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[ecrea] "Technology, Society, Change" - Symposium on Andrew Feenberg
Sun Mar 13 17:01:12 GMT 2011
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"Technology, Society, Change"
A Symposium on Andrew Feenberg's Critical Theory of Technology
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Friday 25th March 2011 - Vrije Universiteit Brussel
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Speakers:
Andrew Feenberg, Graeme Kirkpatrick, Peter-Paul Verbeek, Gert Goeminne,
Karl Verstrynge, Yoni Van Den Eede
http://www.vub.ac.be/FILO/AndrewFeenberg
For long, technology has been treated as a self-contained realm, by
philosophers and non-philosophers alike. Changes to technologies, if
possible at all, were meant to come either from technological progress
itself or from the engineers, scientists, politicians, or marketeers
immediately concerned with them. Quite rightly this stark view has been
refuted during the last couple of decades, not in the least thanks to
the booming scene of Philosophy of Technology, an eclectic band of
philosophers keen on placing technology straight back where it actually
dwells: in the midst of society.
However, the results of their research have by no means seeped into the
collective consciousness. A wide-ranging public debate about the forms,
effects, consequences, and evolution of technology - that surpasses
"mere" climate change problems, however acute these may be - is still
far off. This might be seen as the consequence of a general lack of
knowledge about the very diverse mechanisms behind technological genesis
and change.
As one of the leading theorists in the Philosophy of Technology, Andrew
Feenberg has been concerned with technological change for more than
twenty years now. He has developed a theoretical framework incorporating
insights from sources as various as Marcuse, Marx, Habermas, Heidegger,
Latour, and Social Constructivism of Technology, resulting in a
completely original outlook on technology and its societal dynamics
known as 'Instrumentalization Theory.' In this view, technologies are
socially and historically constructed, but in the end have a
power-consolidating function for the ruling groups. Yet this is but one
side of the story. Individual actors or interest groups can enforce
changes to technologies by way of re-appropriation, demanding design
changes, or political action. This very possibility of democratization
rekindles the potential for social change.
At the symposium, we engage a conversation with Andrew Feenberg and his
work, about issues as the democratization and politics of technology;
development, history, and impact of technology; the form and scope of
public debate around technologies; the workings of technological
decision making; ... Contributions may range from highly theoretical
analyses to very specific observations from the field, and they may
cover disciplines that outstretch the boundaries of philosophy into STS,
communication studies, sociology, psychology, political theory, etc.
Registration:
Please send an e-mail to (yvdeede /at/ vub.ac.be) before 15th March 2011.
Registration fee:
Standard: 10 euro
VUB students: free
Non-VUB students: 5 euro
More information:
Yoni Van Den Eede -- Department of Philosophy and Moral Sciences -- Free
University of Brussels - (yvdeede /at/ vub.ac.be).
http://www.vub.ac.be/FILO/AndrewFeenberg
Yoni Van Den Eede
Ph.D. fellow of the Research Foundation -- Flanders (FWO)
Department of Philosophy and Moral Sciences
Free University of Brussels (VUB)
Phone: +32 486 52 58 30
E-mail: (yvdeede /at/ vub.ac.be)
http://www.vub.ac.be/FILO/AndrewFeenberg
http://www.mcluhancentennial.eu
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