Leonardi - 2009 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 34 (3):393-418.
    In technologically grounded organizations, culture is bound tightly to the material characteristics of the technology that the organization manufactures, distributes, or services. Technological grounding helps explain why high-technology organizations often experience cultural integration problems following a merger. Examining the recent merger of US West and Qwest, this article analyzes how powerful actors strategically used the process of technological grounding to enroll a core technology to situate postmerger integration in technological terms, creating a discourse of inevitability that then justified publicly Qwest's (...)
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  23.  9
    Science, Technology, and Society: New Directions.Andrew Webster - 1991 - New Brunswick, N.J.: Macmillan.
    Read any newspaper or watch your television and as often as not you will be confronted by the worries, hopes, challenges, and mistakes of science and technology. Sociology has been trying to make sense of science for many years, while government and industry have promoted and exploited it for even longer. But what are science and technology? How have they been shaped by society? What new directions are they taking? Andrew Webster provides a lively and accessible introduction to the sociological (...)
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  24.  8
    From Yogic Powers to Technological Powers Contemporary Yoga and Transhumanist Spirituality.Raquel Ferrández Formoso - 2024 - Journal of World Philosophies 9 (1).
    The ideal of “freedom-as-omnipotence” pointed out by Daya Krishna in its interpretation of the Yogasūtra is undoubtedly present throughout the history of yoga. This ideal of omnipotence is also at the basis of the contemporary transhumanist program through the ideal of human perfection, and there are already transhumanist versions that defend the use of meditative techniques from India as complements to a program of human enhancement. In this essay I argue that transhumanism and bioliberalism seek to free us from biological (...)
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  25.  6
    From Yogic Powers to Technological Powers.Raquel Ferrández Formoso - 2024 - Journal of World Philosophies 9 (1).
    The ideal of “freedom-as-omnipotence” pointed out by Daya Krishna in its interpretation of the _Yogasūtra_ is undoubtedly present throughout the history of yoga. This ideal of omnipotence is also at the basis of the contemporary transhumanist program through the ideal of human perfection, and there are already transhumanist versions that defend the use of meditative techniques from India as complements to a program of human enhancement. In this essay I argue that transhumanism and _bioliberalism_ seek to free us from biological (...)
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  26.  6
    On freedom: technology, capital, medium.Peter Trawny - 2017 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. Edited by Richard Lambert.
    How do we challenge the structures of late capitalism if all possible media through which to do do is inescapably capitalist? This urgent political question is at the heart of Peter Trawny's major new work. With searing precision Trawny demonstrates how our world has become wholly determined by technology, capital, and the medium. In this world of the 'TCM', we universal subjects remain in a state of apathy that is temporarily punctuated, but also reinforced, by the phantasmatic dream of difference (...)
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  27.  20
    Technology is dead: the path to a more human future.Chris Colbert - 2024 - Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
    How did we end up here, masters of scientific insight, purveyors of ever more powerful technologies, astride the burning planet that created us, and now responsible for cleaning up the mess and determining the future direction of all of life? And what do we do about it? Technology is Dead attempts to answer both of those questions. It is a book of both challenge and hope, written for those who are able or willing to lead us out of our (...)
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  28.  11
    (1 other version)Technology.Lori Gruen - 1991 - In Dale Jamieson, A Companion to Environmental Philosophy. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 439–448.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The consequences of technology Nature versus culture Technology versus authenticity Conclusion.
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  29.  26
    With great power comes great responsibility: why ‘safe enough’ is not good enough in debates on new gene technologies.Sigfrid Kjeldaas, Tim Dassler, Trine Antonsen, Odd-Gunnar Wikmark & Anne I. Myhr - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (2):533-545.
    New genomic techniques (NGTs) are powerful technologies with the potential to change how we relate to our food, food producers, and natural environment. Their use may affect the practices and values our societies are built on. Like many countries, the EU is currently revisiting its GMO legislation to accommodate the emergence of NGTs. We argue that assessing such technologies according to whether they are ‘safe enough’ will not create the public trust necessary for societal acceptance. To avoid past (...)
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  30. Subversive rationalization: Technology, power, and democracy.Andrew Feenberg - 1992 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 35 (3-4):301 – 322.
    This paper argues, against technological and economic determinism, that the dominant model of industrial society is politically contingent. The idea that technical decisions are significantly constrained by ?rationality? ? either technical or economic ? is shown to be groundless. Constructivist and hermeneutic approaches to technology show that modern societies are inherently available for a different type of development in a different cultural framework. It is possible that, in the future, those who today are subordinated to technology's rhythms and demands will (...)
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  31. Science, technology, and society: a sociological approach.Wenda K. Bauchspies - 2006 - Malden, MA: Blackwell. Edited by Jennifer Croissant & Sal P. Restivo.
