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[ecrea] New book: Exceptional Technologies
Wed Aug 29 13:22:10 GMT 2018
This post is to promote my new book, /Exceptional Technologies: A
Continental Philosophy of Technology/, which came out last week. The
book draws on my long-term research in philosophy of technology, and is
available in a number of formats. Full details can be found here:
https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/exceptional-technologies-9781350015616/
Here’s the blurb, followed by some endorsements:
A discussion of the rapidly growing field, from a thinker at the
forefront of research at the interface of technology and the humanities,
this is a must-read for anyone interested in contemporary developments
in Continental philosophy and philosophy of technology.
Philosophy of technology regularly draws on key thinkers in the
Continental tradition, including Husserl, Heidegger, and Foucault. Yet
because of the problematic legacy of the 'empirical turn', it often
criticizes 'bad' continental tendencies - lyricism, pessimism, and an
outdated view of technology as an autonomous, transcendental force. This
misconception is based on a faulty image of Continental thought, and in
addressing it Smith productively redefines our concept of technology.
By closely engaging key texts, and by examining 'exceptional
technologies' such as imagined, failed, and impossible technologies that
fall outside philosophy of technology's current focus, this book offers
a practical guide to thinking about and using continental philosophy and
philosophy of technology. It outlines and enacts three key
characteristics of philosophy as practiced in the continental tradition:
close reading of the history of philosophy; focus on critique; and
openness to other disciplinary fields. Smith deploys the concept of
exceptional technologies to provide a novel way of widening discussion
in philosophy of technology, navigating the relationship between
philosophy of technology and Continental philosophy; the history of both
these fields; the role of imagination in relation to technologies; and
the social function of technologies themselves.
*
*
*Endorsements:*
“In /Exceptional Technologies/, Smith offers a completely new take on
philosophy of technology via the tradition of transcendental thought in
continental philosophy. He shows us how usual notions of contemporary
philosophy of technology, usually conceived as wedded to the empirical
turn, can be revitalised when technology is thought in relation to the
transcendental. By using the example of exceptional technologies – such
as failed inventions, artworks with impossible aims and other
marginalised technologies – Smith has produced a book that is
insightful, exciting, entirely compelling and a must read for anyone
interested in staying at the cutting-edge of philosophy and media theory
in the contemporary era.” – Timothy Barker, Senior Lecturer in Digital
Media, School of Culture and Creative Arts, University of Glasgow, UK.
“Dominic Smith offers a timely study, just when the popular empirical
turn in technoscience studies is beginning to feel more constraining
than liberating. He presents no "reification of Technology" of the sort
empiricists oppose. Instead he recommends a transcendental analysis of
“general conditions” in technoscientific life whose presence is just as
empirical as any artifact's. What makes /Exceptional
Technologies/ original and noteworthy, however, is Smith's discussion of
“exceptional” (i.e., failed) technologies. Precisely as exceptional, he
argues, they are uniquely effective reminders that generally accepted
conditions are what typically go unnoticed when we are happily
preoccupied with concrete technologies that work.” – Robert C. Scharff,
Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, University of New Hampshire, USA.
“In this important contribution to the philosophy of technology, Smith
engages with some of the most interesting topics in media and
technology, from photography, to the Internet, and even the humble sheet
of paper, that most helpful technology for the writing of philosophy.
Advocating for a renewed sense of the transcendental, Smith focuses on
the conditions of possibility that structure and define any given
technology, both successful technologies and failed ones, hypothetical
devices and impossible ones. Such marginal or paradoxical exceptions
come to define what technology is, and, most importantly, what
technology might become.” – Alexander R. Galloway, Professor of Media,
Culture, and Communication, New York University, USA.
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