Technology: Embodiment, The Self, and Everyday Life

At issue here: Mind-Body Dualism, Consciousness, and Interaction within the world

Some ideas from Larry Hickman's "Technology as a Human Affair," pages 119-159

Embodiment

Traditional Philosophy: Little regard for the body. Descartes- Body as a machine, guided by the soul/consciousness: "I think therefore I am."

Many social sciences- Behavioralism in psychology, strands of Functionalism and other forms of positivism in sociology- view the body and/or the individual as a machine or "empty vessel."

Exceptions: American Pragmatism, Existentialism/Phenomenology, and some Marxism.

Don Ihde: "Technology and Human Self-Conception"

  1. Every self is in some world, so it is senseless to speak of self and world as separate and distinct.
  2. Self and world are both experienced as phenomena- therefore (at least) equal.
  3. Perhaps the world is primary: It is only in and through my participation in the world, (the world I share with others) that I can come to be aware of and understand myself. Consciousness is intentional, relative (reflexive), and interactive.

Maurice Merleau-Ponty: The Phenomenology of Perception

The Self

The Self as Process

Sherry Turkle: "Second Self" (1984) and "Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet" (1995)

Michael Wessells' "Minds and Selves"

In "Computer, Self and Society"

Point to develop: If we understand ourselves and others through our interaction within the world, if technology is the embodiment of self , then in an age of technologically mediated (computer) communication, virtual communities, and technological "ways of life"-- what do we become?

Minds and Computation

Computers, Culture and Identity

Computers, Identity, and the Group:

Hacker Subculture

Networks

And Creativity

Computers and the disAbled

AI (see also, http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~russell/ai.html)

(In part from Michael Wessell's "CSS" chapter 8)

Games: Chess (element of perception)

Simulation (simple tasks)

General Problem Solver

Language

Myth of the intelligent computer:

ELIZA
Decision making and rules?

Artificial Intelligence: How strange consciousness is- (see Time Magazine 03/25/96, vol 147, no. 13: "Can Machines Think") (see also http://www.kurzweilai.net/articles/art0099.html?printable=1

Artificial Life?

Everyday Life (EDL)

McGuinn, chapter 10

URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/280/tecself.html
Owner: Robert O. Keel: rok@umsl.edu
Last Updated: Sunday, April 27, 2014 10:35