    Science, Technology and Society: A Sociological Approach is a comprehensive guide to the emergent field of science, technology, and society (STS) studies and its implications for today’s culture and society. Discusses current STS topics, research tools, and theories Tackles some of the most urgent issues in current STS studies, including power and culture, race, gender, colonialism, the Internet, cyborgs and robots, and biotechnology Includes case studies, a glossary, and further reading lists.
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  32. Technology ethics assessment: Politicising the ‘Socratic approach’.Robert Sparrow - 2023 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility (2):454-466.
    That technologies may raise ethical issues is now widely recognised. The ‘responsible innovation’ literature – as well as, to a lesser extent, the applied ethics and bioethics literature – has responded to the need for ethical reflection on technologies by developing a number of tools and approaches to facilitate such reflection. Some of these instruments consist of lists of questions that people are encouraged to ask about technologies – a methodology known as the ‘Socratic approach’. However, to (...)
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  33.  5
    Political alchemy: technology unbounded.Ágnes Horváth - 2021 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book explores politics as a form of alchemy, understood as the transformation of entities through an alteration of their identities. Identifying this process as a common denominator of many political phenomena, such as communism, EU integration, mediatisation or globalisation, the author demonstrates not only the widespread presence of alchemical techniques in politics, but also the acceleration of their deployment. A study of the steady growth of power as it reaches a continuous and permanent stage, thus avoiding the inherent (...)
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  34.  11
    Technology and ethics: a European quest for responsible engineering.Ph Goujon & Bertrand Hériard Dubreuil (eds.) - 2001 - Leuven, Belgium: Peeters.
    Technology and Ethics. A European Quest for Responsible Engineering, edited by B. Heriard Dubreuil and his team (University Lille) is in many regards an innovative publication. It is the first fully European contribution to the field of engineering ethics and the result of an intensive cooperation between ethicists and engineers from all the member countries of the European Union. The basic structure of the book is both the distinction and interaction between three levels of analysis: personal responsibility of engineers, the (...)
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  35.  66
    Ambient Assistive Technologies : socio-technology as a powerful tool for facing the inevitable sociodemographic challenges?Astrid M. Schülke, Herbert Plischke & Niko B. Kohls - 2010 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 5:8.
    Due to the socio-demographic change in most developed western countries, elderly populations have been continuously increasing. Therefore, preventive and assistive systems that allow elderly people to independently live in their own homes as long as possible will become an economical if not ethical necessity. These respective technologies are being developed under the term "Ambient Assistive Technologies". The EU-funded AAT-project Ambient Lighting Assistance for an Ageing Population has established the long-term goal to create an adaptive system capable of improving (...)
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  36.  84
    Converging technologies and human destiny.William Sims Bainbridge - 2007 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (3):197 – 216.
    The rapid fertility decline in most advanced industrial nations, coupled with secularization and the disintegration of the family, is a sign that Western Civilization is beginning to collapse, even while radical religious movements pose challenges to Western dominance. Under such dire circumstances, it is pointless to be cautious about developing new Converging Technologies. Historical events are undermining the entire basis of ethical decision-making, so it is necessary to seek a new basis for ethics in the intellectual unification of science (...)
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  37.  15
    Post-Automobility Futures: Technology, Power, and Imaginaries.Robert Braun & Richard Randell - 2022 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This book presents an in-depth phenomenological and deconstructive analysis of the automobility imaginary, which is none other than the mundane automobility reality within which we dwell in everyday life.
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  38.  12
    U.S. Wage Inequality, Technological Change, and Decline in Union Power.James S. Mosher - 2007 - Politics and Society 35 (2):225-263.
    Wage inequality, including the college/high school education premium, has increased substantially in the United States. A key part of the most widely accepted explanation for this is that skill-biased technological change accelerated during this time. This article suggests that the impact of skill-biased technological change was closer to constant in the second half of the twentieth century. This leaves a large unexplained decrease in the college/high school education premium in the 1940s and a large unexplained increase in the 1980s. The (...)
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  39.  21
    The interface envelope: gaming, technology, power.James Ash - 2015 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing.
    In The Interface Envelope, James Ash develops a series of concepts to understand how digital interfaces work to shape the spatial and temporal perception of players. Drawing upon examples from videogame design and work from post-phenomenology, speculative realism, new materialism and media theory, Ash argues that interfaces create envelopes, or localised foldings of space time, around which bodily and perceptual capacities are organised for the explicit production of economic profit. Modifying and developing Bernard Stiegler's account of psychopower and Warren Neidich's (...)
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  40.  4
    Creative technologies entrapped by instrumental mind.Saulius Kanišauskas - 2024 - Filosofija. Sociologija 27 (1).
    The paper poses a question why creative processes are more and more often related to technologies and that is clearly visible in institutionalized scientific, cultural and political discourses. It is noteworthy that technologies, creative technologies including, are becoming instrumental mind-based methods, which aim to perform everything more efficiently, more economically and more advantageously. This way creative activity loses its essence and becomes a commodity easily defined in economic categories, and thus it is employed as an effective means (...)
