Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY OF TECHNOLOGY
- What Is Philosophy?
- Philosophies of
- Philosophy of Science
- Philosophy of Technology
- Technological Criticism and Twentieth-Century Social
Movements
- Chapter 1 Questions
CHAPTER 2: DEFINING TECHNOLOGY
- The Problem of Definition
- Origins of the Word
- Ancient Origins of the Root Words
- The Origins of Modern Philosophical Definitions
- Some Preliminary Philosophical Definitions
- Arguments for the Pre-eminence of Science in Our Understanding
of Technology
- Arguments For and Against Broadening Our Conceptions of
Knowledge and Intelligence
- Arguments for More Narrow Definitions
- Arguments for Broadening the Definition
- Technology as Media
- Technology as Systems or Networks
- Technology as Process
- Andrew Feenberg’s Concerns about “Substantivist”
Definitions
- Chapter 2 Questions
CHAPTER 3: TECHNOLOGICAL DETERMINISM
- Technology Control Our Lives?
- The Classic Philosophical Problem of Free Will
- Causal Determinism
- Cartesian Dualism and Compatibilism
- Historical Determinism and the Birth of the Social Sciences
- Marx’s Materialist Historical Dialectic
- Technological Determinism
- Counter Arguments to Technological Determinism
- Social Constructionism versus Technological Determinism
- Defenses of Technological Determinism
- The Luddites
- What about Free Will?
- Chapter 3 Questions
CHAPTER 4: TECHNOLOGY’S RELATION TO ETHICS
- Ethical Theory
- Cultural Relativism
- Divine Command Theory
- Natural Law Theory
- Kantian Ethics
- Utilitarianism
- Technological Instrumentalism: “Guns Don’t Kill People”
- Non-Instrumentalism
- The Non-Instrumentalist Thesis
- Technological Fixes
- Limits to Technological Fixes?
- Media Ecology: McLuhan’s Four Laws of Media
- Law 1: Enhancement
- Law 2: Obsolescence
- Law 3: Retrieval
- Law 4: Reversal
- Actor-Network Theory: Technologies as Mediators versus
Intermediaries
- Chapter 4 Questions
CHAPTER 5: AUTONOMOUS TECHNOLOGY/TECHNOLOGICAL DEPENDENCY
- Autonomous Technology
- Four Images of Technological Dependency
- Herbert Marcuse
- Jacques Ellul
- Marshall McLuhan
- Bruno Latour
- Dependency versus Determinism
- Chapter 5 Questions
CHAPTER 6: TECHNOLOGY AND PROGRESS
- The Belief in Progress
- Defining the Issue
- Inductive Arguments
- Thomas Malthus
- The Population Bomb and Ehrlich’s Commodities “Bet”
- Julian Simon’s Argument for “Unlimited Resources”
- Bjørn Lomborg the Skeptical Environmentalist
- Gregg Easterbrook and the “Progress Paradox”
- Arguments from the Unlimited Power of Science
- The Singularity
- Moore’s Law
- Kurzweil’s Metaphysical Argument for Progress
- Rebuttals to the Inductive Argument
- Joseph Tainter
- Ronald Wright, Jared Diamond on Past Examples of Societal
Collapse
- Thomas Homer-Dixon on Ingenuity Gaps
- Rebuttals to the Scientific Argument
- Science Is Not Limitless: John Horgan
- Thomas Kuhn and Paradigm Shifts
- Big Science
- Rebuttals to the Metaphysical Argument
- Evolution Is Directionless
- Scientism
- Methodological versus Metaphysical Naturalism
- Chapter 6 Questions
CHAPTER 7: APPLICATION OF THE PHILOSOPHY OF TECHNOLOGY TO SPECIFIC
SOCIAL ISSUES
- The Relationship between the Philosophy of Technology and
Ethical Theory
- Three Main Moral Lessons of the Philosophy of Technology and
Their Application
- Denialism (Smoking and Cancer)
- Leveraging Scientific Uncertainty and Disparaging Science
(Environmental Toxins and Climate Change)
- Reverse Adaptation (Nuclear Power)
- Technological Featherbedding (Urban Sprawl)
- Tech Fixes as Panaceas and Red Herrings (Bio Fuel and the
Electric Car)
- Excessive Deferral to Technocratic Experts and Institutions
(Industrial Agriculture)
- Self-Regulation and Victim Blaming (Automation)
- The Gattaca Effect (New Information and Communication
Technologies)
- Temptations to Instrumentalism/Social Determinism
- Albert Borgmann and the Influence of the “Device Paradigm”
- The Non-Technological Approach and the Limits of the Approach
of the Technological Fix
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
James Gerrie is Associate Professor of
Philosophy and Religious Studies at Cape Breton University.
Reviews
“James Gerrie has compiled an extremely useful primer for issues
relating to technology and society, including discussion of basic
ethical principles and influential philosophies of technology.
Canonical as well as contemporary sources are addressed with
clarity and succinctness. This guide will prove to be a useful
overview for students, as well for any general readers interested
in strengthening the foundations of their thought about a set of
urgent issues that dominate our world with comprehensive force.” —
Mark Kingwell, Professor of Philosophy, University of Toronto “An
enjoyable, easy-to-read, conversational introduction to some major
ideas and thinkers in the philosophy of technology. Gerrie covers
the main problems: the challenges with definitions, the inescapable
issue of determinism, and the problems with progress. It’s not just
philosophy for the sake of it—there are plenty of real-world
concerns, and this book definitely opens doors to deeper critical
thinking. Easily the basis of an excellent junior undergraduate
course.” — Scott Campbell, Director of the Centre for Society,
Technology and Values, University of Waterloo