|
Don Ihde (; born 1934) is an American philosopher of science and technology, and a post-phenomenologist. In 1979 he wrote what is often identified as the first North American work on philosophy of technology,〔Paul T. Durbin "Philosophy of technology: in search of discourse synthesis", ''Technè: Research in Philosophy and Technology'' 10:2, Winter 2006, pp. 95–96: "Don Ihde's ''Technics and Praxis'' is the first full-scale philosophical analysis of technology by an American to appear in English"〕 ''Technics and Praxis''. Ihde is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. In 2013 Ihde received the Golden Eurydice Award.〔http://thepowerofinformation.eu/programme〕 Ihde is the author of twenty-two original books and the editor of many others. Recent examples include ''Acoustic Technics'' (2015);〔https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781498519243/Acoustic-Technics〕''Husserl's Missing Technologies''(2016);〔 http://fordhampress.com/index.php/series-imprints/series/perspectives-in-continental-philosophy/hussers-missing-technoogies-paperback.html〕 ''Embodied Technics'' (2010); ''Heidegger's Technologies: Postphenomenological Perspectives'' (2010); ''Postphenomenology and Technoscience Chinese 2008/English 2009)'' also in Spanish, Hebrew and forthcoming Portuguese; ''Chasing Technoscience'' (2003), edited with Evan Selinger; ''Bodies in Technology'' (2001); ''Expanding Hermeneutics: Visualism in Science'' (1998); and ''Postphenomenology'' (1993). Ihde lectures and gives seminars internationally and some of his books and articles have appeared in a dozen languages. He is currently working on Imaging Technologies: Plato Upside Down. ==Bodies in cyberspace== Ihde's ''Bodies in Technology''〔http://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/bodies-in-technology〕 spells out the original exploration of the ways cyberspace affects the human experience. The book is useful to the research scholars who are exploring the role of bodies in the VR technologies. The book is the study of embodiment in cyberspace, an ideal book also related to human–computer interaction (HCI); Ihde explores the meaning of bodies in technology. Don Ihde entirely rejects the Cartesian dualism and Ihde further "does not believe we human beings can exist in disembodied form." Even to have an out of body experience is to have an implicit 'here-body' from which we experience an 'object-body' over there. Ihde believes in having 'I am my body.' But it outlines are ambiguous and 'my experience' can reach through other spatialitities. These arguments of Don Ihde can be further explored in his book ''Bodies in Technology'' 〔http://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/bodies-in-technology〕 Beginning with a "phenomenology of multistability" in the way various "technological media" are perceived, Don Ihde examines the "roles of human embodiment, perception, and spatial transformations within communication and information media." 〔http://www.ifs.tu-darmstadt.de/fileadmin/gradkoll/Publikationen/space-folder/pdf/Ihde.pdf〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Don Ihde」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|