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  41.  59
    Technology and culture and possibly vigilance too.C. T. A. Schmidt - 2011 - AI and Society 26 (4):371-375.
    Many have bowed before the recently acquired powers of ‘new technologies’. However, in the shift from tekhnē to tekhnologia, it seems we have lost human values. These values are communicative in nature as technological progress has placed barriers like distance, web pages and ‘miscellaneous extras’ between individuals. Certain values, like the interpersonal pleasures of rendering service, have been lost as their domain of predilection has for many become fully commercially oriented, dominated by the cadence of profitability. Though the popular (...)
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  42.  9
    建构中国生命伦理学 : 技术当道 (Building Chinese Bioethics : Technology is in Power).Ruiping Fan, Ellen Zhang & Benedict S. B. Chan (eds.) - 2024 - Shanghai:
    This book covers a collection of papers addressing ethical issues generated by advanced biomedical technologies.
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  43.  33
    Remote Technologies and Filial Obligations at a Distance: New Opportunities and Ethical Challenges.Yi Jiao Tian, Fabrice Jotterand & Tenzin Wangmo - 2023 - Asian Bioethics Review 15 (4):479-504.
    The coupled growth of population aging and international migration warrants attention on the methods and solutions available to adult children living overseas to provide distance caregiving for their aging parents. Despite living apart from their parents, the transnational informal care literature has indicated that first-generation immigrants remain committed to carry out their filial caregiving obligations in extensive and creative ways. With functions to remotely access health information enabled by emergency, wearable, motion, and video sensors, remote monitoring technologies (RMTs) may (...)
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  44.  98
    From Technological Autonomy to Technological Bluff: Jacques Ellul and Our Technological Condition.J. Craig Hanks & Emily Kay Hanks - 2015 - Human Affairs 25 (4):460-470.
    The work of Jacques Ellul is useful in understanding and evaluating the implications of rapidly changing technologies for human values and democracy. Ellul developed three powerful theses about technology: technological autonomy, technological determinism, and technological bluff. In this essay, the authors explicate these views of technology, and place the work of Ellul in dialogue with the ides of other important theorists of technology. Ellul’s too-often overlooked theses about technology are relevant to our present technological society.
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  45.  40
    Technological Dramas.Bryan Pfaffenberger - 1992 - Science, Technology and Human Values 17 (3):282-312.
    This article examines the technological construction of political power, as well as resistance to political power, by means of an "ideal-typical" model called a technolog ical drama. In technological regularization, a design constituency creates artifacts whose features reveal an intention to shape the distribution of wealth, power, or status in society. The design constituency also creates myths, social contexts, and rituals to legitimate its intention and constitute the artifact's political impact. In reply, the people adversely affected by (...)
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  46.  54
    Should technological imperatives be obeyed?Ilkka Niiniluoto - 1990 - International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 4 (2):181-189.
    This paper argues that both technological determinism (the development of technology is uniquely determined by internal laws) and technological voluntarism (technological change can be externally directed and regulated by the wants and free choice of human beings) are one‐sided and partly mistaken. The determinists are right in the sense that technology has a power to influence our values and behaviour, and thereby appear to direct ‘technological imperatives’ to us. However, such commands are always conditional on some value premises; the (...)
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  47.  23
    David C. Goodman. Power and Penury: Government, Technology and Science in Philip II's Spain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. Pp. xii + 275. ISBN 0-521-3053-2. £30.00, $44.50. [REVIEW]Harold Cook - 1989 - British Journal for the History of Science 22 (2):245-246.
  48.  93
    Technology as empowerment: A capability approach to computer ethics. [REVIEW]Justine Johnstone - 2007 - Ethics and Information Technology 9 (1):73-87.
    Standard agent and action-based approaches in computer ethics tend to have difficulty dealing with complex systems-level issues such as the digital divide and globalisation. This paper argues for a value-based agenda to complement traditional approaches in computer ethics, and that one value-based approach well-suited to technological domains can be found in capability theory. Capability approaches have recently become influential in a number of fields with an ethical or policy dimension, but have not so far been applied in computer ethics. The (...)
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  49. Self: An Interview.".Power Truth - 1988 - In Michel Foucault, Luther H. Martin, Huck Gutman & Patrick H. Hutton, Technologies of the self: a seminar with Michel Foucault. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. pp. 9--16.
     
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  50.  38
    Justice, emotions, socially disruptive technologies.Benedetta Giovanola - 2023 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 26 (1):104-119.
    Most theories of justice rest on the idea that emotions need to be contained or set aside and that rationality serves as the best, if not exclusive, criterion for identifying the principles of a fair distribution. In recent years, however, two important claims have been made. One is that rationality and emotions are not in conflict with one another, but should be conceived of as strictly interconnected; the other is that social justice is not just about distribution, but also – (...)
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